The Guns of Fort Petticoat (1957) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
28 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Alamo, Rorke's Drift, only with lots of cool women!
hitchcockthelegend22 January 2009
Lt. Frank Hewitt absconds from the Union Army to warn fellow Texans that Indian attacks are inevitable due to a massacre at Sand Creek. What he finds is that all the men are away fighting in the Confederate Army so the homesteaders are mainly made up of women. Having to first earn their respect and trust, he convinces them to prepare for an Indian attack at a dilapidated mission station, teaching the majority of them to shoot and fend for themselves in hand to hand combat. Badly outnumbered when the day comes, it will take more than the hand of god to stop this from being another massacre to further darken the South.

What an absolute blast this picture is, for sure it's steeped in "B" movie tropes, but led by the amiable Audie Murphy as Hewitt, the picture is certainly most engaging and never lets the discerning viewer down. Perhaps struggling to shake off the need to be overtly serious, it is none the less dramatic at times and not without serious moments that put the ladies of the piece firmly in a good light. It's not a feminist picture of course because the characters still need their men to be with them, while Hewitt naturally creates a little pitter-patter amongst some of the women. What the picture chiefly portrays is that these gals can step up to the plate when required, and more crucially, the film doesn't rely on sentimentality to raise the story's worth.

Kathryn Grant (soon to me Mrs Bing Crosby), Hope Emerson, Jeanette Nolan, Peggy Maley and Patricia Tiernan are just some of the female cast that brighten up the play. From the intriguing training sequences as Hewitt gets tough with the gals, to the thrilling rush of the Indian attack on the mission, The Guns Of Fort Petticoat is a very enjoyable Western that most certainly doesn't waste the time of the viewer. 7/10
17 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Above average western with Audie Murphy as a deserter Lieutenant whe defends a heroic stand plenty of women against Indian attackers
ma-cortes3 March 2020
Opposing his commanding officer's decision to attack a group of innocent Indians and wipe them out , Lt. Frank Hewitt (Audie Murphy) leaves his post , while the commandant carries out a brutal slaughter , the famous ¨Sand Creek massacre¨. Then Frank heads home to Texas , there he gets a chilly reception back home however . With most of the folkmen away having drafted in the Confederate army , Frank, the Union officer, is seen by the local women as a traitor . Hewitt knows an impending Indian attack , as they will send all of the tribes on the warpath and subsequently Frank wants to forewarn everyone. He meets some homesteaders , all women (Kathryn Grant , Hope Emerson, Jeff Donnell , Jeanette Nolan, Patricia Tiernan , among others) whose men are away fighting in the Confederate Army to take refuge in an abandoned mission and old fort . He overcomes initial distrust and eventually convinces them . They have to defend a cavalry fort while their men are away, enlisted at army . Problems emerge when other women arrive at the besieged mission and their different relation among them . Hewitt trains them to fight and shoot in anticipation of the attack. The only other man at the fort runs away o save his scalp and ends up leading the Indians back to the mission. As they defend against violent furies , Indian attacks , a thousand of perils and hardships . Some were hussies in silk who became heroines in calico . Surrounded and outnumbered, the defenders prepare for the final assault .As the Indians threaten to overwhelm . Of all frontier annals .. Here's the heroic stand that stands alone¡ The thundering story that challenges all filmdom to match its excitement¡ GOOD WOMEN...BAD WOMEN...BRAWLING WOMEN...BRAVE WOMEN! They were all soldiers in skirts!

