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The Hard Hombre

  • 1931
  • Approved
  • 1h 5m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
138
YOUR RATING
Lina Basquette, Mathilde Comont, and Hoot Gibson in The Hard Hombre (1931)
DramaWestern

When Peaceful Patton goes to work at the Martini ranch he is mistaken for the notorious outlaw the Hard Hombre. This enables him to force the ranchers to divide up the water rights. But he i... Read allWhen Peaceful Patton goes to work at the Martini ranch he is mistaken for the notorious outlaw the Hard Hombre. This enables him to force the ranchers to divide up the water rights. But he is in trouble when his mother arrives and exposes the hoax.When Peaceful Patton goes to work at the Martini ranch he is mistaken for the notorious outlaw the Hard Hombre. This enables him to force the ranchers to divide up the water rights. But he is in trouble when his mother arrives and exposes the hoax.

  • Director
    • Otto Brower
  • Writer
    • Jack Natteford
  • Stars
    • Hoot Gibson
    • Lina Basquette
    • Mathilde Comont
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    138
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Otto Brower
    • Writer
      • Jack Natteford
    • Stars
      • Hoot Gibson
      • Lina Basquette
      • Mathilde Comont
    • 8User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast22

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    Hoot Gibson
    Hoot Gibson
    • William Penn 'Peaceful' Patton
    Lina Basquette
    Lina Basquette
    • Senora Martini
    Mathilde Comont
    Mathilde Comont
    • Maria Romero
    • (as Matilde Comont)
    G. Raymond Nye
    G. Raymond Nye
    • Joe Barlow
    Jessie Arnold
    Jessie Arnold
    • Mrs. Patton
    Jack Byron
    • Abe
    Christian J. Frank
    Christian J. Frank
    • Sheriff
    • (as Christian Frank)
    Rosa Gore
    Rosa Gore
    • Wife In Shack
    Skeeter Bill Robbins
    Skeeter Bill Robbins
    • Slim
    • (as Bill Robbins)
    Frank Winklemann
    • The Hard Hombre
    Charles Brinley
    Charles Brinley
    • Ranch Hand
    • (uncredited)
    Milton Brown
    • Milt
    • (uncredited)
    Bob Burns
    Bob Burns
    • Ranch Hand
    • (uncredited)
    Fred Burns
    Fred Burns
    • Man in Gunfight
    • (uncredited)
    Buck Connors
    Buck Connors
    • Cowhand
    • (uncredited)
    Fernando Gálvez
    • Juan
    • (uncredited)
    Clara Hunt
    • Indian Housekeeper
    • (uncredited)
    Jack King
    • Cowhand
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Otto Brower
    • Writer
      • Jack Natteford
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    5.3138
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    Featured reviews

    5boblipton

    Hoot Gibson Pretends to Be Frank Winkleman

    Hoot Gibson isn't the Hard Hombre, a bad man who's "killed a man for every year he's been alive", even though everyone thinks he is. He's William Penn "Peaceful" Patton, a mama's boy, who goes to work for widow Lina Basquette and trades on the bad man's reputation, until his impersonation is discovered.

    This early B Western by Otto Brower has a few bright moments and some nice riding and stunts, but it's definitely a weaker effort, despite Gibson's usual, relaxed moments. Miss Basquette, driven into the B ranks by the death of her first husband, Sam Warner, and the persecution of her in-laws, offers a decent Mexican accent and a few sultry moments, but not much else. It's definitely a lesser movie for Hoot Gibson, but one that his fans will want to see.
    6joebridge

    "One rattlesnake looks like another..."

    This movie starts out with "Peaceful Patton" (Hoot Gibson) riding right into the middle of a gunfight to try to get them to solve their problems without fighting. One immediately wonders what on Earth is wrong with him (perhaps he was dropped on his head numerous times as a baby) as this movie has an extremely weird take on what might otherwise be cliché (for example - if Don Knotts was in the role), but that's what makes it so amusing in parts, I guess.

    Seriously, having a "rule" to not fight certainly doesn't mean you are going to go way out of your way to make sure you get killed; in other words, Patton seems totally oblivious to almost every facet of reality around him for the first half-hour. Oh well, as long as his mother is happy (although she tends to shout and nag a lot). It is about halfway through the movie before Patton comes to see that people think he's the "Hard Hombre", but then the movie goes quickly downhill from that point, especially when Patton then actually has a gun for a short time (thus simply throwing his lifelong "rule" out the window for the sole benefit of hamming it up for no discernible reason) - kind of ruins the continuity and previous takes.

