Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThe Rough Riders are called upon to help save a stagecoach line.The Rough Riders are called upon to help save a stagecoach line.The Rough Riders are called upon to help save a stagecoach line.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Tristram Coffin
- Steve Taggert
- (as Tris Coffin)
Chris Allen
- Zeke
- (sin créditos)
Gene Alsace
- Henchman
- (sin créditos)
Bob Baker
- Marshal Bat Madison
- (sin créditos)
Ben Corbett
- Luke
- (sin créditos)
Victor Cox
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
Jack Daley
- Rogers
- (sin créditos)
Augie Gomez
- Stageline Employee
- (sin créditos)
I. Stanford Jolley
- Stageline Employee
- (sin créditos)
Joe Phillips
- Slim
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Buck, Tim and Ray kick off a great Rough Riders series. Seems as though Bunion (Horace Murphy) was right that Buck can't turn down a request from Bat Madison (Bob Baker). McCoy comes on strong with early comic relief as a preacher who forces the barflies to sing at gunpoint. Great to see Tristram Coffin famously known for his "dead man walking" incident on live television. Easy to see why Slim Whitaker was one of the most prolific actors as a B-western villains. Also, sweethearts on the set Luana Walters and Dennis Moore were very popular in these early westerns. A lot of action and throwing lead here, especially with the spectacular final scene.
Watching this first of the Rough Rider series of B westerns for Monogram it occurred
to me that someone in that studio thought it would be a good idea to team three
veteran cowboys. No love interest for these guys. They're about business always.
Tim McCoy, Buck Jones, and Raymond Hatton all have careers dating back to the silent era. Hatton in fact was in some of the earliest films made in Hollywood. I'm sure the front row Saturday matinee kids liked them. But this was a trio that their parents might appreciate.
These three are all doing separate things but they answer a call from a US Marshal friends who says that in a certain Arizona town the gold miners are being systematically robbed when they ship with Luana Walters stagecoach line. All three drift in separately and pretend not to know each other. Do you doubt they get the job done?
This was a good beginning to the series.
Tim McCoy, Buck Jones, and Raymond Hatton all have careers dating back to the silent era. Hatton in fact was in some of the earliest films made in Hollywood. I'm sure the front row Saturday matinee kids liked them. But this was a trio that their parents might appreciate.
These three are all doing separate things but they answer a call from a US Marshal friends who says that in a certain Arizona town the gold miners are being systematically robbed when they ship with Luana Walters stagecoach line. All three drift in separately and pretend not to know each other. Do you doubt they get the job done?
This was a good beginning to the series.
"Arizona Bound" is memorable for the teaming of veteran "B" western stars Buck Jones and Tim McCoy. They were joined by veteran sidekick Raymond Hatton. All had begun their careers in the early silent pictures and had continued working regularly into the 1930s in a assorted series for a variety of companies,
With the popularity of Republic's Three Mesquiteer series, other "B" studios began to want to get on the band wagon. Monogram had started with the Range Buster series with Ray "Crash" Corrigan, John "Dusty" King and Max Terhune. Then someone had the idea of teaming Jones and McCoy, both of whom had seen their careers decline by the end of the 30s, in a series. What resulted was "The Rough Riders". Jones, McCoy and Hatton played undercover marshals who were called in to settle a situation at the beginning of each film.
Jones played Buck Roberts who usually posed as an outlaw. McCoy played Tim McCall who usually posed as a parson and Hopkins played Sandy Hopkins a grizzled old timer who often acted as a go between between Roberts and McCall.
In this first of eight Rough Rider films, the boys are called in to help save heroine Ruth Masters (Luana Walters) stage line. Ruth, in true "B" western fashion tries to carry on after her father has been murdered. Trying to gain control of the line is villain Steve Taggert (Tristram Coffin) and his henchman Red (Slim Whitaker). Dennis Moore plays Walters love interest.
Devoid of the usual bar room brawls and with less action than most, the Rough Rider series was nevertheless lifted above the average through the presence of its three stars. All three had been in the business for many years and their collective experience made this a memorable series.
At the end of each film the three would ride off in different directions, Jones to Arizona, McCoy to Wyoming and Hatton to Texas. The producers had planned to continue the series into a second season but fate intervened.
With the US entry into WWII, McCoy, a reserve Colonel, was called back into service. He left the series after the seventh film. Jones made the last one with Hatton and Rex Bell. Following the completion of "Dawn On the Great Divide" in 1942, Jones died tragically in a fire in Boston. The next season, Raymond Hatton took his Sandy Hopkins character to a new series with Johnny Mack Brown. Evidently, scripts intended for the Rough Rider series were utilized in the Brown/Hatton series.
