Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe heirs of the dying owner of a valuable radium mine are being murdered as a mining engineer tries to uncover the killer and clear his cousin's name.The heirs of the dying owner of a valuable radium mine are being murdered as a mining engineer tries to uncover the killer and clear his cousin's name.The heirs of the dying owner of a valuable radium mine are being murdered as a mining engineer tries to uncover the killer and clear his cousin's name.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
George F. Marion
- James Ballard
- (as George Marion Sr.)
James Eagles
- John Borg
- (as James C. Eagles)
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Rocky Mountain Mystery exists in that parallel universe where the old west never really ended but continued on well into the nineteen-thirties and forties, usually inhabited by Gene Autry, Roy Rodgers, Tex Ritter, and sometimes even a very young John Wayne.
The characters ride horses, use oil lamps to light their way, and seemingly live a frontier existence under territorial law, all with six-guns on their hips. The viewer either forgets or is unaware that this is supposed to take place in modern times when suddenly the cowboys encounter modern cars, telephones, radio, and electricity. I sometimes wonder if the depression era children who were the films' main audience actually believed the west was really like this.
This is an above average B-western and a great example of what modern experts are calling "horror western" due to their odd plots and sadistic mystery villains. I prefer to call them mystery or suspense westerns.
Rocky Mountain Mystery effectively mixes an Old Dark House plot with frontier themes. It's not as chilling as I'd like but it does have a creepy fiend dressed in black complete with gloves, hat, and cape; a killer that prefers to crush heads in a hydraulic press but isn't afraid to menace a pretty girl with a straight razor either! The ending is quite surprising and well plotted.
The characters ride horses, use oil lamps to light their way, and seemingly live a frontier existence under territorial law, all with six-guns on their hips. The viewer either forgets or is unaware that this is supposed to take place in modern times when suddenly the cowboys encounter modern cars, telephones, radio, and electricity. I sometimes wonder if the depression era children who were the films' main audience actually believed the west was really like this.
This is an above average B-western and a great example of what modern experts are calling "horror western" due to their odd plots and sadistic mystery villains. I prefer to call them mystery or suspense westerns.
Rocky Mountain Mystery effectively mixes an Old Dark House plot with frontier themes. It's not as chilling as I'd like but it does have a creepy fiend dressed in black complete with gloves, hat, and cape; a killer that prefers to crush heads in a hydraulic press but isn't afraid to menace a pretty girl with a straight razor either! The ending is quite surprising and well plotted.
this is a pretty good western.but it's not just a western.it's also a mystery.actually it's probably more of a mystery than a western.it's short clocking in at around 65 minutes,but it's a pretty good movie.it stars Randolph Scott,Anne Sheridan,Kathleen Burke,Florence Roberts,Howard Wilson,Charles 'Chic' Sale,Mrs.Leslie carter,George F. Marion,among others.i thought it was well done.it had a nice atmosphere,and wasn't wholly predictable.the acting was good by all concerned,and the story was interesting,but similar to another western i remember seeing.though i can't recall weather this movie came out before that one or not.by similar story,i don't mean the general outline and formula that most westerns follow.i mean that some of the story details and specifics are similar.regardless,i liked it.for me,The Fighting Westerner is a 6/10
This is definitely a "B" type western, but Randolph Scott does his normal star role as Randolph Scott. "Chic" Sale's performance as the "old timer" is very entertaining, the plot is decent, and everything moves along. Some interesting little add ins, like the two dogs. You can also see Ann Sheridan before she learned to act.
All in all a little better than average for this era.
All in all a little better than average for this era.
Rocky Mountain Mystery (1935)
** (out of 4)
Randolph Scott stars in this "B" picture, which is based on a story by Zane Grey. In the film Scott has to go to a small mining town where murders are taking place for what appears to be a possible future inheritance. Scott must battle the bad guys, find out who the killer is and romance Ann Sheridan. This is a rather strange film that mixed with Western and Mystery genres together but the end result isn't as good as one would hope. The biggest problem are the incredibly low production values, which usually leaves all the action to one small place. There's never any scope to the film and the low budget doesn't leave much that the cast can do. In fact it seems like the budget is so low that they can't really do much of anything except talk. The mystery itself isn't too interesting but Scott does make the film worth watching. He's certainly not his classic self here but he is good enough for the film. Sheridan is decent in her role but still a little rough around the edges. This was director Barton's third film and of course he's go on to do several Abbott and Costello films. He handles the material here pretty well even though he doesn't have too much to work with.
** (out of 4)
Randolph Scott stars in this "B" picture, which is based on a story by Zane Grey. In the film Scott has to go to a small mining town where murders are taking place for what appears to be a possible future inheritance. Scott must battle the bad guys, find out who the killer is and romance Ann Sheridan. This is a rather strange film that mixed with Western and Mystery genres together but the end result isn't as good as one would hope. The biggest problem are the incredibly low production values, which usually leaves all the action to one small place. There's never any scope to the film and the low budget doesn't leave much that the cast can do. In fact it seems like the budget is so low that they can't really do much of anything except talk. The mystery itself isn't too interesting but Scott does make the film worth watching. He's certainly not his classic self here but he is good enough for the film. Sheridan is decent in her role but still a little rough around the edges. This was director Barton's third film and of course he's go on to do several Abbott and Costello films. He handles the material here pretty well even though he doesn't have too much to work with.
Randolph Scott is a mining engineer, with a letter to a dying mine owner, who has radium on his property. He meets deputy sheriff Chic Sales, who's trying to figure out what happened to an unidentified body. Scott goes on, and meets the bedridden George Marion, and his family, gathered around for his death. Then they start dying... and the will says that if they predecease him, their shares go to the survivors; they begin dying and disappearing, leaving Sales and Scott to figure out who is killing them.
It's a very good mystery, one of the Zane Grey westerns that Paramount was producing in this period, with some nice location shooting near Big Bear Lake, and a large stamping mill that portends a nice melodramatic ending. Sales has never been better, and it's hardly surprising, because there are some nice, long-lived performers for him to compete with: not only Marion, but Florence Roberts in a small role, and Mrs. Leslie Carter in a large one.
Charles Barton would not rank as anyone's idea of a great director, but he handles his cast and the settings very nicely, for a nice, creepy movie.
It's a very good mystery, one of the Zane Grey westerns that Paramount was producing in this period, with some nice location shooting near Big Bear Lake, and a large stamping mill that portends a nice melodramatic ending. Sales has never been better, and it's hardly surprising, because there are some nice, long-lived performers for him to compete with: not only Marion, but Florence Roberts in a small role, and Mrs. Leslie Carter in a large one.
Charles Barton would not rank as anyone's idea of a great director, but he handles his cast and the settings very nicely, for a nice, creepy movie.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesWhen it was re-released nationally in 1950 by Favorite Films, this film, now retitled "Fighting Westerner", often was shown in tandem with the re-release of Fighting Caravans (1931).
- PatzerAlle Einträge enthalten Spoiler
- Zitate
Flora Ballard: I thought you were only supposed to work for Mr. Ballard.
Larry Sutton: I am.
Flora Ballard: I see. Rita's just a hobby. Well, don't let her pull the wool over your eyes.
Larry Sutton: Maybe I like wool pulled over my eyes.
- VerbindungenVersion of Golden Dreams (1922)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Fighting Westerner
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirma
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- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 3 Min.(63 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
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