Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaPecos businessman Matt Gardner is buying up freighters, or wagon trains of food supplies, at cheap prices through intimidation, and charging high prices by deliberately causing phony food sh... Ler tudoPecos businessman Matt Gardner is buying up freighters, or wagon trains of food supplies, at cheap prices through intimidation, and charging high prices by deliberately causing phony food shortages at his trading posts. The only one refusing to sell his supplies is Zack Sibley, w... Ler tudoPecos businessman Matt Gardner is buying up freighters, or wagon trains of food supplies, at cheap prices through intimidation, and charging high prices by deliberately causing phony food shortages at his trading posts. The only one refusing to sell his supplies is Zack Sibley, who is dead set on maintaining his freighter business as well as tracking down his father's... Ler tudo
- Coe Gardner
- (as Malcolm McTaggart)
- Wagon Train Cook
- (não creditado)
- …
- Peter O'Conner
- (não creditado)
- Zack's Horse
- (não creditado)
- Bean-Buyer
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Nevertheless, the leads are attractive. Tim Holt gives a stalwart performance and Martha O'Driscoll is very pretty but is not given much to do. This is the sort of movie I probably would have liked a long time ago when I was a kid and didn't ask many questions. The action scenes were good and the second unit stuff was even better.
This picture was on TCM the other morning. It was a time-killer but did not break any new ground as far as the western genre is concerned. The kids won't notice, though.
Tim Holt is stalwart and believable as a wagon train leader, Martha O'Driscoll is incredibly pretty, young and fetching in the role of an eastern girl gone west. All of the cast does a fine job.
Wagons and a stagecoach are expertly handled (another lost art?) in the Utah country, not just on graded back lot roads.
Authentic-looking in many ways, fast paced, this film is a winner.
Wagon Train is a western that all can enjoy if you are a fan of the western genre. Decades later when color is added, and more sophisticated cameras and lenses, the westerns of the 1970s starring the likes of John Wayne, Clint Eastwood and Charles Bronson may have pushed films like this one, the 1940 Wagon Train to the back of the TV film shelves, but thank God for television stations such as TCM who will periodically honor the great western stars such as Tim Holt and allow us to watch such a film classic.
I give Wagon Train a solid 8 out of 10 rating. It may be a bit dusty, grainy and in black and white but for a near 80 year old film, it remains a classic in my books and is worth watching at least twice in one's lifetime.
Visually, this is quite impressive, the harsh, unforgiving land seems to envelope around the wagon train, lending some grit - there's an effective scene of a Comanche arrow hitting the wood and the scene quickly fades away. Next minute we see Holt riding into the burnt stage station.
A fairly entertaining RKO western that has the appeal of Tim Holt's youthful charm and his chemistry with Martha O Driscoll. There's some gorgeous location photography (It was filmed in Kanab, Utah and in Wildwood Regional Park in Thousand Oaks, California) and some good characterisation.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesPunho Contra Revólver (1940) was shot simultaneously with this movie.
- Erros de gravaçãoAs Zack is chasing after the runaway wagon team through the canyon pass, the tire tracks of the camera truck can be clearly seen in the dirt.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosOpening credits: "The middle of the last century witnessed small bands of courageous men leading their wagon trains across the Wilderness, carrying provisions to the people of the frontier. They died of hunger, thirst, heat and cold. Desert wastes, prairie fires, the attacks of road agents and Indians took their toll. But the freighters still rolled on - - the wheels of their wagons carving from the Trans-Missouri Wilderness a greater and stronger nation."
- ConexõesReferenced in What to Do on a Date (1951)
- Trilhas sonorasWagon Train
(uncredited)
Written by Ray Whitley and Fred Rose
Played on guitar and sung by Ray Whitley and an offscreen chorus
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração59 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1