Agrega una trama en tu idiomaEllen Williams' father has a valuable collection of furs and an outlaw gang is after them. Before he is killed, Williams hides a note revealing their location. The Texas Rangers are on the j... Leer todoEllen Williams' father has a valuable collection of furs and an outlaw gang is after them. Before he is killed, Williams hides a note revealing their location. The Texas Rangers are on the job and to get more information, they have Panhandle pose as an Indian chief.Ellen Williams' father has a valuable collection of furs and an outlaw gang is after them. Before he is killed, Williams hides a note revealing their location. The Texas Rangers are on the job and to get more information, they have Panhandle pose as an Indian chief.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Old Man Wilson
- (sin créditos)
- Henchman Fred
- (sin créditos)
- Old Man Williams
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
The third ranger, Guy Wilkerson, aka Panhandle Perkins, did much of the comedy, but one thing I like about this series, especially after Tex Ritter replaced Jim Newill, is that the comic relief is shared by the entire cast, including the outlaws. "Frontier Fugitives" even gives the normally sombre I. Stanford Jolley a chance to strut his stuff. He pretends to be an Indian and clowns around with Panhandle who is also pretending to be an Indian. In the process Stanford Jolley gets his smoke laced with wacky weed. A stoned Jolley tries to find his way back to his cronies in town. Perhaps this idea came from Dave O'Brien who had earlier played in "Reefer Madness." Since not only Guy Wilkerson but also Tex Ritter and Dave O'Brien were quite adept at doing comedy, at times the Texas Rangers series play almost as comic westerns, even a bit of satire is thrown in from time to time. One reason for this is possibly the low-budget with which the actors were made to work. All the fun distracted from the cheap sets and weak scripts.
The viewer gets action, humor, and songs performed by a master showman. Not bad for a 57 minute oater.
We never see any Indians in Frontier Fugitive, but we do see some white people dressed like Indians and they're after one particular trapper who has hidden a cache of furs somewhere that the bad guys would like to heist. The late trapper left a written message for his daughter that we spend most of the movie trying to find.
This series was the poor relation of Republic's Three Mesquiteers or Monogram's Range Busters. Tex Ritter sings a bit and there's some good action for western fans, but this is nothing to write home about.
It's an interesting if minor variation on the 'save the ranch' plot, but in the hands of director Harry L. Fraser, about six minutes of story, six of Ritter singing, six of riding around Corriganville and shooting at one another, and another six of Wilkerson's now-unfashionable clowning -- he disguises himself as an Indian who talks with many "ugh"s -- are eked out to 57 minutes. Writer Elmer Clifton might have put in a few red herrings, but he knew who he was working for, so we have to watch people ride in, hitch their horses, walk to the front door, enter, then switch to inside until they do what they came to do a couple of minutes earlier. Fraser's continued employment, even at end-of-the-road PRC remains a mystery to me. Perhaps he was paying them.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaTrade reviewed at the Hitching Post theatre in Hollywood on 17 October 1946, 15 months after first release.
- ErroresIn discussing the murder of fur trader Williams in the early part of the movie, one of the bad guys refers to him as Higgins.
- Citas
[first lines]
[Dave and Tex ride up to Panhandle who is making smoke signals and chanting incoherently]
Texas Ranger Dave Wyatt: Well, what are you trying to do, Panhandle?
Texas Ranger Panhandle Perkins: Don't you get it, Dave?
Texas Ranger Tex Haines: Sorry.
Texas Ranger Panhandle Perkins: You understand, don't you, Tex?
Texas Ranger Tex Haines: Sure! You're givin' an imitation of a razorback hog stuck in a barbed-wire fence.
Texas Ranger Panhandle Perkins: No, that ain't it at all! We're near Indian country, ain't we? Well, I'm practicin' talkin' Indian, throwin' up smoke signals, practicin' sign language - I'm getting' prepared!
Texas Ranger Tex Haines: Ah, we were only kiddin', Panhandle. Understood every word you said, didn't we, Dave?
Texas Ranger Dave Wyatt: Sure did, and you're dead right - we've got to be prepared. In fact, we'll hold a counsel of war right now.
- ConexionesFollowed by Flaming Bullets (1945)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución57 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1