Desert Legion

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
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
  • April 3, 1953 (Los Angeles)
  • May 8, 1953 (United States)
Running time
86 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $1,650,000 (US)

Desert Legion is a 1953 American adventure film directed by Joseph Pevney and starring Alan Ladd.

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

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. (He split profits with the studio 50–50.) Joseph Pevney was assigned to direct.

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.

Akim Tamiroff joined the support cast. It was his first Hollywood film in three years.