Oklahoma Territory

The Cherokee Vengeance Cry Thundered Out And Only One Man's Courage Could Silence It... A Man Called Houston!

6.7
19601h 7m

Temple Houston (Sam Houston's son) who is the DA with a sense of Justice. He is located in Fort Smith, Ark and works with Judge Parker in 1872. His area includes the Oklahoma Territory which was the Indian territory at that time. Chief Buffalo Horn who is falsely accused of murder.

Production

Logo for United Artists

Cast

Photo of Bill Williams

Bill Williams

Temple Houston

Photo of Gloria Talbott

Gloria Talbott

Ruth Red Hawk

Photo of Ted de Corsia

Ted de Corsia

Chief Buffalo Horn

Photo of Walter Sande

Walter Sande

Marshal Pete Rosslyn

Photo of Grandon Rhodes

Grandon Rhodes

George Blackwell

Photo of Thomas Browne Henry

Thomas Browne Henry

Judge Isaac Parker

Photo of Charles Stevens

Charles Stevens

Tom Badger

Photo of Walter Baldwin

Walter Baldwin

Ward Harlan

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

Houston We Have A Temple!

Oklahoma Territory is directed by Edward L. Cahn and written by Orville H. Hampton. It stars Bill Williams, Gloria Talbott, Ted de Corsia and Grant Richards. Music is by Albert Glasser and cinematography by Walter Strenge.

Temple Houston was a most interesting real life character, one who is very much worth reading up on. This picture is not based on any real facts, but the essence of the real man is very much evident. Clocking in at under 70 minutes, Cahn's movie is devoid of pointless filler and extraneous wastage.

The story is intelligent as it tells of the persecution of a Cherokee Chief because shifty factions are operating behind the scenes for their own ends. The legal aspects are intriguing as well, as Houston -as the DA for the territory - has to first prosecute Buffalo Horn for murder, only to then be forced into being his defence council - with not exactly legal methods wonderfully brought into play.

In truth it's all a bit fanciful and nutty, but consider the low budget and you find a smart screenplay surrounded by a nice looking film (Calif locales), with the wily Cahn keeping it all together rather handsomely. 6.5/10

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