    The "Mexican" women certainly act, sound, and look a lot more like FRENCH maids. In fact, sometimes they sound so "French", it's like they're doing bad Napolean impressions. To be honest, I was seriously expecting a "certainly monsieur" in several scenes, and had this movie been filmed in Paris, I probably wouldn't have noticed. The Mexican man about 20 minutes in isn't much better - he sounds more like Werner Klemperer in an episode of "Hogan's Heroes".

    What I learned from this movie - "The Golden Rule" means "ladies first".

    I won't reveal the ending, but you'll probably be rolling on the floor with it.

    6/10
    4Spuzzlightyear

    Keep your hands off my mother!

    Fairly numbing western here, about a guy "Peaceful Patton" who's not afraid to wade into the middle of a gunfight to ask them to "come on out and talk it over peaceful!" Nothing doing! They're in the middle of a land war! Patton decides to get a job with a "mexican" lady And by "Mexican" I have to put that in quotes because Lina Basquette does, well, a BAD Spanish accent here. (Supposedly she was Hitler's favorite actress!). Anyways, there's rumblings around that Hard Hombre, a deadly criminal, is in the area. Somehow Patton is thought to be Hombre, and then everyone bows down to him, instead of treating him like the joke he is. Oddly enough, Patton DOESN'T deny at first he was Hombre, making this either believe that this was a brilliant twist, or just plain bad writing. Soon, Patton (as Hombre) brokers a land deal between the cowboys, until of course, the real Hombre comes along.,. Hoot Gibson (!!!) is alright I guess, but the script here is just awful, trundling from one boring scenario to another. You can tell when it's cheap by looking at the strange exterior scenes and how everything looks like it was filmed in an upscale neighborhood, when it's supposed to be a midwest town..
    3JoeytheBrit

    "Keep your hands off my mother!"

    About 20 minutes into this ultra-low budget early thirties oater it struck me that it might actually have been intended as a comedy, although nothing I had seen on screen had made me laugh. A slightly podgy chap named Hoot Gibson plays the lead character, a nice mother-loving, churchgoing (i.e. dull) cowboy called Peaceful Patten who bears an uncanny resemblance to a tough guy known only as The Hard Hombre. Patten applies for a job with the comely Spanish widow Martinez (the also-comely Lina Basquette) who gives him the task of recovering her 30 head of cattle stolen by evil pot-bellied Joe Barlow. Evil Joe mistakes Patten for the hard hombre and, having sold the cattle, meekly hands over a roll of bills.

    Now it's pretty obvious by this point that all Patten has to do is pretend to have threatened evil Joe for the money to have the grateful widow Martinez leading him to her boudoir by the hand, but sadly he's a little slow on the uptake – in fact, the film is nearly over before he realises how he can put the case of mistaken identity to good use (and even then it's not to get himself in the Signora's boudoir).

    Poverty Row film crews must have been falling over each other back in the early thirties as they roamed the Californian hills filming their 'b' movie westerns. Most of these films weren't very good, but this one is worse than most. Otto Brewer's direction is truly bad – he seems to have no idea of where best to place a camera or how to move it, and simply seems to have planted his cameraman in front of the actors and hoped for the best. It's one of the few westerns I've seen with virtually no gunplay, and the absence of any music is particularly noticeable in the so-called action scenes. Hoot Gibson makes an insipid hero – neither funny nor heroic – and looks like a middle-aged caretaker who still lives with his parents.

    Even by Poverty Row standards this one's a dud.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The first documented telecast of this film took place in Buffalo Saturday 22 November 1948 on WBEN (Channel 4); it first aired in Los Angeles Wednesday 1 February 1950 on KTSL (Channel 2), in Chicago Saturday 4 March 1950 on WGN (Channel 9), and in Philadelphia Thursday 13 April 1950 on Frontier Playhouse on WPTZ (Channel 3)
    • Quotes

      Senora Martini: William! don't want to see you killed!

      William Penn 'Peaceful' Patton: Thanks!

    • Connections
      Edited into Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch (1976)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 20, 1931 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • O Bamba do Rio Verde
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Clarita, California, USA
    • Production company
      • M.H. Hoffman Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $60,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 5m(65 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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