Denver and Rio Grande

1952 "TWO FIGHTING RAILROAD CREWS BATTLE FOR THE ONLY RIGHT OF WAY!"
5.7| 1h29m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 16 May 1952 Released
Producted By: Paramount
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Jim Vesser and his team of railroading men try to build a rail line through a mountain pass, while a group of less scrupulous construction workers sabotages the entire operation in the hopes that they can get their tracks laid first and get the money from the railroad.

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Director

Byron Haskin

Production Companies

Paramount

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Denver and Rio Grande Audience Reviews

Exoticalot People are voting emotionally.
JinRoz For all the hype it got I was expecting a lot more!
Stevecorp Don't listen to the negative reviews
Neive Bellamy Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
boblipton A first I thought this was an Allied Artists production: overblown script about the building of the titular railroad, Edmond O'Brien in the lead.... but no, it was a Paramount production, one of their A Westerns that seem overblown, despite an appealing cast, including Dean Jagger, personal favorite Zasu Pitts, Sterling Hayden (at the start of his "I'll say the line, but don't expect me to care" phase) and a spectacular railroad crash that used two actual engines. Ka-boom! Cute ingenue Kasey Rogers is spying for bad-guy Hayden (for a competing line) because she thinks D&RG people killed her brother, but she and O'Brien keep making goo-goo eyes at each other when they think the other isn't looking.I wasn't terribly impressed. It looked like a DeMille Western epic from the 1930s, but without the mythic characters, and it's too visually perfect, shot on site in the clean air of Colorado by former cameraman Byron Haskins and ace Technicolor specialist Ray Rennahan, meant to show off the the bright, accurate colors of fresh paint and clean clothes and green leaves that Technicolor could bring to the screen, like a mid-30s Warner Brothers short. I'm more interested in story and character than sheer spectacle, and the story and characters here are standard, while the spectacle (train crash aside) had all been done before. That leaves the outdoor photography around the tracks, and while the natural scenery is frequently beautiful, an hour and a half is pretty long for a travelogue. Despite the talent and effort, it winds up a pompous, overblown B Western.
mark.waltz Hollywood usually gets the details of history all wrong, whether it be miscasting the actors and distorting the facts. This does more of the later, but why quibble? It's an interesting piece of western fable told with gusto and taste, well cast and quite entertaining. The American west always looks its best in color, with the mountain greenery and blue skies smiling down on the settlers. That little piece of prose as as authentic as the story here of two rival railroad companies dealing with the competition in completely different ways. Edmund O'Brien represents the more ethical of the two, while a bearded Sterling Hayden represents the more ruthless of the two.This is highlighted by a train collision head on, with Zasu Pitts amusing as a lovelorn cook. Linda Elliott, who went onto a career on T.V. as Kasey Rogers, is a vengeance seeking young woman who gets in the good graces of O'Brien with a hidden agenda. It's a fast moving A western that may not have all the facts, but at least provides steady entertainment and pretty visuals.
helpless_dancer Two railroad construction crews go head to head in getting a new line through to the west. One crew is filled with dirty rotten scalawags who stop at nothing to fulfill their duty. The other group are square shooters who just want to do an honest days work for an honest days pay. They meet for the final showdown in an explosive ending. Good western filmed in beautiful mountain country.
Marta Pretty standard 50's action-western with a railroading theme. Edmund O'Brien's team of men are trying to build a rail line through the mountains, and dirty-dealing Sterling Hayden's men are trying to build their line first by sabotaging the other group. Lots of trains and mountain scenery, and not much else.Landslides, robberies and shootings abound, but despite the action the poor actors can't do much with the dead-end script. Dean Jagger is always good, and Paul Fix and Zasu Pitts are the comic relief as the broadly Irish train engineer and the camp cook who keeps trying to get Fix to propose to her. If you like trains and beautiful scenery, this is a decent movie.