Lonnie Wilson, the son of sharecropper Zuba Wilson, returns to his small southern hometown of Clinton, Louisiana after spending six years on a chain gang for killing Colonel Ben Marquand's son Davey in an automobile accident. He revives his love affair with Melinda Marquand, who married Dr. Ned Thomas while Lonnie was serving time for the accident that she had actually caused.[4]
Lonnie incites Ned about his wife's infidelity, which Ned verifies when he catches Lonnie and Melinda in an embrace in Colonel Marquand's hunting lodge. Melinda, looking for an explanation, shoots and wounds Lonnie to defend her innocence by claiming that she was being raped.
Colonel Marquand, who had paid Lonnie to take the blame for his daughter, uses her story to have Sheriff Wheaton kill Lonnie. Mrs. Marquand eventually faces Davey's death and realizes that she witnessed Melinda run down her little brother.
Peter Marquand and Ned return to the lodge and inform Otis that the charges against Lonnie are based on lies. Exonerated, Lonnie gives Zuba the deed to the farm, and Zuba dances in delight, thrilled to finally own his land.[5]
Dana Andrews was originally cast in the lead but backed out. He was replaced by Raymond Burr, then three years into Perry Mason, which was on a production break because of a writers' strike.[10][11]
In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Howard Thompson called Desire in the Dust "an interesting little picture" while noting the film's striking similarities with The Long, Hot Summer (1958), although with one important difference: "[W]hereas 'Summer' collapsed in honeysuckle absurdity, 'Desire' explodes theatrically in about three directions, bloodhounds included." Thompson praised the performances, especially that of Martha Hyer as "an ice-cold vixen, indeed," but ended his review by summarizing the film as a "... curious picture, which shifts from the beguiling to the ridiculous."[13]