This fresh , genial picture gets Western action , shootouts , agreeable outdoors , a lot of attractive roles and turns to be quite entertaining . It's a medium budget film with good actors , technicians, production values and pleasing results . A good Western by the professional and craftsman filmmaker George Marshall who brought ¨When the Dalton rode¨and ¨Destry rides again¨. Excitement and entertainment mount in the closing stages as the brave women begin to fall little by little , one by one , while defending a cavalry fort . The main and enjoyable plot line results to be the Union Army deserter, Lt. Hewitt, trains a rag-tag band of all-female homesteaders to defend themselves against a Comanche tribe on the warpath , as he convinces them of the perils that lie ahead and trains them to repel the attack that will eventually come. Gritty and decently written Western with interesting screenplay by Walter Doniger , based on a story by William Harrison , exploring the anguish of women , the hard relationship among them and including jarring bursts of action and emotion . This is a thrilling tale of a valiant and a hard-bitten lieutenant assembling a detail of misfit women to hold-off rampaging Indians . This is a moving story about a surrounded mission/fort and director takes a fine penned script creating a women-cavalry-Indians tale that is far from ordinary , exploring the distresses and desperation of some fainthearted women . This Western is predictable and conventional but entertaining . It is an uneven Western with a plot that several times reminds ¨Beau Geste¨in female style and following an typical American style , such as ¨Chuka¨ and ¨Only the valiant¨ by Gordon Douglas , ¨Mutiny at Fort Sharpe¨ by Fernando Cerchio with Broderick Crawford , all of them dealing with forts also besieged by Indians , as well as taking parts here and there of ¨Westward the woman¨by William A Wellman with Robert Taylor , Denise Darcel . It's the regular plot concerning a motley team stranded by hostile Indians , unfortunately, despite a few good elements like these , I didn't overall care for this movie that results to be decent one , but including some flaws . The movie is sometimes slow-moving , and the characters mostly act alike . As the picture contains nice moments but partially unsatisfying , that's why of the excessive scenes shot at the claustrophobic environment of the mission interior . Audie Murphy gives a nice acting as Lt. Frank Hewitt who deserts the Union Army to warn former Texas neighbors of impending Indian attacks triggered by Army massacre. The WWII hero Murphy won more than 10 medals , being the most decorated American soldier , including Congressional Medal of Honor and he was prized by 5 decorative medals by France and Belgium , post-WWII . Murphy starred a great number of Westerns as The kid from Texas , Cimarron kid , Gun point , Night passage , The gunrunners , Posse from hell , Gunfight at Comanche , Rifles Apaches , The unforgiven, Legend of Sam Ward , Whispering Smith , 40 guns at Apache pass , Texas Kid . Support cast is pretty well , as Audie Murphy being well accompanied by a fine -mostly women- cast , such as : Kathryn Grant , Hope Emerson , Jeanette Nolan , Jeff Donnell , Patricia Tiernan , Peggy Maley , Isobel Elsom . And the bad guys and good guys include a whole crop of familar faces you love to see , such as : Sean McClory , Ray Teal , Francis McDonald , John Dierkes, Nestor Paiva , the usual nasty James Griffith and Charles Horvath who usually plays Indian roles , here as Yellow Horse .

It provides a rousing and stirring musical score by Mischa Bakaleinikoff , Columbia Pictures's regular , though uncredited. It contains brilliant and colorful cinematography in Technicolor by Ray Rennahan . Being shot on location in Old Tucson , Arizona, Amado, Arizona,Sierrita Mountains, Ironwood Forest National Monument, Tucson Mountains, Sonoran Desert, Picacho Peak State Park, Sedona , San Xavier, Flagstaff, Arizona . The motion picture well produced by Harry Joe Brown and Audie Murphy himself , though uncredited , being directed in sure visual eye by George Marshall . Pretty good serious and acceptable Western with George Marshall's inspired direction and a sensational cast . Marshall realized a variety films of all kind of genres , though especially Western , the best are starred by James Stewart and Glenn Ford . Marshall directed Western along half century , his first Western was ¨Wild gold¨(1934) and he subsequently made his masterpiece ¨Destry rides again¨(1939) in which combines action , charmingly natural story , humor and drama ; in 1951 directed a new version under title ¨ Frenchie ¨ with Eddie Murphy and Marie Blanchard in similar characters to James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich . As Marshall introduces comicalness in realist Western , including a little genre satire on the conventional Western thrown in for good measure . As he directed Western with funniness such as ¨Texas¨ also starred by Glenn Ford and Edgar Buchanan . He went on filming parody/western such as ¨Fancy pants¨(1950) , ¨Advance to the rear¨(1964), and musical Western as ¨Red Garters¨and ¨The second greatest sex¨. Other Westerns he directed are the following ones : ¨When Dalton rode¨, ¨Valley of the sun¨, ¨The savage¨, ¨Pillars of sky¨, ¨the guns of Fort Petticoat¨ and the episode titled ¨The railway¨ from ¨How the West was won¨ . Rating 6.5/10. Better -than -average. Well worth seeing . The picture will appeal to Eddie Murphy fans .
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
The brave Lieutenant and his fearless women's army!!!
elo-equipamentos31 July 2020
On the sacred ground where were shot El Dorado, Walk the Proud Land, The Badlanders, the Deadly Companions, just named a few, also served to Guns of Fort Petticoat, plainly an unusual western in every sense, when a bold southern Texan Lt. Frank Hewitt (Murphy) joined in the Union Army during the Civil war, sounds contradictory, however when a Indians uprising took place, he willfully defects to return to Texas at Sand Creek to warning all settlers in time, which have only women, due their husband still fight on the war, notwithstanding he was treated overtly as renegade, all these inhabitants avoiding his degrading presence, although after farm's woman has been killed by the Comanche, they finally are convinced that have to join under orders of the Lt. Frank at small Church, also added and strengthened by passing through prostitutes, together they are strong to face the Comanche attack, meanwhile each one has to stare your own matters, as the missing husband, the pregnant and unwanted single woman, the religious woman who refuse to kill anyone and the brave woman the Sergeant Hanna Lacey (Hope Emerson) in outstanding performance, finally Lt. Frank having side by side with the boy Bax Leatham working as cupid between he and the pretty girl Anne Martin (Kathryn Grant), awesome and charming Columbia production!!!

