Agrega una trama en tu idiomaRoy is mistaken for a bad guy expected by the local outlaw gang. He goes undercover to pin the goods on the bad guys. Just as he is about to do so, the real bad guy shows up.Roy is mistaken for a bad guy expected by the local outlaw gang. He goes undercover to pin the goods on the bad guys. Just as he is about to do so, the real bad guy shows up.Roy is mistaken for a bad guy expected by the local outlaw gang. He goes undercover to pin the goods on the bad guys. Just as he is about to do so, the real bad guy shows up.
Pat Brady
- Pat Brady - Member, Sons of the Pioneers
- (sin créditos)
Buck Bucko
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
Ed Cassidy
- Sheriff
- (sin créditos)
Dorothy Christy
- Committee Woman
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
A villainous lawyer, along with crooked deputy Glenn Strange, blackmails a judge in order to effect a fake tax scheme in order to steal oil rich ranches. In rides Gabby Hayes and Roy Rogers, who's immediately mistaken for one of the baddies, a situation he uses to get to the bottom of things.
Another watchable Roy Rogers vehicle, this has a few nice twists, as well as enough action and pretty girls to keep this interesting throughout.
Roy and Gabby are in fine form, having to battle the good guys and the bad guys this time around, leading to a nifty climax with Roy facing off against his double.
This marks the third time Roy played dual roles, the first two being 1938's Billy The Kid Returns and the second being 1941's Jesse James At Bay.
Another watchable Roy Rogers vehicle, this has a few nice twists, as well as enough action and pretty girls to keep this interesting throughout.
Roy and Gabby are in fine form, having to battle the good guys and the bad guys this time around, leading to a nifty climax with Roy facing off against his double.
This marks the third time Roy played dual roles, the first two being 1938's Billy The Kid Returns and the second being 1941's Jesse James At Bay.
Plot - Roy assumes role of his visual double, a bad guy, in order to uncover a complex land-grabbing scheme that's threatening his old homesite.
Here Roy has a double role, a bad guy as well as his usual cowboy hero. So, can you keep them straight, since they dress alike. Anyway, it's an overly complex plot in my little book, but not without compensations.
There's lots of scenic hard riding, even though it's the greater LA area. And catch the scenic rock spires of Vasquez Rocks, a cheap place to film being LA county property, which is why oaters of the time loved filming there.
Also, there's some fast shooting, but no flying fists. And, be sure to catch actress Beryl Wallace as good-bad girl Julie, who almost steals the show. She reminds me of voluptuous B-movie vixen Marie Windsor, e.g. (The Killing {1956}). Too bad Beryl died young in a plane crash.
The flick's also a fine baddie threesome of Fowley, Strange, and Barcroft, enough to please any old movie fan. Happily, Gabby adds his usual toothless mugging in amusing style. But what about Trigger. Catch his and Roy's ride down that steep hillside where it looks like the palomino is about to take a bad fall just as the filming shifts away. I sure hope he didn't.
All in all, it's an okay Rogers entry, but to me, the screenplay needs a re-write into a more appropriate 55-minute format. Still, Roy, Gabby and crew carry us along as usual. Thanks guys.
Here Roy has a double role, a bad guy as well as his usual cowboy hero. So, can you keep them straight, since they dress alike. Anyway, it's an overly complex plot in my little book, but not without compensations.
There's lots of scenic hard riding, even though it's the greater LA area. And catch the scenic rock spires of Vasquez Rocks, a cheap place to film being LA county property, which is why oaters of the time loved filming there.
Also, there's some fast shooting, but no flying fists. And, be sure to catch actress Beryl Wallace as good-bad girl Julie, who almost steals the show. She reminds me of voluptuous B-movie vixen Marie Windsor, e.g. (The Killing {1956}). Too bad Beryl died young in a plane crash.
