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Hop-a-Long Cassidy

  • 1935
  • Approved
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
443
YOUR RATING
William Boyd and James Ellison in Hop-a-Long Cassidy (1935)
Home Video Trailer from Good Times Ent
Play trailer2:14
1 Video
33 Photos
DramaWestern

An evil ranch foreman tries to provoke a range war by playing two cattlemen against each other while helping a gang to rustle the cattle.An evil ranch foreman tries to provoke a range war by playing two cattlemen against each other while helping a gang to rustle the cattle.An evil ranch foreman tries to provoke a range war by playing two cattlemen against each other while helping a gang to rustle the cattle.

  • Director
    • Howard Bretherton
  • Writers
    • Clarence E. Mulford
    • Doris Schroeder
    • Harrison Jacobs
  • Stars
    • William Boyd
    • James Ellison
    • Paula Stone
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    443
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Howard Bretherton
    • Writers
      • Clarence E. Mulford
      • Doris Schroeder
      • Harrison Jacobs
    • Stars
      • William Boyd
      • James Ellison
      • Paula Stone
    • 13User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Hop-Along Cassidy
    Trailer 2:14
    Hop-Along Cassidy

    Photos33

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    William Boyd
    William Boyd
    • Bill Hop-Along Cassidy
    James Ellison
    James Ellison
    • Johnny Nelson
    • (as Jimmy Ellison)
    Paula Stone
    Paula Stone
    • Mary Meeker
    George 'Gabby' Hayes
    George 'Gabby' Hayes
    • Uncle Ben
    • (as George Hayes)
    Kenneth Thomson
    Kenneth Thomson
    • Jack Anthony
    Frank McGlynn Jr.
    Frank McGlynn Jr.
    • Red Connors
    Charles Middleton
    Charles Middleton
    • Buck Peters
    Robert Warwick
    Robert Warwick
    • Jim Meeker
    Willie Fung
    Willie Fung
    • Salem the Cook
    Frank Campeau
    Frank Campeau
    • Henchman Frisco
    Jim Mason
    Jim Mason
    • Henchman Tom Shaw
    Ted Adams
    Ted Adams
    • Hall
    Franklyn Farnum
    Franklyn Farnum
    • Riley - Cowhand
    Sid Jordan
    Sid Jordan
    • Wrangler
    • (uncredited)
    John Merton
    John Merton
    • Party Guest with a Pint in His Hip Pocket
    • (uncredited)
    Pascale Perry
    • Outlaw Guard
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Phillips
    Joe Phillips
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Monte Rawlins
    Monte Rawlins
    • Cowhand Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Howard Bretherton
    • Writers
      • Clarence E. Mulford
      • Doris Schroeder
      • Harrison Jacobs
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.7443
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    Featured reviews

    7planktonrules

    If you love old B-westerns, then this one is a must!

    "Hop-a-Long Cassidy" is the first appearance of this western hero. In all, William Boyd made 66 of these films and they tended to be among the better B-series films of the era.

    When the story begins, there's some tension between two ranchers...to the point that you know sooner or later violence is going to break out and someone's going to get killed. Into this mess arrives Hopalong who has been summoned by one of the ranchers to help deal with this situation. What no one realizes is that one of the foremen is deliberately stoking fires on both sides...and while the ranches are fighting each other, the foreman and his henchmen are rustling their cattle! Fortunately, Hoppy is NOT a guy to jump headfirst into the problem and his slow, cautious approach is bound to bring answers.

    This film is quite different from films from the likes of Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. This is no singing cowboy picture and it also is a good bit more violent than most of them as well...with a hanging, plenty of shootings and more! It all makes for a very exciting and more realistic sort of B-western. And, like a B, it runs at about one hour and is relatively low-budgeted...though it does sport an amazingly good cast for such an effort.
    7chipe

    Excellent heart-warming first movie of the series

    I thought this —the first Hoppy movie— was excellent and entertaining. It could have had more action and a better mystery-detective-like plot, but so what? It was rich in character exposition, plus the fine acting, scenery, etc. James Ellison was the best young Hoppy sidekick in my opinion. I also enjoyed the acting and dialog from Uncle Ben (Gabby Hayes), Buck Peters and Red Connors characters. I was touched by the qualities expressed by the whole Bar 20 family: honor, loyalty, friendship, love, respect, competence, etc. Best,of course, is William Boyd's acting/persona. There is no need to repeat plot here as it is done in other user reviews. Key memorable scenes were (1) Hoppy's first introduction to Johnny Nelson, who had only heard heroic tales about Hoppy and had resented them; and (2) Uncle Ben's almost mystical communication with Hoppy to relay clues about the rustlers.
    6bkoganbing

    Hoppy arrives at Bar 20

    William Boyd made his screen debut as Hopalong Cassidy in Hop-ALong Cassidy. He was really William known as Bill Cassidy when he does arrive, but he gets wounded in a gunfight and limped a bit for the duration of the film. The guys in the bunkhouse called him Hopalong after he gave himself that nickname. Throughout the rest of the 66 films and TV shows we rarely heard his Christian name.