Resume:

First watch: 1999 / How many: 3 / Source: Cable TV-DVD / Rating: 7.75.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
comical, yet good, serious story
daviddaphneredding9 September 2014
When I first saw the movie title as a boy, I thought it might be something almost ridiculous, but now that I've seen it my thoughts have been somewhat amended. The storyline is brief: during the Civil War an army officer (played well by the veteran western actor Audie Murphy) leads a group of women from Texas against hostile, attacking Indians who want to destroy the old fort where the women are found. Again, I was ready to laugh when I saw the title, but I do not think that in real life I would have wanted to tangle with any of these women who, led by Murphy, became practically sharpshooters. They held off Indians and outlaws well. This cinematic piece was exciting and the action good, which is shown through the fact that the women were very emotional. In one point the matter of killing is addressed, so in one place the movie is controversial. Because of the beautiful scenery, exciting western action, and good story, this has become a favorite western of mine.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Audie Get Your Gun!
Poseidon-37 October 2003
The title of this film almost sounds like it will be a comedy.....sort of like "F Troop" meets "Petticoat Junction". It is, however, a relatively serious affair with some decent action sequences and some (sometimes unintentional) amusing moments. Murphy stars as a Cavalry Lieutenant who deserts his post in order to go a warn the people of his nearby hometown of an impending Indian attack. Unfortunately, virtually every man is gone from the area and the remaining women all resent him for wearing the blue instead of the gray uniform. Once the Indians start to make their mark, the ladies begin to change their mind and Murphy rounds them all up in an abandoned mission, determined to convert them into soldiers for their own sake. An already slightly campy film (check out the Indian grandma doing a child's hair at her camp right before a marauding cavalry unit appears), gets even loonier at this point. The mere idea of women brandishing guns and fighting physically must have been otherworldly in 1957. The enterprise is treated with all the expected attention and detail for the curio that it is. Murphy refers to the ladies as "men" and appoints sergeants, etc... He drills them in target practice, hand to hand combat and skirt-tucking (turning skirts into makeshift pants!) Naturally, there is every type of woman imaginable.....the old love, the new love, the haughty rich bitch, the one "in trouble", the religious fanatic, the tart, etc... What gives the film a great boost in the arm is the irascible, irreplaceable presence of burly, sarcastic Emerson as the leader of the women. Always intriguing to watch, she gets a plum role here as a bossy, tough, but good-hearted pioneer woman. It also helps that the film isn't dumb enough to suggest that this sort of thing wouldn't lead to casualties. So the unusual aspect of seeing women holding a fort with guns is accented and enhanced by seeing some of them take a fall as well. This adds to the realism of a film which is, at heart, pretty trite and coy. There are some fairly tough scenes and the Indian attack is actually pretty tense. (And it's awful nice of the Indians to wait and WAIT before coming until Murphy has trained all the gals, drained the water from the well, taught them how to make "bombs" and ammunition and solved various other problems!) Maley as a saloon singer and Elsom as a society matron help push the camp envelope. A few other ladies (like the one who gets upset and literally gobbles like a turkey with her face in the ground) take it even further, but Nolan rips it open. She is downright embarrassing as a devout Christian who clutches her Bible and spouts messages of nonviolence. However, when push comes to shove and arrows come to necks, she has a freak-out scene that is one for the books! Even with the pat situations and mundane dialogue, there's a certain curiosity value to the film and scattered laughs throughout (Wade, as Elsom's maid, has a real zinger of a closing line for her character!) Grant would later become better known as Mrs. Bing Crosby.
16 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Audie's Amazon Army
bkoganbing6 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Audie Murphy, a Texan here as well as in real life, stayed with the Union Army during the Civil War. He's drawn duty out west fighting Indians instead of Confederates.

The real life Sand Creek Massacre of the Cheyenne has occurred and there is a total uprising on the frontier. Murphy goes AWOL from the army and back to his part of Texas to help the remaining people there as most of the young men are in the Confederate army.

After a lot of convincing he's got himself a female troop that proves themselves quite worthy standing up to Indians and renegade white men.

The Guns at Fort Petticoat is one of Audie Murphy's best B westerns in his career. Murphy turned out to be a real acting talent, if he hadn't been, his career wouldn't have lasted as long as it did.

He gets some good support here from that distaff group of players assembled at the old mission where they have to stand off the Cheyenne. Hope Emerson is the second in command and as always Hope is a formidable presence on the screen.

While this was playing in theaters Kathryn Grant became the second Mrs. Bing Crosby. I happened to meet her a few years ago when she was on a book tour promoting a book about her marriage with Bing. She mentioned that she liked The Guns at Fort Petticoat and wished she owned a copy of the film. If I had known I would have bought my VHS copy and given it to her. She should be proud of her work in this film.