The flick's also a fine baddie threesome of Fowley, Strange, and Barcroft, enough to please any old movie fan. Happily, Gabby adds his usual toothless mugging in amusing style. But what about Trigger. Catch his and Roy's ride down that steep hillside where it looks like the palomino is about to take a bad fall just as the filming shifts away. I sure hope he didn't.
All in all, it's an okay Rogers entry, but to me, the screenplay needs a re-write into a more appropriate 55-minute format. Still, Roy, Gabby and crew carry us along as usual. Thanks guys.
Sunset On The Desert has Roy playing two roles, Roy Rogers rancher and rodeo star and his evil doppelganger, a gunman in the pay of Douglas Fowley. Fortunately we see far more of the good Roy than the bad Roy because quite frankly Roy just can't cut it as anything less than a cowboy hero.
Fowley has bad Roy and a whole bunch of others trying to get control of a lot of properties in the area. He's got a hold over Judge Frank M. Thomas who thinks his brother who was once the partner of the good Roy's father pilfered some money from the county.
Both the Roys have girl friends, the good Roy is chasing Lynne Carver daughter of the former partner of his dad and Judge Thomas's niece. The bad Roy's got the shapely Beryl Wallace. Needless to say both the women are confused.
I saw an edited version of Sunset In The Desert and a lot was left out, but even so every actor loves the challenge of playing dual roles. But Roy Rogers was not an actor per se, he was a movie cowboy hero. And good what he did, but he should have had a better story. And he just doesn't cut it as a bad guy in the scenes as bad Roy.
Fowley has bad Roy and a whole bunch of others trying to get control of a lot of properties in the area. He's got a hold over Judge Frank M. Thomas who thinks his brother who was once the partner of the good Roy's father pilfered some money from the county.
Both the Roys have girl friends, the good Roy is chasing Lynne Carver daughter of the former partner of his dad and Judge Thomas's niece. The bad Roy's got the shapely Beryl Wallace. Needless to say both the women are confused.
I saw an edited version of Sunset In The Desert and a lot was left out, but even so every actor loves the challenge of playing dual roles. But Roy Rogers was not an actor per se, he was a movie cowboy hero. And good what he did, but he should have had a better story. And he just doesn't cut it as a bad guy in the scenes as bad Roy.
Roy Rogers reads in the paper that his father's old partner, Frank Thomas is in desert. Thomas is now a judge and has been making some peculiar rulings about a ranch in the throes of repossession. He and Gabby Hayes ride into town, where Roy is mistaken for a hired gun for the bad guys. He adopts this as a cover while he investigates.
It's another nice little B movie in the Rogers catalog directed by Joseph Kane. Lynne Carver is the ingenue, Beryl Wallace the not-so bad bad girl, and the usual complement of competent minor players fill out the cast list. Roy only sings a couple of songs, but I looked at a 52-minute TV print that had 11 minutes removed.
It's another nice little B movie in the Rogers catalog directed by Joseph Kane. Lynne Carver is the ingenue, Beryl Wallace the not-so bad bad girl, and the usual complement of competent minor players fill out the cast list. Roy only sings a couple of songs, but I looked at a 52-minute TV print that had 11 minutes removed.
Two Roys for the price of one here! There's "good" Roy - the singing cowboy we all love and admire - and "bad" Roy - or,rather, bad Bill - easy to spot because he's the one with a black eye! Roy, of course, spends most of the film pretending to be Bill in order to bring the real crooks to justice.
Sadly, the version of this movie that I watched is the shortened one - I suspect I may have lost one of the musical numbers - but there's still plenty to recommend. As well as Gabby and the Sons of the Pioneers, look out for Roy Barcroft. Although cast as a minor villain, he dominates the screen each time he appears. A really class act!
Sadly, the version of this movie that I watched is the shortened one - I suspect I may have lost one of the musical numbers - but there's still plenty to recommend. As well as Gabby and the Sons of the Pioneers, look out for Roy Barcroft. Although cast as a minor villain, he dominates the screen each time he appears. A really class act!
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- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 3 minutos
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- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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