Swamp Water

The Swamp! Sinister - mysterious - it shaped the lives and loves and hates of the people who lived around its edges!!

6.3
19411h 30m

A hunter happens upon a fugitive and his daughter living in a Georgia swamp. He falls in love with the girl and persuades the fugitive to return to town.

Production

Logo for 20th Century Fox

Cast

Photo of Walter Brennan

Walter Brennan

Tom Keefer

Photo of Walter Huston

Walter Huston

Thursday Ragan

Photo of Anne Baxter

Anne Baxter

Julie Keefer

Photo of Dana Andrews

Dana Andrews

Ben Ragan

Photo of Virginia Gilmore

Virginia Gilmore

Mabel MacKenzie

Photo of John Carradine

John Carradine

Jesse Wick

Photo of Eugene Pallette

Eugene Pallette

Jeb McKane

Photo of Ward Bond

Ward Bond

Tim Dorson

Photo of Russell Simpson

Russell Simpson

Marty McCord

Photo of Joe Sawyer

Joe Sawyer

Hardy Ragan

Photo of Paul E. Burns

Paul E. Burns

Tulle McKenzie

Photo of Frank Austin

Frank Austin

Fred Ulm

Photo of Matt Willis

Matt Willis

Miles Tonkin

Photo of Mae Marsh

Mae Marsh

Mrs. McCord (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

"Ben" (Dana Andrews) is taking part in a manhunt through the swamp to track down long since escapee "Tom Keefer" (Walter Brennan) who has been hiding out there for many a year. His dog spots a deer drinking by the side of the river and jumps off their boat into the Okefenokee after it. Despite the sagacious counsel of his father (Walter Huston), he decides to set off into the undergrowth to try and reunite with his mutt. There he encounters their previous quarry and discovers things might not be so straightforward as he'd previously thought; especially when he returns and meets the fugitive's daughter "Julie" (Anne Baxter) and has to cross swords with the scheming "Dorson" brothers - Ward Bond and Guinn Williams (whom I swear has more than a passing resemblance to George W. Bush!). The story has an inevitability about it, but Brennan and Andrews, not for the first time, gel well - as do Andrews and the slightly doey eyed Baxter. Eugene Pallette - or at least his inimitable voice - helps keep it moving, alongside John Carradine and a gentle performance from Mary Howard making for an untaxing, but enjoyable enough thriller with some lovely cinematography and real life alligators!

You've reached the end.