Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuJohn Drury arrives in town and is taken on as a hero by the townspeople after he saves a horse's life. They ask him to lead them in their fight against the mysterious Hawk who has been plagu... Alles lesenJohn Drury arrives in town and is taken on as a hero by the townspeople after he saves a horse's life. They ask him to lead them in their fight against the mysterious Hawk who has been plaguing them for years with theft, arson and murder.John Drury arrives in town and is taken on as a hero by the townspeople after he saves a horse's life. They ask him to lead them in their fight against the mysterious Hawk who has been plaguing them for years with theft, arson and murder.
- Guitar Player
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- Vigilante Member
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- Jury Foreman
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- Vigilante Member
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- Bob Webb
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- Short Jury Member
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- Hawk Henchman on Sentry
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- Townswoman at Dance with Clout
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- Rancher's Wife
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- Hawk Henchman
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- Sheriff Lem
- (Nicht genannt)
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It's one of the movies that Wayne made at the nadir of his career, co-starring with this horse, called Duke. It's a remake of a silent western starring Ken Maynard, with a lot of the original footage cut in, because producer Leon Schlesinger believed in doing things on the cheap... which gives an idea of how far Walthall had fallen in the Hollywood scheme of things. Director Fred Allen was an editor when he wasn't making one of his eight directorial efforts, so the shooting is efficient and the shots well lit by cinematographer Ted McCord. There isn't much to this movie, but it kept everyone working for a few weeks and still plays all right.
The action moves quickly enough for kids to follow it to see if Wayne caught the bad guy or at least exposed him to the law. I thought the film held up over the years. Solid supporting cast with both Harry Gribbon and Otis Harlan providing the humor; a little gallows at times but no doubt that was for any adult who wandered in.
You have to feel sorry for Wayne's character, John Drury, who goes from horse saving hero to wanted outlaw in the blink of an eye. I think after all was done with, I would have just moved on and left these people to themselves.
But, all in all, a decent oater for its time.
*** (out of 4)
Duke, a horse, is on trial for killing a man and the judge is about to put him to death when cowboy John Drury (John Wayne) makes a deal. If Drury can tame the horse then it can live. Of course the cowboy comes through and soon the two of them are trying to track down the real murderer.
RIDE HIM, COWBOY was Wayne's shot at stardom as this was the first of the six picture deal that he signed with Warner. The film is certainly a step up from movies like TWO FISTED LAW, which featured Wayne in supporting parts. On a technical level this might still be a "B" movie but it's still better than what we had seen the now legend in up to this point.
The best thing about the picture is actually Wayne and his supporting cast of actors. I thought that laid back approach of Wayne's worked pretty well here including the scenes where he trying to smooth talk the leading lady played by Ruth Hall. Wayne and Hall share some nice chemistry together. Frank Hagney does a good job in his role of the villain and Henry B. Walthall turns in another fine supporting performance.
As you'd expect, there's a lot of gun play as well as other Western trappings but they're all handled quite nicely by director Fred Allen who keeps the film moving at a nice pace throughout its 55 minutes.
It had action, comedy, romance and suspense all packed into a movie less that lasted only 55 minutes. It had a convincing nasty villain, a pretty girl, a talented horse named "Duke," and a crooked-but-funny judge. The horse was able to untie rope and acted almost human.
The only thing that looked a bit dated - but applied to all classic westerns - is when they broke chairs over the good guy's head and it never seemed to faze him. Only in the movie can a guy get punched flush in the jaw and have a wooden chair broken over his skull, and the victim is no worse for the wear!
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- WissenswertesA remake of the 1926 film The Unknown Cavalier (1926) which stared Ken Maynard in John Wayne's role.
- PatzerWhen the horse tries to untie the knot to free Drury the knot changes several times. He actually reties it once by mistake.
- Zitate
John Drury: Where I come from we don't shoot horses when they get ornery; we tame 'em.
- Crazy CreditsThe six main players are credited in a long tracking shot as they all sit at the same table. Likely filmed during a lunch break.
- VerbindungenEdited from The Unknown Cavalier (1926)
- SoundtracksMy Pony Boy
(1909) (uncredited)
Music by Charley O'Donnell
Lyrics by Bobby Heath
Played during the opening credits
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Der Falke
- Drehorte
- Rhyolite, Nevada, USA(establishing shot of Desolation)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 28.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Laufzeit55 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1