There are four nasty men in this film as well. Sean McClory plays a no good rat of a human being who's impregnated Jeff Donnell and runs out on her. Then there are three of the nastiest outlaws you'd ever want to meet in James Griffith, Nestor Paiva, and Ray Teal. Audie and the women have to deal with them also.

There is one terribly touching scene that moistens my eyes every time I watch The Guns at Fort Petticoat. One adolescent girl's mom is killed during one of the attacks. Actresses Isobel Elsom and Peggy Miley play a southern dowager and a saloon entertainer respectively. Both of them comfort the young girl at the hour of her tragedy and in so doing prove they have a lot more character than originally thought. A really class piece of acting, brought off by Director George Marshall.

Kathryn Crosby, if you happen to read this review, contact me and I'll be glad to give you my copy of The Guns at Fort Petticoat.
14 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Audie Murphy leads an army of Texan women!
Tweekums20 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This film opens with Union Army officer Lt. Frank Hewitt encountering a group of Comanche; they are off the reservation without permission but as they are unarmed and peaceful he allows them to continue on their way. When his CO, Col. Chivington, hears about this he sets off to teach the Comanche a lesson about doing what they are told... this 'lesson' is Sand Creek Massacre. Hewitt knows that after such an atrocity the Indians will understandable go on the war path and one place they are likely to strike is his home in Texas. Knowing this he deserts and heads south. Wearing Union blue he is not too welcome when he arrives in Confederate Texas but after an attack leaves one woman dead the other people start to believe him. Since the war is on there is only one man left in town and he is clearly only out to save his own skin... if he is save the women he must get them ready to fight.

B-western regular Audie Murphy puts in a fine performance as Lt. Hewett; the more I see him in films like this the more I'm surprised he better known. The women are a varied bunch and the actresses do well enough even though this is clearly Murphy's film. The action is fairly solid and if you are expecting the women to prevail without taking a single casualty you will be surprised as quite a few die. There were of course a few flaws; it did seem strange that Hewett went into Confederate Texas in his Union uniform, equally it seemed strange that all but one of the men would have left the settlement; I'd have thought there would be a few old men at the very least although accept that it was necessary for the narrative. The epilogue where Hewitt returns to his unit and avoids punishment when the women turn up to vouch for him did seem sill after the action that had gone before. Over all it was pretty entertaining though and I'm sure fans of B-westerns looking for something different will enjoy this. It is of interest to note that while this is obviously a work of fiction Col. Chivington was a real person and he was involved in the Sand Creek Massacre in Colorado, where his troops slaughtered numerous Indians; mainly women and children.
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Audie and his "Men"....
tim-764-29185626 April 2012
Audie Murphy calls his posse of women, his 'men'; they're armed, laid up in a sort of fortified mission and awaiting Indian attack after a reprisal.

Lt. Frank Hewitt, (Murphy) is an Army deserter and on the run, back to his home in Texas. He has refused to take part in an attack on Indians at Sand Creek but when said Indians are out for revenge for the attack, he chances upon this ramshackle group of women and children.

Much of the (shortish) film is taken up by trying to prepare the women for imminent battle. Giving them firing practice with rifles and generally a battle of wits and the sexes as he has to bully and cajole them into new thinking and tactics. Hope Emerson, at 6'2" and 230 pounds, a formidable lady by any standards takes to the challenge with gusto and enthusiasm, whilst others, especially ones with strong religious beliefs cannot abhor fighting and don't so easily, whilst Kathryn Grant, a young feisty woman, becomes romantically entwined with Frank Hewitt.

It's quite a good film and quite likable. There's good comarderie and dialogue and some neat action scenes when they come. However, Audie Murphy never really struck with me, his persona, or perceived one always seeming a little bland. He looks just too boyish and sweet to be bossing these women around, whereas someone with more gravitas and snarl would make for a more interesting film.

That's just a personal view and I know Audie Murphy has his fans out there, too.
3 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
southern who joined union during civil war returns home to rally women against raiding Indians
dougbrode13 March 2006
As every Audie Murphy buff knows, his best western was the near-classic No Name On the Bullet, with perhaps Destry a close second. But in the top three (setting the short but brilliant Red Badge of Courage and the autobiographical To Hell and Back, an A movie, aside), Guns of Fort Petticoat is at the top of the list, owing to splendid outdoor action sequences, a smart sense of humor that doesn't allow anyone to take this all too seriously, and . . . to put it bluntly . . . sex appeal. Also, a political consciousness, with Murphy a) going north, despite his being a southwesterner, to fight in the civil war because he's against slavery, and b) his attempt to try and stop the Sand Creek Massacre and save Native American lives. (One historical error: The massacre was not perpetrated by 'regular U.S. army,' as the film suggests, but by a self-styled civilian-soldier group called a 'militia outfit' though really noting more than racist vigilantes.) Knowing that an Indian war is impending, Murphy returns to the war torn southwest and, with men absent, trains women to fight and defend themselves. Something of a feminist western, way ahead of its time, but (thankfully) no polemics, only action, romance, and surprisingly effective comedy. Kathryn Grant makes an adorable female lead for Audie.
20 out of 23 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"A man fights for what he thinks is right."
classicsoncall11 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The picture opens with a take on the historical Sand Creek Massacre which occurred on November 29th, 1864. It was accurately depicted as being led by Colonel John Chivington, though in the actual battle Chivington's forces totaled about two hundred fifty men, a lot larger than this film represented. The number of Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians slaughtered varies with the source, but most of the estimates come in around a hundred thirty five, with most of them being women and children. The colonel who led the attack was particularly hateful of Indians and was quoted back in the day saying - "I have come to kill Indians, and believe it is right and honorable to use any means under God's heaven to kill Indians." Quite appropriately, the event also goes by the name of Chivington's Massacre.