At any rate the Rough Rider series allowed veteran cowpokes Jones and McCoy to ride off into the sunset one last time with their heads held high.
Watch for fellow "B" hero Bob Baker in a cameo as Marshal Bat Madison near the end of the film.
With the popularity of Republic's Three Mesquiteer series, other "B" studios began to want to get on the band wagon. Monogram had started with the Range Buster series with Ray "Crash" Corrigan, John "Dusty" King and Max Terhune. Then someone had the idea of teaming Jones and McCoy, both of whom had seen their careers decline by the end of the 30s, in a series. What resulted was "The Rough Riders". Jones, McCoy and Hatton played undercover marshals who were called in to settle a situation at the beginning of each film.
Jones played Buck Roberts who usually posed as an outlaw. McCoy played Tim McCall who usually posed as a parson and Hopkins played Sandy Hopkins a grizzled old timer who often acted as a go between between Roberts and McCall.
In this first of eight Rough Rider films, the boys are called in to help save heroine Ruth Masters (Luana Walters) stage line. Ruth, in true "B" western fashion tries to carry on after her father has been murdered. Trying to gain control of the line is villain Steve Taggert (Tristram Coffin) and his henchman Red (Slim Whitaker). Dennis Moore plays Walters love interest.
Devoid of the usual bar room brawls and with less action than most, the Rough Rider series was nevertheless lifted above the average through the presence of its three stars. All three had been in the business for many years and their collective experience made this a memorable series.
At the end of each film the three would ride off in different directions, Jones to Arizona, McCoy to Wyoming and Hatton to Texas. The producers had planned to continue the series into a second season but fate intervened.
With the US entry into WWII, McCoy, a reserve Colonel, was called back into service. He left the series after the seventh film. Jones made the last one with Hatton and Rex Bell. Following the completion of "Dawn On the Great Divide" in 1942, Jones died tragically in a fire in Boston. The next season, Raymond Hatton took his Sandy Hopkins character to a new series with Johnny Mack Brown. Evidently, scripts intended for the Rough Rider series were utilized in the Brown/Hatton series.
At any rate the Rough Rider series allowed veteran cowpokes Jones and McCoy to ride off into the sunset one last time with their heads held high.
Watch for fellow "B" hero Bob Baker in a cameo as Marshal Bat Madison near the end of the film.
Former lawman Buck Jones is called to Mesa City, Arizona in order to get to the bottom of the constant stagecoach and gold-shipment robberies. Framed for the hold-ups, Jones teams up with "preacher" Tim McCoy and good-old-boy Raymond Hatton to uncover the real culprits.
The first in Monogram Pictures' Rough Riders series, this is mostly by-the-numbers, with little action. However, it's redeemed somewhat by an exciting, action-packed climax and an inspired performance by McCoy, who's flamboyant character introduction, where he refuses to "dance" to a blazing six-gun before turning the tables and forcing the whole saloon to sing "Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie", is the film's highlight.
The first in Monogram Pictures' Rough Riders series, this is mostly by-the-numbers, with little action. However, it's redeemed somewhat by an exciting, action-packed climax and an inspired performance by McCoy, who's flamboyant character introduction, where he refuses to "dance" to a blazing six-gun before turning the tables and forcing the whole saloon to sing "Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie", is the film's highlight.
Three heroes Buck Roberts, Tim McCall and Sandy Hopkins are undercover Marshals out to stop villains who seek to destroy a stage line. The owner has been killed and his daughter Ruth Masters has taken over in her dads place running the coaches. Tristram Coffin stars as the dastardly Steve Taggert who will stop at nothing to ruin the Masters Stage company business.
Ok western starring Tim McCoy, Buck Jones and Raymond Hatton, but it's familiar and an ordinary, only the stars and the action keep it afloat. The finale is quite thrilling, though.
Ok western starring Tim McCoy, Buck Jones and Raymond Hatton, but it's familiar and an ordinary, only the stars and the action keep it afloat. The finale is quite thrilling, though.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaGreat Western Pictures was formed by Buck Jones, Trem Carr and Scott R. Dunlap to produce the "Rough Rider" series. Each contributed $3300, or $10,000 total, to get things off the ground.
- ErroresWhen Tim McCoy first enter the saloon, his positioning on the edited shots do not match.
- Citas
intertitle: [closing intertitle] Watch for THE ROUGH RIDERS when they ride again.
- ConexionesEdited into Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch (1976)
- Bandas sonorasRough Riders Ride
(uncredited)
Written by Edward J. Kay
Sung over opening-and-closing credits by male chorus
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución57 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Arizona Bound (1941) officially released in Canada in English?
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