Una banda di razziatori, servendosi di grossi camion, ruba il bestiame agli allevatori della zona del Red River, in Texas. Per interrompere il complicato traffico che fa leva, tra l'altro, s... Leggi tuttoUna banda di razziatori, servendosi di grossi camion, ruba il bestiame agli allevatori della zona del Red River, in Texas. Per interrompere il complicato traffico che fa leva, tra l'altro, su ignari turisti devono intervenire i Tre Moschettieri che risolveranno il caso.Una banda di razziatori, servendosi di grossi camion, ruba il bestiame agli allevatori della zona del Red River, in Texas. Per interrompere il complicato traffico che fa leva, tra l'altro, su ignari turisti devono intervenire i Tre Moschettieri che risolveranno il caso.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Dude Ranch Cowhand
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Rustler
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- Marshal
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Everything starts fine with a build-up of the importance of the Mesquiteers. When the town sends for one investigator to help the local sheriff find out who has been stealing the ranchers' cattle they end up with three! However, there is a switch along the way. The meat industry sends out its own agent to investigate what is happening to the cattle in the area. That investigator is Tex Reilly (Kirby Grant) who happens to be an old friend of the Mesquiteers. When he runs into the trio he explains that his face may be known to the cattle rustlers, so he trades places with Stony (John Wayne) and rides into town with Tuscon (Ray Corrigan) and Lullaby (Max Terhune). Stony investigates Tex's lead by masquerading as escaped murderer who falls in with the rustlers. That makes a total of four people working as Mesquiteers. From there the adventure unfolds!
There were a few things that made me feel the quality was lacking in this movie. In one scene Tex refers to "the kid" before any kid has been mentioned or seen. In the next scene Tuscon and Lullaby meet Tommy (Sammy McKim). A scene must have been edited from the film or the scenes were edited out of order. Another thing that is really minor but noticeable is the lack of development of the main bad guys, Payne and Hartley (William Royle and Perry Ivins). They are taking/giving orders throughout the movie, but they never come across as really strong villains.
The last thing to complain about is something that I perhaps should not mention, but it was significant. Red River Range recycles a plot element that I remembered from a Gene Autry movie, Public Cowboy No. 1 which was released in 1937. In that movie the cattle rustlers butchered the cattle on the range, buried the hides and waste, and moved the beef out in refrigerated trucks. That is repeated in this Mesquiteers adventure. Complaining about re-using plot elements in a B western may be a bit like complaining about 14 shots coming from a six shooter without reloading, but what seemed to be an original twist on cattle rustling in one movie reeked of plagiarism in the next. To be fair to Red River Range there is a plot element that I have not yet seen anywhere else. Vacationers at a dude ranch are taken out to rustle cattle as part of the everyday activities without knowing that they are helping real cattle rustlers.
Perhaps I have nitpicked too much because over all Red River Range is worth viewing.
Unbeknownst to John Wayne, Ray Corrigan, and Max Terhune the meatpacking industry has hired its own agent, Kirby Grant, to get a line on the rustling. That in itself was an interesting aspect of this film, the inflation of meat prices as a result of cattle rustling. One never does think of the economic hurt, those rustlers cause.
Kirby's cover is blown before he can infiltrate and folks in the Red River country already know the Mesquiteers are coming. So Wayne and Grant switch places and Wayne poses as an escaped killer.
The focus of the investigation is a dude ranch where some mighty strange goings on are occurring. Can't reveal what the scheme, but I assure viewers it's a lulu.
A bit more comedy than usual in this film in the person of old vaudevillian Polly Moran, an amazonian tourist at the dude ranch with eyes on the Duke. Good thing the investigation was over as soon as it was because who knows what John Wayne might have had to do to keep his cover.
Three Mesquiteers is a fun series from Republic, and Red River Range is a good example with a nice mix of gunplay and humour - Polly Moran as a dude lady offers some humour and some sage advice to John Wayne who pretends to be a stranger to the old west. It's not strictly a western as it has trucks and telephones, but there's mostly fast riding and wide open spaces.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizJohn Wayne's last b-movie before becoming famous for Stagecoach and thereafter a huge movie star. He made over fifty small films before his fame, mostly Western programmers.
- Citazioni
Lullaby Joslin: Reckon the folks in Red River will kinda be surprised they're gettin' three investigators when they only asked for one?
Stony Brooke: They're only gettin' one - and his two assistants.
Tucson Smith: And you're the one?
Stony Brooke: Sure!
Tucson Smith: It's awfully nice of you to take us along for the ride.
- ConnessioniEdited into Six Gun Theater: Red River Range (2016)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione56 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1