With that, Lieutenant Frank Hewitt (Audie Murphy), disgusted with the actions of his commanding officer, deserts the Cavalry and heads south into Texas, attempting to warn whoever he can that a Cheyenne uprising is imminent. Finding the border town of Jonesville occupied primarily by women whose husbands are off fighting for the Confederacy, Hewitt is confronted with derision and disdain for wearing a Union uniform. It takes the murder of a local woman by a Cheyenne to convince the rest of the women to abandon town and bond together for protection at a run down mission under Hewitt's direction and training.

My favorite character here has to be 'good as three men' Hannah Lacey, admirably portrayed by the feisty Hope Emerson. Hannah gets right into the spirit of things at the mission fort, calling all her female charges 'men', as in 'Let's go men' when it's time to buckle down and do the hard work required to get ready for an Indian attack. Hewitt placed her second in command, and who was going to argue? In this story though, you didn't get a sense of how big actress Emerson actually was, six foot two and two hundred thirty pounds in her heyday. If you get the chance, you really have to catch her in the 1950 prison movie "Caged", it'll give you nightmares for a week!

There's a side story regarding a trio of outlaws that interferes with Hewitt's command of 'Fort Petticoat' but they're dispatched rather quickly once the Cheyenne figure out their game. When it comes time to defend the mission, the women are up to the task, even while taking on casualties. The picture is quite realistic in that regard, showing women and even a young kid getting shot before Hewitt's calculated move to ambush a Cheyenne medicine man and string him up to stop the warring tribe, thereby suggesting it was not a good day to die.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
A lively idea but...
rc22316 February 2001
A Unionist deserter (earnestly portrayed by Murphy) has to whip a group of women into shape to fight off an Indian attack. A lively idea leads to a (mostly) lively film. The trouble is we've got Indians, the Civil War, evil officers, religious nutters, Calamity Jane types... generally no stereotype is left unturned. (5
2 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Enjoyable Western
jeremycrimsonfox23 April 2019
The Guns Of Fort Petticoat is a nice little western flick. Telling the story of Lt. Frank Hewitt, a man who deserts the Union when his colonel decides to attack friendly Indians returning to Sand Creek, resulting in the Sand Creek massacre, he has to prepare a townstead of women to defend themselves as Indians commit attacks in the state in retaliation to the massacre.

This is a neat movie. The idea of women defending their homestead is a bold move, but it works out. The story has everything to expect in a western: action, romance, suspense. If you never saw this, I recommend doing so.
8 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
" Audie's Army Wears Petticoats "
PamelaShort10 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Audie Murphy plays Union officer Lt. Frank Hewitt, who disobeys his officer's orders to massacre Native Americans at Sand Creek. He deserts his unit as he knows the massacre will only incite the tribe to take revenge upon American citizens. He heads home for Texas, where his friends and neighbours consider him a traitor, for defecting the calvary. With the proof of an impending tribal attack, Hewitt must train the women to defend themselves, as all the men are away at war. He trains them at an abandoned missionary, and when the angry Indians arrive, the women defeat them. Hewitt the deserter is found not-guilty during court-martial proceedings, however his former commander is not so lucky, and is charged with the Sand Creek carnage. This film is surprisingly very good. The cast gives solid performances, with the stand-out mention of Hope Emerson and young Kathryn Grant playing Murphy's feisty love interest. There are some good tense and gripping scenes, that take place during the attack on the mission. Murphy's performance is cool as he whips the woman into fighting shape. I really enjoyed this entertaining film and suggest it's worth a look.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Reckon a woman can shoot as good as a man.
rmax30482317 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
My TV Guide, with which I sometimes find myself in agreement, gave this three stars out of four and I thought, "Why not?" It wasn't a masterpiece. It had no poetry. It was worth three stars, I guess, if you consider the genre -- inexpensive Western with no bankable big stars. But, really, the plot is rudimentary and derivative. By 1957 the war movies had played themselves out, but this film simply transposes the story of a small heroic band of soldiers finally triumphing over a horde of savage enemy soldiers, only in this case the heroic soldiers are all women and the savage enemy is the Comanche instead of the Japanese or Germans.

