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Western

The Secret of Convict Lake

- 6 women at the mercy of the west's most dangerous outlaws !

After a group of convicts escapes from prison, they take refuge in the wilderness. While most of the crew are ruthless sociopaths, Jim Canfield is an innocent man who was jailed under false pretenses. When Canfield and his fellow fugitives reach an isolated farming settlement where the men are all away, it creates tension with the local women. Things get direr when rumors of hidden money arise, and Canfield discovers that the man who framed him is part of the community.

Release Date : 1951-07-29

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : 20th Century Fox

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Glenn Ford

Character Name : Jim Canfield

Original Name : Glenn Ford

Gender : Male

Gene Tierney

Character Name : Marcia Stoddard

Original Name : Gene Tierney

Gender : Female

Zachary Scott

Character Name : Johnny Greer

Original Name : Zachary Scott

Gender : Male

Ann Dvorak

Character Name : Rachel Schaeffer

Original Name : Ann Dvorak

Gender : Female

Ethel Barrymore

Character Name : Granny

Original Name : Ethel Barrymore

Gender : Female

Cyril Cusack

Character Name : Edward "Limey" Cockerell

Original Name : Cyril Cusack

Gender : Male

Richard Hylton

Character Name : Clyde Maxwell

Original Name : Richard Hylton

Gender : Male

Barbara Bates

Character Name : Barbara Purcell

Original Name : Barbara Bates

Gender : Female

Helen Westcott

Character Name : Susan Haggerty

Original Name : Helen Westcott

Gender : Female

Jeanette Nolan

Character Name : Harriet Purcell

Original Name : Jeanette Nolan

Gender : Female

Ruth Donnelly

Character Name : Mary Fancher

Original Name : Ruth Donnelly

Gender : Female

Harry Carter

Character Name : Rudy Schaeffer

Original Name : Harry Carter

Gender : Male

Mary Carroll

Character Name : Millie Gower (uncredited)

Original Name : Mary Carroll

Gender : Male

Charles Flynn

Character Name : Steve Gower (uncredited)

Original Name : Charles Flynn

Gender : Male

Raymond Greenleaf

Character Name : Tom Fancher (uncredited)

Original Name : Raymond Greenleaf

Gender : Male

Jack Lambert

Character Name : Matt Anderson (uncredited)

Original Name : Jack Lambert

Gender : Male

William F. Leicester

Character Name : Luke Haggerty (uncredited)

Original Name : William F. Leicester

Gender : Male

Tom London

Character Name : Jerry - Posse Member (uncredited)

Original Name : Tom London

Gender : Male

Dale Robertson

Character Name : Narrator (Voice) (uncredited)

Original Name : Dale Robertson

Gender : Male

Houseley Stevenson

Character Name : Samuel 'Pawnee Sam' Barlow (uncredited)

Original Name : Houseley Stevenson

Gender : Male

Bernard Szold

Character Name : Bartender (uncredited)

Original Name : Bernard Szold

Gender : Male

Ray Teal

Character Name : Sheriff Cromwell (uncredited)

Original Name : Ray Teal

Gender : Male

Max Wagner

Character Name : Jack Purcell (uncredited)

Original Name : Max Wagner

Gender : Male

Forrest Burns

Character Name : Minor Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Forrest Burns

Gender : Male

Pat Combs

Character Name : Minor Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Pat Combs

Gender : Male

Frances Endfield

Character Name : Tess (uncredited)

Original Name : Frances Endfield

Gender : Male

Danny Fisher

Character Name : Minor Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Danny Fisher

Gender : Male

Tom Hawthorne

Character Name : Minor Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Tom Hawthorne

Gender : Male

Sandee Marriott

Character Name : Minor Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Sandee Marriott

Gender : Male

John Marshall

Character Name : Bartender (uncredited)

Original Name : John Marshall

Gender : Male

David Post

Character Name : Mike Fancher (uncredited)

Original Name : David Post

Gender : Male

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

The Convict Conundrum. The Secret of Convict Lake is directed by Michael Gordon and collectively written by Anna Hunger, Jack Pollexfen, Oscar Saul and Victor Trivas. It stars Glenn Ford, Gene Tierney, Ethel Barrymore, Zachary Scott, Ann Dvorak, Barbara Bates, Cyril Cusack, Richard Hylton, Helen Westcott, and Jeanette Nolan. Music is by Sol Kaplan and cinematography by Leo Tover. I came here to kill one man. I don't mind killing a couple of others if I have to. It's winter time here at Diablo Lake, and the five convicts who have survived the escape find themselves holed up in a remote village. Their reasons for being there differ, more notable though is that the men of the village are away prospecting, meaning the village is only currently populated by women. It's a fine bubbling broth of scenarios, each convict is different, ranging from unstable psycho type, alpha male, twitchy youngster, simpleton and on to the calm likeable one who doesn't appear to belong in this company. So with the reasons for the men being here established, narrative then jostles with the inner fighting of the convicts, and the various emotional strands of the women folk. Suffice to say there is sexual tensions, mistrust, misrule, macho posturing and of course secrets to be born out. Violence is sporadic but potent upon arrivals (one instance especially grabs you by the throat), and with the mystery of the men's crimes a constant question, intrigue makes for an enjoyable companion. Tech credits are uneven. The studio bound feel of the village sequences which fill out 90% of the pic are an itch, making you hanker for the more expansive snowy terrains that greeted us at story beginning. However, Tover's monochrome photography is suitably mood compliant, even if Kaplan's score isn't, while the lead actors are giving good value to offset some of the histrionics elsewhere. Perhaps not the firecracker it could have been, given all the elements involved - particularly annoying that a strong feminist bent subsides into token play - this is none the less a most interesting piece that holds attention throughout. 7/10

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2024-02-17

Zachary Scott is quite menacing in this chilly tale of half a dozen escaped convicts who find themselves caught up in the wintery weather on the look out for shelter - and for $40,000! When they arrive at a remote village they discover that the men are all away and that under the imperious guidance of "Granny" (Ethel Barrymorre) it's the wives and children who are left. Not that they'd expect much danger in the middle of winter with the snow knee high everywhere around, but they have weapons and know how to use them. The dissolute looking men wander into town and beg for food and shelter, which grudgingly the women give them. "Greer" (Scott) is aware of the rumoured fortune, though, and pretty soon he and the gang are looking to take the cash - and anything else they can get. The one exception amongst this motley crew might be "Cranfield" (Glenn Ford) convicted but adamant he was framed, and by a man from this small community too! A fire seriously dents their stores and the courageous intervention of the men redraws their boundaries and that ends up making things more perilous and just a little more romantic for "Cranfield" too. The alpine atmosphere helps sustain the tension quite well as does the nasty Scott and though it does descend a little into a sentimental sludge at times thanks to an unremarkable effort from the usually stronger Gene Tierney, there's still enough of the threatening criminal mentality to keep it edgy until the rather rushed but fitting denouement. One of Ford's more robust efforts too.