AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,5/10
184
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAgainst a background of exceptional mountain photography, Hoppy rushes to rid former sweetheart Nora Blake and Pappy's range of rustlers and bad guys.Against a background of exceptional mountain photography, Hoppy rushes to rid former sweetheart Nora Blake and Pappy's range of rustlers and bad guys.Against a background of exceptional mountain photography, Hoppy rushes to rid former sweetheart Nora Blake and Pappy's range of rustlers and bad guys.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Gertrude Hoffman
- Ma Caffrey
- (as Gertrude W. Hoffman)
Ed Cassidy
- Sheriff Hawley
- (as Edward Cassidy)
John Beach
- Bar 20 Cowhand
- (não creditado)
Dick Botiller
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
Sheik the Horse
- un-named (Hopalong's horse)
- (não creditado)
Bud McClure
- Henchman
- (não creditado)
Charles Murphy
- Henchman Tex
- (não creditado)
George Plues
- Henchman
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
The formula for nearly every Hopalong Cassidy film is that Hoppy be accompanied by two sidekicks....and old cuss and a young handsome guy. Originally, the old cuss was Windy, played by George 'Gabby' Hayes. But after a contract dispute with Paramount, Hayes went on to Republic Studios...where he became the regular sidekick for Roy Rogers and also played second fiddle to a few others. This means that they needed a new old geezer...and they experimented with a few until they ultimately settled on Andy Clyde, who played 'California' is more than half the Cassidy films. In "Cassidy of Bar 20", the studio experimented with a new guy....Frank Darien as 'Pappy'. He wasn't bad but didn't distinguish himself...so Paramount kept trying.
The plot to "Cassidy of Bar 20" is pretty typical...a baddie, Clay Allison, wants to control everything and is trying to drive poor Nora and her outfit out of business. What made this a bit different is that long ago, Nora and Hoppy were a number...which is surprising for the normally asexual cowboy. In his films, he nearly always left the loving to his young sidekick, Lucky or Jimmy or whoever.
So is this any good? Yes. But it really isn't that special and there are several logical problems with the script. Worth seeing but not especially memorable.
The plot to "Cassidy of Bar 20" is pretty typical...a baddie, Clay Allison, wants to control everything and is trying to drive poor Nora and her outfit out of business. What made this a bit different is that long ago, Nora and Hoppy were a number...which is surprising for the normally asexual cowboy. In his films, he nearly always left the loving to his young sidekick, Lucky or Jimmy or whoever.
So is this any good? Yes. But it really isn't that special and there are several logical problems with the script. Worth seeing but not especially memorable.
Not the greatest Hopalong Cassidy movie, but not a bad effort. After a hard roundup the men of the Bar 20 head into town for some fun. That is all except "Hoppy" (he tells the rest of the boys "I'll see you back here in two weeks, and be practically sober!") and "Pappy" (enjoyingly played by Frank Darien in his only appearance in the Cassidy series). Later joined by "Lucky" the trio have a series of adventures which commence with their being arrested by a crooked landowner. Also prominent is an unusual love story, a curmudgeonly storekeeper, and of course the usual romance involving "Lucky" (Charles Hayden) which ends in plenty of action. Light-hearted and fast-moving throughout.
Cassidy Of Bar 20 has two things unique in the series. I only recall one other time that actual personality from the old west is in a Hoppy movie as a character. One was a later Belle Starr story and in this one Clay Allison makes an appearance. However the real Allison assuredly no boy scout was not anything like the rat we see in this film.
The other is that Frank Darien makes his one and only appearance as the old timer sidekick for Hoppy. There were a few before producer Harry Sherman settled on Andy Clyde after Gabby Hayes left. He was just simply Pappy and he rode a mule. He never really took and I can see why Sherman just used him once and that was that.
Allison is making trouble for small ranchers like John Elliott and his wife who had some history with Hoppy sends for him. Allison is played by Robert Fiske and he's not got much in the way of character. He does a couple of cold blooded murders in Cassidy Of Bar 20 and pays in the end.
Hoppy fans should like this. Belle Starr made out better in a Hoppy movie, Clay Allison far worse.
The other is that Frank Darien makes his one and only appearance as the old timer sidekick for Hoppy. There were a few before producer Harry Sherman settled on Andy Clyde after Gabby Hayes left. He was just simply Pappy and he rode a mule. He never really took and I can see why Sherman just used him once and that was that.
