Desert Legion
1953 film by Joseph Pevney
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Desert Legion is a 1953 American adventure film directed by Joseph Pevney and starring Alan Ladd.
Lewis Meltzer
| Desert Legion | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Joseph Pevney |
| Screenplay by | Irving Wallace Lewis Meltzer |
| Based on | novel The Demon Caravan by Georges Surdez |
| Produced by | Ted Richmond |
| Starring | Alan Ladd Richard Conte Arlene Dahl Akim Tamiroff |
| Cinematography | John F. Seitz |
| Edited by | Frank Gross |
| Music by | Frank Skinner |
| Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | Universal Pictures |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 86 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Box office | $1,650,000 (US)[1] |
Plot
Ladd stars as a soldier in the French Foreign Legion who stumbles across a lost city in the desert mountains of Algeria in North Africa.
Cast
- Alan Ladd as Paul Lartal
- Richard Conte as Crito
- Arlene Dahl as Morjana
- Akim Tamiroff as Pvt. Plevko
- Oscar Beregi as Khalil (as Oscar Berefi)
- Leon Askin as Major Vasil
- Anthony Caruso as Lt. Messaoud
- George J. Lewis as Lt. Lopez
- Sujata Rubener as Dancer (as Sujata)
- Asoka Rubener as Dancer (as Asoka)
Production
The film was made by Universal Pictures, and based on a 1927 novel The Demon Caravan by Georges Arthur Surdez.
It was Alan Ladd's first film for Universal since becoming a star. It was a one-picture deal and gave Ladd a percentage of the profits, a relatively novel thing at the time.[2][3] (He split profits with the studio 50–50.[4]) Joseph Pevney was assigned to direct.[5]
Ladd had broken his hand during a fight scene towards the end of his most recent film The Iron Mistress, but recovered to begin work on Desert Legion on 7 July 1952.[6]
Akim Tamiroff joined the support cast. It was his first Hollywood film in three years.[7]