Allegheny Uprising

Allegheny Uprising

Film poster
Directed by William A. Seiter
Produced by P. J. Wolfson
Screenplay by P. J. Wolfson
Based on The First Rebel
by Neil H. Swanson
Starring
Music by Anthony Collins
Cinematography Nicholas Musuraca
Edited by George Crone
Production
company
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release dates
  • November 10, 1939 (1939-11-10)
Running time
81 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $696,000[1]
Box office $750,000[1]

Allegheny Uprising (released in the UK as The First Rebel) is an American 1939 film produced by RKO Pictures, and starring Claire Trevor and John Wayne. Based on the 1937 novel The First Rebel by Neil H. Swanson, with a screenplay by the film's producer, P. J. Wolfson, and directed by William A. Seiter, the film is loosely based on the historical event known as the Black Boys Rebellion of 1765, after the conclusion of the French and Indian War.

Clad in buckskin and a coonskin cap (as he would be a decade later in The Fighting Kentuckian), Wayne plays real-life James Smith, an American coping with British rule in colonial America. The supporting cast includes Brian Donlevy, George Sanders and Chill Wills. Claire Trevor and John Wayne also headed the cast of John Ford's Stagecoach the same year, and in Allegheny Uprising Trevor is top-billed over Wayne, due to her greater name value at the time.

The film did not fare well in its initial release. The superficially similar John Ford film Drums Along the Mohawk had been released only one week prior. In the United Kingdom, where the film kept the original title, it was initially banned by the Ministry of Information for placing the British, already at war against Nazi Germany, in a bad light.[2]

Plot

In the southwestern Pennsylvania region, of colonial America, in the 1760s, colonial distaste and disapproval of the British government is starting to surface. Many local colonists have been killed by Native Americans, who are armed with rifles supplied by white traders. Local adventurer, James Smith (John Wayne) and his followers complain to British officials, pressuring them to make it illegal to trade weapons to the Indians. Trader Ralph Callender (Brian Donlevy) and other businessmen are not happy with the new law, as it cuts into their profit. They continue to trade with the local Native American population, hiding rifles and rum inside military supply trains. When the British authorities fail to do anything to prevent this, James Smith organizes his men and heads out to intercept the wagon train. Smith's spirited and bold girlfriend, Janie McDougall (Claire Trevor), assists him and his men in posing as Indians to intercept the gun shipments.

Captain Swanson, a British army officer, is sent to protect the wagon train at all costs, following a complaint lodged by Callender, that Smith and his men intend to rob the wagon train, while neglecting to state that the train contains guns and liquor. Captain Swanson considers the involvement of Smith and his men, as a revolt against his authority, and in retaliation, he jails more than half of the local colonists, holding them without trial. This sets Smith and Swanson on a collision course.

Main cast

Reception

The film recorded a loss of $230,000.[1]

Colorization

The film was colorized in the late 1980s and released on VHS.[3] New DVD copies are in black and white only.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Richard Jewel, 'RKO Film Grosses: 1931-1951', Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television, Vol 14 No 1, 1994 p57
  2. K. R. M. Short. "Colonial History & Anglo-American tension: Allegheny Uprising & Drums along the Mohawk" (PDF). Film-Historia Vol. VI, No.1 (1996). Retrieved October 9, 2011.
  3. Matthews, Jack (October 22, 1986). "Rko Pictures Sues Over Colorization". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 2, 2016.

External links

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