White Feather | |
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Directed by | Robert D. Webb |
Produced by | Robert L. Jacks |
Screenplay by |
Delmer Daves Leo Townsend |
Based on |
My Great-Aunt Appearing Day 1952 story in Lilliput magazine by John Prebble |
Starring |
Robert Wagner Jeffrey Hunter John Lund Debra Paget |
Music by | Hugo Friedhofer |
Cinematography | Lucien Ballard |
Edited by | George A. Gittens |
Distributed by | Twentieth Century Fox |
Release date
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Running time
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102 mins. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1,125,000 |
Box office | $1.65 million(US rentals) |
White Feather is a 1955 Technicolor CinemaScope western film directed by Robert D. Webb and starring Robert Wagner. The movie was filmed in Durango, Mexico. The story is based on fact; however, the particulars of the plot and the characters of the story are fictional.
The story of the peace mission from the US cavalry to the Cheyenne Indians in Wyoming during the 1870s. The Cheyenne agree to leave their hunting grounds so that white settlers can move in to search for gold. Colonel Lindsay (John Lund) and land surveyor Josh Tanner (Robert Wagner) are in charge of the resettlement, but the mission is threatened when Appearing Day (Debra Paget), the sister of Little Dog (Jeffrey Hunter) and fiancé of Cheyenne tribesman American Horse (Hugh O'Brian), falls for Tanner. When Appearing Day runs away to join Tanner at the fort, American Horse follows and while he is captured, he is later freed by Little Dog and the two ride off to the hills. Tanner, Col. Lindsay and a troop of soldiers go to the Cheyenne camp where Chief Broken Hand (Eduard Franz) has agreed to sign a peace treaty. After the signing, a warrior rides up and throws down a knife with a white feather attached, a declaration of war by American Horse and Little Dog against all the soldiers. Tanner convinces the Chief to allow the matter to be resolved between themselves.