Canadian Pacific

The blazing saga of untamed men and a savage wilderness!

5.0
19491h 35m

A surveyor for the Canadian Pacific Railroad must fight fur trappers who oppose the building of the railroad by stirring up Indian rebellion.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Canadian Pacific (1949) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HQ]

Canadian Pacific (1949) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HQ]

Cast

Photo of Randolph Scott

Randolph Scott

Tom Andrews

Photo of Jane Wyatt

Jane Wyatt

Dr. Edith Cabot

Photo of J. Carrol Naish

J. Carrol Naish

Dynamite Dawson

Photo of Victor Jory

Victor Jory

Dirk Rourke

Photo of Nancy Olson

Nancy Olson

Cecille Gautier

Photo of Robert Barrat

Robert Barrat

William Van Horne

Photo of John Parrish

John Parrish

Mr. Gautier

Photo of Walter Sande

Walter Sande

Mike Brannigan

Photo of John Hamilton

John Hamilton

Pere Lacomb

Photo of George Chandler

George Chandler

Telegraph Operator

Photo of Ralph Clanton

Ralph Clanton

Opening Narrator (voice)

Photo of Chief Yowlachie

Chief Yowlachie

Indian Chief (uncredited)

Photo of Norman Jewison

Norman Jewison

Joe Podge (uncredited)

Photo of Earle Hodgins

Earle Hodgins

Sandy McNair (uncredited)

Photo of Edmund Cobb

Edmund Cobb

Jim (uncredited)

Photo of Sam Ash

Sam Ash

Speaker from Ontario (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

I was never a great fan of Randolph Scott - he never really imposed himself onto the screen, and here he doesn't really either. It doesn't help that the plot is a fairly well trammelled one. He ("Andrews") is the railroad surveyor who falls foul of the local fur traders who fear that the steel monster will decimate local trade. His antagonists are no slouches. "Rourke" (Victory Jory) and "Dynamite Dawson" (J. Carrol Naish) being determined to thwart his engineering plans and so resort to enlisting the help of the local Indians who want no truck with these interlopers at all, much less their destructive construction project that will further destroy their ancestral home. In order to convince the locals that the train would be a good thing for their community, he promises to settle with his gal "Cecille" (the rather wooden Nancy Olson) but that doesn't really cut much ice with an opposition that now has him firmly in it's sights and that sees him soon under the care of local doctor "Edith" (a competent Jane Wyatt) with whom, well you can guess the rest. Indeed, that's really the problem with all of this - it's just too predicable. There is some action now and again and a bit of rousing speechifying too, but for the most part this is an adequately photographed pioneering tale that we've seen a few times before - only with a more charismatic lead. It's watchable, but the title doesn't really help it much and it's all fairly forgettable afternoon cinema fayre.

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