Captain Apache Explained

Captain Apache
Director:Alexander Singer
Screenplay:Milton Sperling
Philip Yordan
Based On:The novel Captain Apache by S.E. Whitman
Producer:Milton Sperling
Philip Yordan
Starring:Lee Van Cleef
Carroll Baker
Stuart Whitman
Cinematography:John Cabrera
Editing:Leigh G. Tallas
Music:Dolores Claman
Distributor:Scotia International
Runtime:94 minutes
Country:Spain
United Kingdom
Language:English

Captain Apache is a 1971 Spanish-British acid Western film directed by Alexander Singer and starring Lee Van Cleef, Carroll Baker, and Stuart Whitman. It was written and produced by Milton Sperling and Philip Yordan. The film was based on the 1965 novel Captain Apache by Sidney Edgerton Whitman, a prolific writer of Western fiction. The vocals of the opening and credits song were written by Dolores Claman and performed by Van Cleef.

Synopsis

Captain Apache is a Native American U.S. Cavalry officer, who finds himself tangled into a conspiracy, and proceeding upon the case of solving the enigma of the last words of a dead commissioner (and captain's old friend) which were: "April morning". Each time he nears discovering the meaning of the phrase, another character capable of providing certain help in solving the mystery dies and throws him off the trail. The journey eventually takes the captain to a train, one which pulls a private railroad car named April Morning, transporting President Ulysses S. Grant. Putting the information together leads the captain to realizing an assassination is about to take place and he is the only one who can prevent it.

Cast

Release

Captain Apache was also released under these titles: Capitán Apache (Spain), Deathwork (U.S.A.), The Guns of April Morning (U.K.), Capitan Apache (Italy), Kapteeni Apassi (Finland), Pääpiru (Finland), O Keravnos ton Apache (Greece), and Hunt the Man Down.

References

External links