Añade un argumento en tu idiomaThe Range Busters help a young man framed as the leader of an outlaw gang that has been holding up stage coaches.The Range Busters help a young man framed as the leader of an outlaw gang that has been holding up stage coaches.The Range Busters help a young man framed as the leader of an outlaw gang that has been holding up stage coaches.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Ray Corrigan
- Crash Corrigan
- (as Ray 'Crash' Corrigan)
Max Terhune
- Alibi Terhune
- (as Max 'Alibi' Terhune)
Riley Hill
- Ernie Willard
- (as Roy Harris)
Forrest Taylor
- Larry Meadows
- (as Forest Taylor)
Victor Adamson
- Barfly
- (sin acreditar)
Jimmy Aubrey
- Barfly
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
In reviewing a film like Arizona Stagecoach one has to remember that this was
aimed at a kid audience so subtle it's not.
After some hijinks where Dusty King lost a bet and has to sing upside down hanging from a rope, the Range Busters get a request from a visiting sheriff to investigate a series of holdups on the Wells Fargo stage line. This gang is getting their information from the inside.
I can't say any more but that from the second the villain makes his appearance before a word of dialog is uttered we know it's him. This particular actor made several westerns and he's always a bad guy.
The matinee knew who it was as they knew the Range Busters would figure it out before it ended.
Still it's enjoyable on its own level.
After some hijinks where Dusty King lost a bet and has to sing upside down hanging from a rope, the Range Busters get a request from a visiting sheriff to investigate a series of holdups on the Wells Fargo stage line. This gang is getting their information from the inside.
I can't say any more but that from the second the villain makes his appearance before a word of dialog is uttered we know it's him. This particular actor made several westerns and he's always a bad guy.
The matinee knew who it was as they knew the Range Busters would figure it out before it ended.
Still it's enjoyable on its own level.
Crash Corrigan and his compadres help rid a town of a gang of cut-throats terrorizing the citizenry of the local community. This Range Busters film features a little bit of everything (action, comedy and suspense) in a standard western programmer.
Corrigan had a long career in film, mostly in "B" films. His best work was in the 3 Mesquiteer series, but he does a good job in this routine oater. Terhune was decent comedian, but his ventriliquist dummy often seems out of place in his western films.
This film was fine when viewed in context, but does not leave the viewer with any lasting film memories. An average time-passer .........
Corrigan had a long career in film, mostly in "B" films. His best work was in the 3 Mesquiteer series, but he does a good job in this routine oater. Terhune was decent comedian, but his ventriliquist dummy often seems out of place in his western films.
This film was fine when viewed in context, but does not leave the viewer with any lasting film memories. An average time-passer .........
The Range Busters - Ray "Crash" Corrigan, John "Dusty" King, and Max "Alibi" Terhune come to the aid of some friends who find their ranch surrounded by highway-robbers. Before their arrival, their friend discovers his partner with stolen loot and shoots it out before being framed for the hold-ups by villains Charles King and Kermit Maynard.
An enjoyable, straight-foreword entry in Monogram Pictures' Range Busters series, the successor to Republic's Three Mesquiteers, this has some good action scenes and an atmospheric (though probably canned) music score.
Both corny and creepy are several scenes where Terhune's ventriloquist dummy "Elmer" talks and moves independently! I know these Saturday matinée B-westerns were made for a primarily juvenile audience, but this is just too silly!
In the final scene when Terhune picks up Elmer, who just finished moving without him, a hand can be briefly glimpsed pulling out of the dummy and disappearing under the chair!
An enjoyable, straight-foreword entry in Monogram Pictures' Range Busters series, the successor to Republic's Three Mesquiteers, this has some good action scenes and an atmospheric (though probably canned) music score.
Both corny and creepy are several scenes where Terhune's ventriloquist dummy "Elmer" talks and moves independently! I know these Saturday matinée B-westerns were made for a primarily juvenile audience, but this is just too silly!
In the final scene when Terhune picks up Elmer, who just finished moving without him, a hand can be briefly glimpsed pulling out of the dummy and disappearing under the chair!