It's the Civil War period and Colonel Chivington has just wiped out an Indian village. This brutality puts the white man in disfavor with the Comanche and provides them with a revenge motive. Lieutenant Audie Murphy deserts his command and rides to Texas to warn the settlers. He winds up at a decrepit mission in the middle of nowhere. It's occupied only by about two dozen women and a few kids. Murphy's job? To whip these women out of their winsome civilian ways and make soldiers out of them.

He designates the monumental Hope Emerson sergeant. The others he calls by their rank or their last names. He teaches them how to load and shoot a rifle. He teaches them martial arts. It's almost funny, the way Murphy goes around barking orders -- "Sergeant, you take the west window. Martin, go over to your post. The rest of you come with me." Even when the Comanche finally do show up there's something vaguely comic about the battle. The Indians ride in merry circles around the mission, like horses on a carousel. Even the gun shots and the wounds and the death are overdone to the point of absurdity, and it owes nothing to the jokes about exploding rifles. There is a kind of balked romance between Murphy and the rather pretty Kathryn Grant but it's dispensable.

None of the performances stand out, although Hope Emerson, who is roughly the size of the Colossus of Rhodes, is unforgettable as always. Man, you ought to see her in "Cry of the City." Whew.

The photography looks hasty, and probably was. The settings -- Old Tucson with its faux adobe walls -- is attractive enough, but there is a scene in which Sean McClory, as a cowardly traitor, is talking to his girl friend through the barred windows of a jail. The young lady is standing outside and is adequately lighted but McClory is in this dark dump and no viewer could help experiencing a susurrus of disquiet while thinking, "Hey, that guy in the jail has an orange light shining on him from inside!" What I mean is, it's pretty clumsy.

Overall, if you don't expect anything in the way of originality, it's a way to while away an hour and a half without feeling too much pain.
1 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Marvellous film enjoyed every minute.
pamelagittins17 November 2002
i have seen this film several times. also, i am looking forward to seeing it again on television this week.

my only regret is that when we visited Arlington cemetery in 1990 we did not visit Audie Murphy's grave.
11 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Hope Emerson, frontier woman
Reedmalloy4 September 2014
An earlier reviewer writes that the title of this Audie Murphy oater suggests a comedy--"F Troop" meets "Petticoat Junction." He can be forgiven this wit since both of those sitcom inanities post-date this western by many years.

But in a way he was not far wrong. While not a comedy it has comedic elements, as all good action films should, and it's a merger of two stories that could be described as "The Alamo" meets "Westward the Women".

The latter is an (apparently) little known film by William Wellman made six years earlier. Robert Taylor has the Audie Murphy role as wagon-master Buck Wyatt leading a group of mail-order brides from Chicago to California. He's also a hard-nosed martinet whose crew deserts him when they can't obey his orders to stay away from the women, thus setting up a similar scenario. Although not the only male guiding the wagon train west (there are four), the setup is pretty much the same as "Fort Petticoat".

The common bond here is Hope Emerson ("Sergeant" Hannah Lacey), a true pro. She was also Patience Hawley in Wellman's film, playing the same character in both, and it's a good one. I believe MGM hoped to establish Emerson as another Marjorie Main but comparisons are invidious and Emerson, a wonderful actress (see "Caged"), inevitably came off second to Main. Sadly, she died a few years after this movie was made.

Many of the same elements populate both movies, particularly in how the man trains the women, who grow beyond his tutelage (and leadership) after overcoming difficult odds, but "Fort Petticoat" manages to come up with a few new turns of its own.

As for Audie, he does well--reprising Buck Wyatt in spirit but remaining true to his own personality. He plays as well off Emerson as Taylor did in "Westward" and both make this an entertaining movie.

This movie can be frequently found on Encore Westerns but if you can catch "Westward the Women" on TCM, I urge you to do so. It's a bit grittier but the two are a credit to each other thanks to Hope Emerson.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Chivington's folly, and Audie's dollies
weezeralfalfa25 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
One of several films that includes the infamous massacre of a peaceful Cheyenne village at Sand Creek, CO, simply because it was the most accessible location for the perpetrator: Colonel Chivington of the Colorado Territorial Militia(herein claimed to be of the US army). Other films include "Massacre at Sand Creek" and "Soldier Blue". Also, partway through the film, we switched from marauding Cheyenne to marauding Comanche, who would be more relevant to Texas. I'm sure there must be other films where a mass of women took over the usual duties of soldiers because the men were needed elsewhere. I'm familiar with "Wild Women", in which a group of women inmates of a fort prison cell are pressed into service in lower Texas, barricading an abandoned village to fight a Mexican patrol. Another example is "The Man from the Alamo", where Glenn Ford trains the women in a wagon train to fire on a Mexican patrol, after the men are called to join Sam Houston.

