Richard Egan brings charisma galore as a British officer in India to director Seymour Friedman's rough and tough but routine adventure epic "Khyber Patrol" with Raymond Burr as his treacherous adversary. Basically. this is just another cavalry western that suffers from a low budget and a 71-minute running time. The uniforms are as splendid as the casting. Patric Knowles, Paul Cavanagh, Philip Tonge, and Patrick O'Moore are all spit, polish, and British to the core. "Chinatown at Midnight" helmer Friedman and scenarist Jack DeWitt and Richard Schayer generate just enough suspense among the true Britons and Canadian born Capt. Kyle Cameron to keep us guessing how long the natives will tolerate this insubordinate Canuck. Cameron and fellow officer Lieutenant George Kennedy (Patric Knowles) are competing for the affections of Colonel Rivington's daughter Diana (Dawn Addams) when our stalwart hero gives Kennedy orders that plunge him into an ambush. Cameron and company are struggling to defeat the border tribesmen who are crack shots with rifles. When the British are set to import Maxim machine guns to even the odds, the villains need somebody to show their men how to operate those weapons. Cameron pulls a sort of "Four Feathers" change of allegiances to fool the tribesman and a shrewd Russian officer, Capt. Ahmed Shir (Raymond Burr of "Perry Mason"), before they can raid a British convoy of wagons carrying the machine gun. Naturally, "Khyber Patrol" never wears out its welcome.