    The plot is a standard western one, an outlaw gang stirs up a feud between the Bar 20 and a neighboring outfit owned by Robert Warwick. But it takes Bill Boyd to come up with the solution, aided and abetted by James Ellison whom he acquires as a sidekick.

    Gabby Hayes is in this as Uncle Ben and he's the usual Gabby Hayes. He proved so popular that Paramount just resurrected him for the next few years before he left the series. Here as the chief villain guns him down it shows the Saturday matinée kids just how dastardly he is. Rather stupidly he leaves him to bleed out rather than finish him off. I guess Paramount did not want to shock the kids whose dimes to see the film and the subsequent series planned.

    So Hopalong Cassidy becomes an American institution. Curiously enough Bill Boyd did a few non-Hoppy films after this before settling down into this character permanently.

    It was a good beginning for an American institution.
    7bsmith5552

    Enter Hopalong Cassidy

    "Hop-Along Cassidy" (aka "Hopalong Cassidy Enters") was the first of 66 features starring William Boyd as Hoppy. One of the most successful and best written of the "B" western series, it was to run from 1935 to 1948.

    As written by Clarence E. Mulford, Cassidy was a crude, crusty ranch hand and definitely not intended as a Saturday Matinee hero. In fact, character actor James Gleason, who looked nothing like a hero was apparently first offered the part.

    Boyd, who had been around Hollywood since the early 20s and had fallen from grace, ultimately was cast in the part. It was decided between himself and producer Harry "Pop" Sherman that Boyd would not play the character as written.

    In this first entry in the series, Boyd plays the character with a few rough edges, all of which would disappear in future films. He starts out as "Bill" Cassidy but acquires his nickname "Hopalong" when is wounded in the leg and is forced to hop along with the aid of a cane.

    The story involves two competing ranchers, Buck Peters of the Bar-20 (Charles Middleton) and Meeker (Robert Warwick) arguing over the open range land for their cattle. Meeker's foreman known as Pecos Jack (Kenneth Thompson) is behind a plot to set the two ranches against each other while stealing their cattle, changing their brands and selling them off for himself.

    In this first entry in the series the traditional trio comprises Hoppy, Johnny Nelson (James Ellison) and Red Connors (Frank McGlynn Jr.). George Hayes by this time had evolved into the character he would play for the rest of his career. In this picture he plays a ranch hand named "Uncle Ben". Although still not using the name "Gabby", he would appear later in the series as the grizzled sidekick "Windy Halliday".

    Also in the cast are Paula Stone as Mary Meeker, Ellison's love interest, Willie Fung as the Meeker's Chinese cook, who provides most of the comic relief, and veterans John Merton and Franlyn Farnum in other roles.

    Charles Middleton would achieve some measure of fame as "Ming the Merciless" in the Flash Gordon serials. The character of Red Connors would be resurrected in the Hopalong Cassidy TV series of the 50s with Edgar Buchanan playing the part.
    10Flaming_star_69

    Hoppy mellowed in time

    It was interesting for me to see this first of the Hopalong Cassidy movies last night. I saw a distinctly different Hopalong than those later movies I have seen. This one had a hard look in his eye that was most menacing and at one point, he was about to draw his gun on his own man, which made for a completely different Hopalong than the one which emerged in time. He actually resembled men of the REAL OLD WEST instead of the watered-down, lip-stick sissy version most of Western characters in the movies had--such as Gene Autry.

    I remember last year I got to see the very first episode of Bonanza--the TV Western series. I noticed the same thing there how the Cartwrights were hard, rough and even deadly (the way men were in the REAL WEST) and, having watched the series over several years, I noticed they too mellowed with time.

    Otherwise, I certainly enjoyed this first issue of Hopalong Cassidy. He was certainly my HERO as a small boy of 5-6 back in 1953-1954 when I first started watching him on TV. And it was good to view this one.

    I won't bother with the plot. Others have already done that. But the point I made is one that clearly stood out to me about this very first movie in the series.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in La Prisonnière du désert (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      William Boyd was originally offered the role of Buck Peters, the Bar 20 ranch foreman, but chose the role of Cassidy.
    • Connections
      Edited into Border Justice (1951)
    • Soundtracks
      Followin' the Stars
      Music and lyrics by Sam H. Stept and Dave Franklin

      Sung by James Ellison and Frank McGlynn Jr.

      Played as background music often

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 23, 1935 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hopalong Cassidy Enters
    • Filming locations
      • Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Harry Sherman Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $85,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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