Lovers David Lynch and Betty Summers are caught in the feud between their two families. When David kills the Summers' son, he escapes to the West. He marries, and when his son is two, he and... Read allLovers David Lynch and Betty Summers are caught in the feud between their two families. When David kills the Summers' son, he escapes to the West. He marries, and when his son is two, he and his wife are killed by Indians who take the boy. Twenty years later the boy is now the In... Read allLovers David Lynch and Betty Summers are caught in the feud between their two families. When David kills the Summers' son, he escapes to the West. He marries, and when his son is two, he and his wife are killed by Indians who take the boy. Twenty years later the boy is now the Indian chief. Betty's daughter is nearby and the two are destined to meet.
- Mike
- (uncredited)
- Indian
- (uncredited)
- Major
- (uncredited)
- Substitute Engineer
- (uncredited)
- Undetermined Role
- (uncredited)
- Interrogated Indian
- (uncredited)
- Indian Dancer
- (uncredited)
- Pat
- (uncredited)
- Mrs. Summers
- (uncredited)
- Chief Grey Eagle
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Fast forward twenty years, after O'Brien and Chandler move west and are slaughtered by marauding Indians, leaving their young son to be captured. He grows up and becomes their chief. One day he and a raiding party come upon settlers, including the daughter of the ex-girlfriend of his father. They capture the settlers, but soon after he becomes an ally of the U.S. Cavalry.
If it all sounds hard to swallow, it is. Too much plot contrivance squashed in to a picture which needed more run time. Ultimately, the film becomes less interesting as a good story peters out into confusion. The acting is sub-par, but O'Brien is stalwart and masculine and he gets some help from Bert Hanlon as an Irish/Jewish traveling salesman. "The Golden West" is a tough slog except maybe for George O'Brien fans. At Cinevent, Columbus O., 5/13.
I have hunted for this movie as various sources indicated that it had scenes filmed in Sedona, AZ. Unfortunately, the copy I found was made from a poor print (missing 6 minutes of footage) and an absolutely horrible video transfer. I am unable to be sure if the Indian encampment was filmed in Sedona due to the murkiness and fuzziness of the background scenery. The same is true of the scene where Motano presents Betty's daughter with his only former life's possession-the music box. It may have been filmed on Oak Creek. Other new footage appears to have been filmed at the upper Iverson Ranch, and definitely at Vasquez Rock.
There is almost too much movie for its 74 minute running time. The silent footage is edited into the production in a nearly seamless fashion. The usual self deprecating O'Brien humor is evident throughout, as are the many Americana vignettes. The movie is interesting for early performances by Hattie McDaniel and Onslow Stevens. Bert Hanlon makes for an amusing itinerant Jewish Irishman Dennis Epstein.
O'Brien, as always, shines larger than life when given a chance, and the supporting players are vivid and highly watchable character types. The production makes terrific use of outdoor atmosphere, wagons, and horses, and Howard manages to cut in the new footage with some more elaborate stock footage of a wagon train.
But despite everyone's best effort, they cannot overcome the screenplay, which needed two hours to flesh out the saga but only gets one. The end result has large gaps in the story timeline. It looks cut to death, but was probably made that way to try to force fit a decades-long story into such a short running time. I enjoyed it despite the treatment, especially O'Brien. It's no wonder he was a star for so long. Looks, personality, charm, and more.
Did you know
- SoundtracksHome Folks
Written by James F. Hanley
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 14m(74 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1