Agrega una trama en tu idiomaGreedy rancher McGowan wants to have a local wild horse sanctuary closed, so he can capture and sell them while Tucson tries to break up Stony's marriage to a sexy, gold-digging saloon girl.Greedy rancher McGowan wants to have a local wild horse sanctuary closed, so he can capture and sell them while Tucson tries to break up Stony's marriage to a sexy, gold-digging saloon girl.Greedy rancher McGowan wants to have a local wild horse sanctuary closed, so he can capture and sell them while Tucson tries to break up Stony's marriage to a sexy, gold-digging saloon girl.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Rita
- (as Rita Cansino)
- Sheriff Miller
- (as Edward Cassidy)
- Henchman
- (as Robert Smith)
- Pete
- (as Ed Boland)
- Man Who Sees Stony with Pinto
- (sin créditos)
- Drunk
- (sin créditos)
- Judge
- (sin créditos)
- Bartender
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
It must be years since I last saw him in anything, but especially in a Three Mesquiteers.
His portrayal of Stony Brooke had always been the definitive one to me and, much as I love John Wayne, the Mesquiteers were not the same with him in the Brooke role.
This is a different Stony from any other characterization I have seen.
This movie had a little bit of everything, and managed to be enough different to warrant watching, except, perhaps, to the jaded.
There are gunfights; there is a saloon brawl; there is a dancing girl (played by someone named Margarita Cansino, a good-looking actress with some apparent dancing ability; whatever happened to her?).
There are wild horses and a good battle between two of them.
Tucson Smith was the leader in the stories as written originally by William Colt MacDonald, and in this movie he is. It's a good opportunity for Crash Corrigan and he makes the most of it.
Yak Canutt is one of the bad guys and, of course, the lead stunt man, and no one ever did it better.
Harry Tenbrook, of whom I know nothing, gets a good part as another bad guy, sort of the foreman, and is interesting enough I wonder why we didn't see him more often.
"Hit the Saddle" is another miserable generic title, and surely the producers could have found one more appropriate. However, that's my only complaint (except for the intendedly "funny" ending that wasn't) and I recommend this movie.
To be honest, I'll always recommend the Three Mesquiteers, and always recommend anything with Crash Corrigan.
P.S. Just in case: Of course I know Margarita Cansino became Rita Hayworth. I was just trying to be cute.
In "Hit the Saddle" there are two main plots. First, Stony is in love with Rita (Rita Hayworth), a saloon girl with a heart of lead. His pals are dead set against this, as they understand exactly who Rita really is. The second is about a greedy rancher who not only wants his own horses but wants to capture the protected wild horses as well. The scum-bag needs to make these wild animals look dangerous, so he and his men deliberately stampede the horses...killing the sheriff in the process! Will Stony see the light and will the trio manage to bring the horse wranglers to justice?
So is it any good? Well, since Terhune does have his stupid ventriloquist dummy, Elmer, in the film...something I simply never understood about the Mesquiteer and Range Buster films. Why is a lawman and cowboy running around with a dummy like this?! What I also didn't love was how much Stony hated his friends....as they argued throughout the story....something you DON'T expect in a Mesquiteer film! The men always play close friends....and disrupting this formula seemed foolish. Because of this, it's definitely not one of the team's better efforts.
By the way, just before the killer stampede is loosed, pay attention as one of the baddies called the trio 'The Three Musketeers'! I am surprised no one caught that and corrected it. It is possible they noticed but didn't both re-shooting it, as these B-westerns were definitely done on the cheap...and re-shoots cost money.
First there's the horse, a beautiful wild animal called the pinto stallion. He leads a herd of wild horses which are now protected by law by the government. Some dastardly villains want to shoot the wild ones like The Misfits for dog food. They train a black horse and paint him to look like the pinto so he can start stirring up the other rancher's horses. On one raid, the sheriff is trampled to death by the ersatz pinto. Robert Livingston believes in the horse's innocence, but Ray Corrigan and Max Terhune want him done in and Corrigan's the sheriff.
And then there's the matter of Rita Hayworth or as she was known at this point in her career, Rita Cansino. Rita and Livingston want to get married. The other two Mesquiteers have no use for her and think she's a goldigger. This part of the plot may have been the basis for the Gunga Din story that RKO did two years later.
So who does Livingston wind up with, Rita or the pinto stallion? For that you have to view this film of The Three Mesquiteers series.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis is the last of four films that Rita Hayworth made freelancing before returning to Columbia Pictures.
- Citas
[after Stoney and Rita sing a duet]
Tucson Smith: As I live and breathe, if it isn't one of them singin' cowboys!
Lullaby Joslin: That was grand singin'. I ain't heard the like since my grandpap Zubie was hung.
- ConexionesFeatures The Devil Horse (1926)
- Bandas sonorasWinding the Trail
Written by Oliver Drake and Sam H. Stept
Sung by Robert Livingston and Rita Hayworth
with Rudy Sooter and His Band
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Hit the Saddle
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución57 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1