Allison is making trouble for small ranchers like John Elliott and his wife who had some history with Hoppy sends for him. Allison is played by Robert Fiske and he's not got much in the way of character. He does a couple of cold blooded murders in Cassidy Of Bar 20 and pays in the end.
Hoppy fans should like this. Belle Starr made out better in a Hoppy movie, Clay Allison far worse.
This is one of the worst Hoppy films. The plot was unbelievable and weak. The comic sidekick (Frank Darien as Pappy) was also among the worst in the series. ***Spoliers.***
Hoppy is out to help his girl friend whose ranch is being rustled and preyed upon by local rustlers-land grabbers, led by Clay Allison. For no good workable reason (from my viewpoint) Hoppy lets himself get arrested and imprisoned for trespassing (or whatever), and then he convinces Allison to put Hoppy on parole and work his time out at Allison's ranch. In short order, Hoppy sees Allison's men maybe rustling Nora's cattle. So Hoppy rides off to see Nora. (What about his parole agreement?) Meanwhile, Fred is the only witness to see Allison shoot Nora's partner (or foreman) dead. For no real good reason that I could see, Fred's mom suspects her son as involved in the murder and has the son placed in jail! None of this really matters because Allison finally decides to have his gang descend on Hoppy and everyone else at Nora's ranch, but they are beaten back and Allison is killed.
Not much of a good plot.
Hoppy is out to help his girl friend whose ranch is being rustled and preyed upon by local rustlers-land grabbers, led by Clay Allison. For no good workable reason (from my viewpoint) Hoppy lets himself get arrested and imprisoned for trespassing (or whatever), and then he convinces Allison to put Hoppy on parole and work his time out at Allison's ranch. In short order, Hoppy sees Allison's men maybe rustling Nora's cattle. So Hoppy rides off to see Nora. (What about his parole agreement?) Meanwhile, Fred is the only witness to see Allison shoot Nora's partner (or foreman) dead. For no real good reason that I could see, Fred's mom suspects her son as involved in the murder and has the son placed in jail! None of this really matters because Allison finally decides to have his gang descend on Hoppy and everyone else at Nora's ranch, but they are beaten back and Allison is killed.
Not much of a good plot.
When bad-guys begin harassing the townsfolk, Hoppy's (William Boyd) former gal Nora Blake (Nora Lane) sends him a plea for help. Hoppy is the boss of Bar 20 ranch in Texas, so he rides down the Camino Real in the New Mexico cattle country near Alamogordo.
Before he and his saddlemates, "Lucky" Jenkins (Russell Hayden) and "Pappy (Frank Darien), can reach her ranch, they are stopped by Clay Allison (Robert Fiske), a cattle-rustler who is in almost complete control of the district, and wants to extend his holdings by seizing Nora's cattle and driving her out.
The plot portion where Hopalong and co. Volunteer to wrangle horses for bad guy cattleman instead of paying fine and going prison is unusual and makes a change from a straightforward Hopalong taking on the crooked cattleman. There's nice cinematography, lush mountain scenery and some good action, well at least in the finale.
Before he and his saddlemates, "Lucky" Jenkins (Russell Hayden) and "Pappy (Frank Darien), can reach her ranch, they are stopped by Clay Allison (Robert Fiske), a cattle-rustler who is in almost complete control of the district, and wants to extend his holdings by seizing Nora's cattle and driving her out.
The plot portion where Hopalong and co. Volunteer to wrangle horses for bad guy cattleman instead of paying fine and going prison is unusual and makes a change from a straightforward Hopalong taking on the crooked cattleman. There's nice cinematography, lush mountain scenery and some good action, well at least in the finale.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThis is one of 54 Hopalong Cassidy features produced by Harry Sherman, initially distributed by Paramount Pictures from 1935-1941, and then by United Artists 1942-1944, which were purchased by their star William Boyd for nationally syndicated television presentation beginning in 1948 and continuing thereafter for many years, as a result of their phenomenal success. Each feature was re-edited to 54 minutes so as to comfortably fit into a 60 minute time slot, with six minutes for commercials. It was not until 50 years later that, with the cooperation of Mrs. Boyd. i.e. Grace Bradley, that they were finally restored to their original length with their original opening and closing credits intact.
- ConexõesFollowed by Coração do Arizona (1938)
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração56 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was A Última Testemunha (1938) officially released in Canada in English?
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