One of three early 1920s westerns starring veterans Harry Carey and Marguerite Clayton, Desert Driven was the story of a man -- accused of a crime he didn't commit and wounded by the posse -- who hides out on a desert ranch. Obtaining work as a ranch hand, the hero falls for the rancher's daughter (Clayton). The crooked foreman (Charles LeMoyne) recognizes him, alas, and alerts the law. A last-minute confession by the real murderer (George Waggner) saves the innocent man from a second encounter with the noose. Both Carey and Clayton had worked in westerns since the earliest days of California filmmaking, he as a star for Universal, she as Broncho Billy Anderson's perhaps best-remembered leading lady. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi