Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaJay Lynch, the half-brother of rancher Jim Dawson, schemes with Dawson's crooked lawyer, Jasper Raines, to take over Dawson's ranch. Lynch has his henchmen, "Bronco" West and "Drifter" Smith... Leggi tuttoJay Lynch, the half-brother of rancher Jim Dawson, schemes with Dawson's crooked lawyer, Jasper Raines, to take over Dawson's ranch. Lynch has his henchmen, "Bronco" West and "Drifter" Smith kill Dawson, but Dawson is only wounded and found and hidden away by cattle-association d... Leggi tuttoJay Lynch, the half-brother of rancher Jim Dawson, schemes with Dawson's crooked lawyer, Jasper Raines, to take over Dawson's ranch. Lynch has his henchmen, "Bronco" West and "Drifter" Smith kill Dawson, but Dawson is only wounded and found and hidden away by cattle-association detectives Tom Sterling and his sidekick, Lopez Mendoza. Lynch then shows up at the Dawson ... Leggi tutto
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Jay Lynch
- (as Ken Duncan)
- Henchman Drifter Smith
- (as Earle Douglas)
- Tom's Horse
- (as Rusty the Wonder Horse)
- Deputy
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
All to the good for the good guys. With Aubrey declared legally dead half brother to Aubrey, Kenne Duncan produces a forged will giving Aubrey's ranch to him and dispossessing Aubrey's daughters Betty Miles and Sugar Dawn.
What's a cowboy hero to dobut fight for the wronged ladies. And that it happened to be his job so much the better.
Frank Yaconelli who could also play an occasional villain was funny comic relief with his traps he can't stay out of.
Nicely paced western from Monogram.
With the almost always but not this time excellent Frank Yaconelli and the always watchable Betty Miles, probably the best girl cowboy in movies, and the venerable Kenne (but here billed as Ken) Duncan, Keene continued to be as likable as ever, just not very entertaining.
But the flaw was in the script, and somewhat in the directing, not in the very good cast.
Players included Tom London and Gene Alsace, and they all had some good moments, even in some of the "humor" that a few times turned out actually to be funny.
It really is a good story, and you can find this for free at YouTube, so I do recommend "Riding the Sunset Trail." Just try not to let the not-very-funny "humor" de-rail you and your watching.
This film begins with a ranch owner being ambushed and falling to what appears to be his death. His step-brother was behind this and he now produces a fake will--leaving everything to him and nothing to his daughter. Fortunately, Tom (Tom Keene) and his partner, Lopez (Frank Yaconelli) to come to the rescue--though mostly Lopez behaves like a bad Mexican stereotype (sort of like the Frito Bandito) and spends most of the film getting caught in bear traps, mouse traps and the like. The plot is EXTREMELY familiar-- especially when Tom gives a long exposition near the end explaining who he REALLY is and why he's there.
All in all, I've seen worse B-westerns...but not many. Strictly for folks who aren't real demanding and don't mind a western that breaks no new ground or isn't particularly entertaining.
By the way, one line I did find funny was when Tom came to help the daughter and she asked how she could repay him for his kindness. He said "we'll think of something later..."---and my mind went all sorts of places I don't think the filmmakers intended.
A band of outlaws, led by Jay Lynch (Kenne Duncan),ambush and supposedly kill Lynch's half-brother, rancher Jim Dawson (Jimmy Aubrey), but Tom Sterling, working undercover for the Cattleman's Association, and his pal, Lopez Mendoza (Frank Yaconelli), find the wounded rancher, and keep him in hiding. Lynch and crooked lawyer Jasper Raines (Slim Andrews) have a forged will that leaves Dawson's ranch to Lynch, and half-Uncle Lynch shows up and orders Dawson's daughters Betty (Betty Miles) and Sugar (Sugar Dawn) to vacate his newly-acquired ranch. Tom, as usual with his gun belt buckled in the back, and Lopez come riding in to aid the Dawson sisters in their efforts to keep the ranch.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe earliest documented telecasts of this film took place in Chicago Wednesday 9 February 1949 on WBKB (Channel 4), and in Philadelphia Friday 11 November 1949 on Frontier Playhouse on WPTZ (Channel 3).
- ConnessioniRemade as Tumbleweed Trail (1946)
I più visti
Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1