During the 1930s and 40s, Republic Pictures had a lot of success with their Three Mesquiteers western series. However, after a dispute about money, the Mesquiteers left for Monogram Studios. And, unlike the Mesquiteers, had a much more stable lineup of heros, with Ray Corrigan, John 'Dusty' King, Max Terhune appearing in most of the films in the series. I generally enjoyed the films though there was one odd thing about all of them...Terhune. It seems that in addition to being a hero, he was also a ventriloquist and often took his dummy, Elmer, with him on adventures....which, if you think about it, is really stupid!
The Range Busters have been asked to head to Stoney Creek, as there have been a string of stage coach robberies there. And, it's very fortunate they've headed there, as Ernie Willard has been accused of the crimes...though he was just trying to give the stolen money back after he caught one of the gang members with it. The dumb posse wouldn't listen and was about to string up Ernie...so Ernie skidaddled to save his skin. The Range Busters meet with Ernie and convince him to stay in hiding while they investigate the case.
This is pretty much what you'd expect from a Range Busters film except for one thing....Elmer acts in the film WITHOUT Max in one scene. In other words, he talks with Corrigan and King and you see no Max anywhere....and the scene played like Elmer was alive...which is very creepy...hence I deducted a point. Apart from this creepy scene, the usual production values and acting are in the film and the story pretty decent for a B-western.
The Range Busters have been asked to head to Stoney Creek, as there have been a string of stage coach robberies there. And, it's very fortunate they've headed there, as Ernie Willard has been accused of the crimes...though he was just trying to give the stolen money back after he caught one of the gang members with it. The dumb posse wouldn't listen and was about to string up Ernie...so Ernie skidaddled to save his skin. The Range Busters meet with Ernie and convince him to stay in hiding while they investigate the case.
This is pretty much what you'd expect from a Range Busters film except for one thing....Elmer acts in the film WITHOUT Max in one scene. In other words, he talks with Corrigan and King and you see no Max anywhere....and the scene played like Elmer was alive...which is very creepy...hence I deducted a point. Apart from this creepy scene, the usual production values and acting are in the film and the story pretty decent for a B-western.
Average Range Busters fare with the usual action scenes (chases, shoot outs etc.) interspersed by songs from Dusty King - one of which he warbles while suspended upside down from a tree - and comic interludes featuring Max Terhune and his dummy, Elmer.
Incidentally, this is one of those entries in which Elmer moves and talks when Terhune is nowhere to be seen. Some critics have suggested that this sort of thing is silly and implausible but, is not the whole B western world a fantastic and mythical universe bearing no resemblance to reality? Anyway, I'm an Elmer fan so, in the words of the little wooden man himself "what's it to yuh?"
Incidentally, this is one of those entries in which Elmer moves and talks when Terhune is nowhere to be seen. Some critics have suggested that this sort of thing is silly and implausible but, is not the whole B western world a fantastic and mythical universe bearing no resemblance to reality? Anyway, I'm an Elmer fan so, in the words of the little wooden man himself "what's it to yuh?"
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis film's earliest documented telecast occurred Thursday 5 July 1945 on New York City's pioneer television station WNBT (Channel 1). Post-WWII television viewers got their first look at it in New York City Saturday 26 March 1949 on WCBS (Channel 2), in Philadelphia Sunday 27 November 1949 on Frontier Playhouse on WPTZ (Channel 3), in Chicago Monday 5 December 1949 on WGN (Channel 9), and in Cincinnati Tuesday 20 December 1949 on WKRC (Channel 11).
- Citas
Elmer, Alibi's dummy: Alibi, come here.
Alibi Terhune: What's bothering you, Elmer?
Elmer, Alibi's dummy: Who's going to take that money to the stage office?
Alibi Terhune: Well, I am, I reckon.
Elmer, Alibi's dummy: That's what I was afraid of. You better take me along to protect you.
- ConexionesEdited into Six Gun Theater: The Arizona Stagecoach (2016)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Arizona Stagecoach
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración58 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principal laguna de datos
By what name was Arizona Stage Coach (1942) officially released in Canada in English?
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