Audie rides around the north Texas plains, convincing menless women to go to an old broken down mission for safety. Besides Audie, the only man in the mission was Kettle. He came to no good when he stole a horse and rode to his 3 buddies, who promptly strung him up after he told about the women. They came to the mission , but the women scared them off after it was obvious they were up to no good. But, they soon ran into a band of marauding Comanche. Telling them about the women, they rode together back to the mission. But the women had hidden themselves well, so that a superficial look by the Comanche failed to discover them. The 3 men were killed for leading the Comanche astray. Soon there after, a gun was accidentally discharged in the mission, alerting the Comanche that someone was there. The Comanche returned and fired on the fort, killing several women, until Audie sneaked out and killed their medicine man, in the rear, stringing up his body in front of the fort.

In the finale, Audie is court martialed by his Union post for desertion and insubordination. But the women somehow got past the guards, into the interrogation room, corroborating what Audie said about their beating off the Comanche. The General decided to drop the charges, and instead served Chivington with a court martial for leading the massacre of Cheyenne. Historically, Chivington was not court martialed. However, he was roundly criticized. He claimed he killed around 200 warriors, but other witnesses said they were mostly women, children and old men. He claimed the massacre would cow the Indians into stopping their raids on settlers, but it had the opposite effect.

See it in color at YouTube
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Enjoyable low budget western turns the genre upside down
AlsExGal19 October 2017
In 1864, in a Colorado fort, Lt. Frank Hewitt (Murphy) deserts after failing to talk his commanding officer, Col. Chivington (Ainslie Pryor) out of attacking an Indian village that has only women and children in it. The village is located on Sand Creek. Chivington and his company massacre the inhabitants, and their male survivors swear vengeance. The rest of the film is about Hewitt's race to inform the female settlers and children (the men are away fighting the Civil War) that they are in danger. To complicate matters, the settlers are Confederate, and Hewitt is on the Union side.

Murphy is earnest and sincere in his role, and it's a relief to see him lose his temper in a film for a change. Kathryn Grant made no impression whatsoever, aside from being pretty. As Hannah Lacey, Emerson was the best player in the film. Whether she was ready to kill Hewitt at first sight, or turning thirty some women into soldiers, she was a funny, welcome presence.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
One of Audie's best '50's westerns
coltras353 February 2021
Audie Murphy plays a lieutenant who deserts the army so he can return to his Texas hometown to warn them about the impending Comanche attack, and ends up training a group of women who vary in degrees in personality, to defend their position. That's just an arduous task than the actual impending attack. A highly enjoyable Murphy western with great performances all round, especially from Hope Emerson, who is elected as sergeant. Plenty of action, suspense. Audie is really good here and it's pity he didn't stick with Harry Joe Brown ( who produced the great Randolph Scott films). Along with Tumbleweed, drums across the river and Ride clear of Diablo, the guns of Petticoat is one of his best 50's westerns.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
These ladies learn how to go in to battle!
cgvsluis13 June 2022
This is the story of a Texan boy who joins the northern Yankee military and becomes Lt. Frank Hewitt, played by Audie Murphy. He overhears a tribe of natives who are planning to head south over the Texas boarder and cause problems, he tries to get his superior officer to listen but doesn't succeed. So, when things escalate Lt. Frank goes awol to notify his fellow Texans to get prepared for an Indian raid...only they won't listen to a northern "traitor" until it's too late. He ends up rounding up the survivors who all end up being women, hence the title, to hold of the natives at the local mission. This is when the story really starts...Frank has to train this motley group of women to defend themselves and it is a lot of work!

Hope Emerson and Kathryn Grant are wonderful in this western drama. They don't pull any punches toughening up these frontier women and it was refreshing to see in a western.

If you like westerns and strong female characters, this might be a film for you.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Audie Murphy at His Peak...Off-Beat...Ahead-of-its-Time...Upside-Down Western...A Hidden Gem
LeonLouisRicci11 August 2021
This 1957 MovIe Arrived when the War-Hero's Status in Hollywood was at an All Time High.

A Guaranteed Audience-Fan-Base had Developed for His Above Average Output of Colorful Westerns.

This was Certainly the Most Off-Beat, Ahead-of-its-Time Offering in His Usually Conservative but Sometimes Edgy Style. Taking a Feminist Stance with an Outrageous Idea in Context.

The Silly Title Foreshadows Failure but just the Opposite Happened.

If Anyone Thinks this is Going to be Powder-Puff-Fluff, Think Again.

There are Strong Individual Characters that Fight, Suffer, Bleed, and Die.

The Violence is Not Toned Down, if Anything, it is Ramped-Up.

Turns-Out His Instincts were Correct and the Movie Works-Beautifully. It Looks Great, has a Big-Cast and a Story that would be Right at Home in Today's Trend of Gender-Bending.

