California Conquest (1952) Poster

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6/10
In Old California
richardchatten14 September 2022
Cornel Wilde follows in the footsteps of Zorro in this quickie from the team of producer Sam Katzman and director Lew Landers set long ago when Los Angeles was just a collection of shacks but the Russkies were already the menace.

Villainy is supplied by those usual suspects Alfonso Bedoya and John Dehner, while the biggest (and most pleasant) surprise is a unique appearance in Technicolor by the usually demure Theresa Wright as a feisty young filly who strides about in boots and britches and is handy with a gun. She should given Wilde a swift clip about the ear for calling them "those horrible pants" and the film subscribes to the usual nonsense that she's only capable of turning heads when she changes into a nice frilly dress.
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4/10
A bit of red, white and blue flag waving and anti-red propaganda, set long before the word communist was invented.
mark.waltz4 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
It's Sam Katzman as producer, and that's all you need to know, the leading producer of B movies both at Monogram and Columbia, focusing on action adventures like this later on at Columbia, looking higher budgeted with color photography and fast moving yet simple. He has an A pair of leads with handsomely rugged Cornel Wilde and Oscar winning Teresa Wright, playing a well to do Spanish settler in the Mexican territory of old California and the rough and tough gunslinging daughter of a lawman. After her father is killed by the bandit gang of Alfonso Bedoya, Wright vows revenge, teams with Wilde and infiltrates Bedoya's gang, only to find out that he's involved with imperialistic Russia in an effort to grab California territory before film makers from New York can claim it as the movie capital of the world.

I enjoyed this for the fun elements, recognizing that it was just a colorful adventure programmer, one of dozens made during this time to take advantage of the good weather and show off the beautiful greenery of the open spaces not yet built up. Wilde is charming and Wright feisty, definitely based on other rough and tough female legends of the old west like Calamity Jane, Annie Oakley and Belle Starr. John Dehner and Eugene Iglesias costar as Bedoya's co-conspirators, fooling themselves into believing that by betraying their own people, they could rise in power without worry of being betrayed by the Czar's leaders in the new world. There are situations here that I found hard to believe, but those are minor complaints. It serves its purpose in giving a slight historically true story and entertain, with the colorful camera work a standout.
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"Historical" Piece - rule over California
ksf-227 October 2011
California Conquest tells the story of the battle for rule of what will eventually become a state, when gold is found here later. Teresa Wright does a good job as the daughter of a settler who is determined to get her married off to famed explorer John Fremont. As someone else has pointed out, what a mishmash of crappy accents that come and go, and about half the actors just mumble for some reason to the point of distraction. Cornel Wilde is Arturo Bodega (Bordega ?), fighting off the interloping Russians, but he sounds like a European. We get the usual amount of swordfights, gunfights, and oat burning horse chases. Some great outdoor photography, presumably California. Several of the scenes are very dark, and its hard to see what is occurring; not sure if its just bad lighting, or film degradation. There is the usual climactic battle of good versus evil at the very end. Entertaining, but Teresa Wright is the only shining star in this one.

Directed by Lew Landers, who had a long history in Hollywood; acc to wikipedia, he acted in two shorts around 1914, when he would have been about 12. He disappears for 15 years (war? working?) Then he pops up as crew on one film, and disappears again for about five years. Then starts a long career as director in 1934, and had been directing for almost 20 years when this film was made.
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3/10
Defeating the Dialogue Directors
boblipton8 May 2009
Cornel Wilde does a Mexican accent. He does a really bad Mexican accent with an often wooden delivery. For me that trumps every other aspect of this movie, which is supposed to be about California in the 1840s and jockeying between Mexico, the U.S. England and Russia to control it, but seems to be about Wilde getting into sword fights, breaking into peoples' hotel rooms to rob them and wooing Teresa Wright.

It even makes Teresa Wright seem like a bad actress. She had been nominated for two Oscars a decade earlier and had won one, and was a wonderful actress, but her delivery, which was just right when speaking with Gary Cooper or Joseph Cotten, well, here it makes her seem as if she thinks that Cornel Wilde is slightly deaf or stupid.

There are other aspects of this movie one might consider, I suppose, but I find it impossible to concentrate on them enough to offer them for your consideration. Let's simply note that this movie was decent enough to keep me watching to the end and that's why it's not an absolute bomb. But it's not worth your time to look at it.
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3/10
"The Czar has no territorial ambitions"
bkoganbing18 May 2015
California Conquest was a film of its times at the height of the Cold War and the McCarthy period when some in Hollywood felt it was their duty to show the Russians for the grasping imperialists they were even before Karl Marx drew breath. Cornel Wilde plays a California Don already looking forward to statehood with USA and Teresa Wright is the daughter of an American settler in California who has a dry goods business.

I'm of the opinion that a lot of Hollywood players to make themselves blacklist proof did films like California Conquest. Wilde himself was a person of no political leanings that I've discovered took a film like this so that no one would question his patriotism in those times.

As history records the last Russian settlement in California closed up shop in 1841 that being Fort Ross which was mentioned here. It is here though that Ivan Lebedeff and Lisa Ferraday are the Czar's agents weaving a plot to bring all of California into the Russian fold. As their agents they have Alfonso Bedoya bandit leader in the Gold Hat tradition and the ambitious John Dehner who is setting himself as a Quisling.

No mention here of the Mexican War to come or of that phrase that had a lot of currency back in those days about American 'Manifest Destiny' to spread from the Atlantic to the Pacific and if you don't agree too bad.

Don't get me wrong there were some good anti-Communist films of the time. California Conquest just isn't one of them.
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