What a beautiful movie!
... View MoreIf the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.
... View MoreIt's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.
... View MoreThe thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;
... View MoreGuinn "Big Boy" Williams (Bob Wilson), Marjorie Gordon (Ruth Hopkins), Wally Wales (Desolation), John Elliott (George Wilson), Steve Clark (Sheriff Hopkins), Ace Cain (Dead Pan), Edmund Cobb (Hank), George Chesebro.Director: BOB HILL. Screenplay: Rock Hawkey (pseudonym of Bob Hill). Story: Guinn "Big Boy" Williams. Photography: William Hyers. Film editor: Holbrook Todd. Assistant director: Myron Marsh. Sound recording: Cliff Ruberg. Associate producer: Peter E. Kassler. Producers: Max Alexander, Arthur Alexander. Not copyrighted by Beacon Productions, Inc. U.S. release through First Division in 1935 (exact date unknown). No New York opening. Not theatrically released in Australia. 55 minutes. COMMENT: Another inventively scripted and directed "B" western from Bob Hill, this one poses the unusual situation of Williams returning from college to find that his father and three half-brothers earn their living by robbing and plundering — with the added complication that Williams is not only boarding with the local sheriff who has sworn to jail the outlaws, but falls for the sheriff's lovely daughter as well!Williams handles this assignment with more than his usual vigor, performing most of his own acrobatics and stunt-work, including some thrilling fisticuffs a-top a speeding stage-coach. He is most ably supported by John Elliott, in one of his best roles here as the sad-faced badman, plus Steve Clark as the vengeful sheriff, and a wonderful trio of hateful half-brothers in Wally Wales, Ed Cobb and Ace Cain. Full of action and shot against superb locations, this is a movie I can recommend to all western movie buffs.
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