40 Guns to Apache Pass

40 Guns to Apache Pass

Year: 1967

Runtime: 95 mins

Language: English

Director: William Witney

Western

He must transport a shipment of rifles across the entire Apache territory while the Apaches, angry and on the warpath, threaten the region. The Army is tasked with protecting the tribe, but greedy white traders, aided by mutinous soldiers, steal the guns, forcing Murphy to recover them.

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40 Guns to Apache Pass (1967) – Full Plot Summary & Ending Explained

Read the complete plot breakdown of 40 Guns to Apache Pass (1967), including all key story events, major twists, and the ending explained in detail. Discover what really happened—and what it all means.

In the Arizona Territory of 1868, the Apaches, led by Cochise Michael Keep, are on the warpath. Army Captain Bruce Coburn Audie Murphy is tasked with escorting homesteaders to Apache Wells where they can concentrate their defense against the raiders. But there is dissension in the ranks as some of the men under Coburn’s command feel they are being driven too hard. Coburn has to discipline Cpl. Bodine Kenneth Tobey for stealing rationed water. In an attack at Apache Wells, one of the homesteaders, Harry Malone Kenneth MacDonald, is killed. His two sons, Mike Michael Blodgett, the elder, and the younger and more timid Doug Michael Burns, then join the Army.

To defend themselves at Apache Wells, they need guns. Coburn is sent to bring in a consignment of repeating rifles that is on its way, or at least prevent them from getting into the hands of the Apaches. En route, Coburn and his men are attacked. The inexperienced Malone brothers are left to guard the horses, but Mike disobeys orders and goes off to fight the Indians. He is last seen alive pleading for his younger brother’s help, but Doug, never having experienced combat and badly frightened by the Apaches, is too afraid to come to his older brother’s rescue. When the other soldiers discover Doug hiding behind some rocks and sobbing, he is scorned as a coward. His shame is complete when he overhears Coburn say he has no use for “a worthless yellow kid.”

The survivors of the patrol manage to rendezvous with the consignment of guns. On the way back to Apache Wells, Bodine and four other soldiers decide to take the guns and desert to Mexico, leaving Coburn and the wounded First Sergeant Walker [Robert Brubaker] tied up. After some hesitation, Doug again disappoints Coburn when he throws in his lot with the deserters, after Bodine promises to release the two captives. But Bodine intends to kill them, lighting a fuse on a keg of dynamite in the wagon to which Coburn is tied.

After Coburn frees himself from his bonds seconds before the wagon explodes, he helps the wounded Walker back to Apache Wells. He wants to go back and retrieve the rifles, but the commander, Col. Reed [Byron Morrow], says he cannot spare any men and orders Coburn to stay, threatening him with court-martial for the failure of his mission. Disobeying orders, Coburn sets off alone after Bodine anyway, who is attempting to sell the stolen rifles to the Apaches for gold. Under a flag of truce, Bodine meets Cochise and agrees to take him to where the rifles are hidden.

Meanwhile, Coburn finds and single-handedly attacks the deserters guarding the cache of rifles. Doug, still smarting from being branded a coward by Coburn, summons new-found courage and enters the fray, helping Coburn kill the other deserters and recover the rifles. Coburn extends his hand to Doug to show that he now respects the youth as an honorable soldier, before ordering him to get the rifles to Apache Wells.

Cochise and Bodine pursue and catch up with Coburn. In a delaying tactic, Coburn distributes five rifles in positions where he can fight off a number of Apaches. When Doug delivers the rifles to the garrison at Apache Wells and explains to Col. Reed what happened, the commander orders the rifles issued to the soldiers to rescue Coburn, with Doug leading them to the besieged captain’s location. The rescue party arrives just as he is almost out of ammunition. After a fierce battle, the Apaches are chased off and Bodine flees alone with Coburn in pursuit. In a final shootout between the two foes, Coburn kills Bodine. Doug accompanies Coburn and the triumphant soldiers back to Apache Wells, where Coburn is welcomed by a grateful Col. Reed, and Doug is reunited with his family who had feared him dead.

Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 14:08

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