What Might have Come-Off as a Cringe-Fest, is Handled so Perfectly that the Movie's Audacious Story is Dramatic, Action-Packed, and Slightly Humorous.

But a Deadly Serious Against-the-Grain Attitude and the Approach is Delivered Defiantly.

The Cast Answered the Challenge with a Bravado that is Charming and Engaging. There's Not a Wink-Link in the Chain of Actresses Asked to Flip Expectations on its Head.

They Surely Succeed in Making this One of Murph's Most Endearing Westerns

It's a Brilliant Manipulation with Unexpected and Overwhelming Entertainment. This One Rises to the Top of the Decades Fixation on the Genre.

A Must-See for Audie Murphy Fans.

He is in Total Control, and Western Movie Buffs are in for an Unexpected Surprise Treat.

It's One of those that May Even Appeal to Movie-Watchers Not Generally Drawn to Western Movies.

An Underrated, and Unacknowledged Mini-Masterpiece of Imaginative, Heart-Rendering, and Profound Movie-Making for the Masses.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
The female version of Alamo!
Artemis-926 December 2002
I wonder why no one who commented on this movie before noticed how this is the sort of scenario that made El Alamo the thrilling film it was, and that led to so many re-makes. There is a surrounded group, with no escape, and decided not to surrender to a bitter enemy... That this group was of women only, and that they died battling with bravery, makes me wonder where the cable televisions are, what video producer will discover this gem first - a gem it is, as people who saw this film only had praise for it! I'll be the first to buy a VHS or DVD copy of this film. Just tell me where it is.
9 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Good original idea
Caz196413 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Very entertaining western from the late 50's ,Audie Murphy stars as a Texan who joins the Union side during the American civil war,much to the annoyance of his fellow Texans. The Union army then go on to attack a peaceful Indian settlement which he is very much against and because of this he deserts. Because he believes the Indians will want revenge he quickly goes back to Texas to warn the homesteaders of future Indian attacks.When he arrives home there is only women left as the men have all gone away to fight in the Civil war,the women all distrust him because he is wearing the Unionists colours and they only see him as a traitor. After the body of a young woman is found killed by an arrow he manages to finally convince the women that what he has been saying is true. They then all take refuge in an abandoned mission where he trains them to fight and shoot in anticipation of an attack,they also learn how to make bombs.The only other man at the mission runs off and joins up with a gang who after they kill him lead the Indians back to the mission. The women end up surrounded and outnumbered and very bravely fight off the final Indian assault with Murphys help of coarse.

The Guns Of Fort Petticoat is a sort of what-if film thats very ahead of its time ,its the sort of storyline that you would expect to be made today and not back in the 50's.It has its amusing moments and it also has romance and some pretty interesting fight scenes.It may all sound a bit far-fetched but it does work especially when quite a few of the women get killed,which under the circumstances is bound to happen. The characters are interesting {if not a little clichéd}and Audie Murphy does give a very good performance and convinces us that this could have happened. This is a very entertaining little film that im glad has been forgotten.
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Breaks movie cliché taboos
john-mm20 April 2012
In this movie you will see many clichés attacked successfully: women & children being shot; women leading themselves without panicking or falling over tree roots as a plot device; in-cred-ible. There are a great many movies, books, plays and so on with a single "mutant" woman who is somehow, amazingly, able to do "man" things as good as a man. Her uniqueness is usually used in the plot as a comic device to lure men into a false sense of security, except Alien, I guess.

This movie breaks this unspoken code: highly successfully and entertainingly.In fact it states quite blankly that all women are as good as any man; including in the ability to fight to the death and the last bullet.

I had to keep checking that this was made in 1957! The same year as Funny Face.

You have to put aside the 1950s production values, over-long horse-riding long-shots, and just forget the male supporting cast (except the wonderful Audie Murphy) : they are rather clichéd; concentrate on enjoying the entire female ensemble performance: they really do produce an incredible performance; slightly reminiscent to me of The Big Red One.

I cannot think of another movie which has this premise of a group of women fighting for their own sakes; and not needing a man to do it for them.
14 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
If you like Westerns, you will like this !
padrelaw21 May 2016
This film is one of hundreds of westerns churned out in the post-WWi era; in fact, westerns ruled the roost of cinema until the late 60s, most of which were made quickly, inexpensively, and predictably.

Some of the big stars, who were able to command slightly larger budgets and better writers, were John Wayne, Randolph Scott, and WWII hero Audie Murphy. In this delightfully entertaining escapade, Murphy opposes the US Army's massacre of an Indian village populated with women and children, and, knowing the actions of the soldiers will lead to retribution, rides to his home state of Texas to warn the settlers (almost all of whom are, or course, women - the men being off fighting the civil war).

Take a guess as to whether the women and Murphy survive and whether or not at least one of the women fall in love with him. Yeah, right.

Anyway, you will not regret seeing this great example of the B- westerns that your grandparents grew up watching each weekend in double features for 35 cents.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed