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Heritage of the Desert

  • 1932
  • Passed
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
213
YOUR RATING
Heritage of the Desert (1932)
DramaWestern

Nabb controls the pass and lets all the ranchers through except Holderness and his stolen cattle. When Nabb refuses to sell, Holderness works an his son Snap who has run up gambling debts. T... Read allNabb controls the pass and lets all the ranchers through except Holderness and his stolen cattle. When Nabb refuses to sell, Holderness works an his son Snap who has run up gambling debts. There is more trouble when Snap becomes jealous of Judy's attraction to the surveyor Jack. ... Read allNabb controls the pass and lets all the ranchers through except Holderness and his stolen cattle. When Nabb refuses to sell, Holderness works an his son Snap who has run up gambling debts. There is more trouble when Snap becomes jealous of Judy's attraction to the surveyor Jack. When Holderness has Snap killed, everyone heads to town for the showdown.

  • Director
    • Henry Hathaway
  • Writers
    • Zane Grey
    • Harold Shumate
    • Frank Partos
  • Stars
    • Randolph Scott
    • Sally Blane
    • J. Farrell MacDonald
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    213
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Henry Hathaway
    • Writers
      • Zane Grey
      • Harold Shumate
      • Frank Partos
    • Stars
      • Randolph Scott
      • Sally Blane
      • J. Farrell MacDonald
    • 10User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos20

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    Top cast23

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    Randolph Scott
    Randolph Scott
    • Jack Hare
    Sally Blane
    Sally Blane
    • Judy
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    • Adam Naab
    David Landau
    David Landau
    • Judson Holderness
    Gordon Westcott
    Gordon Westcott
    • Snap Naab
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    • Lefty - Henchman
    • (as Guinn Williams)
    Vince Barnett
    Vince Barnett
    • Windy
    • (as Vincent Barnett)
    Charles Brinley
    Charles Brinley
    • Naab Man
    • (uncredited)
    Fred Burns
    Fred Burns
    • Bob Burns
    • (uncredited)
    Jim Corey
    Jim Corey
    • Ed Slade - Henchman
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Ellis
    Frank Ellis
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Susan Fleming
    Susan Fleming
    • Girl at Roulette Table
    • (uncredited)
    Billy Franey
    Billy Franey
    • Naab Man
    • (uncredited)
    William Gillis
    • Cowhand
    • (uncredited)
    Merrill McCormick
    Merrill McCormick
    • Henchman
    • (uncredited)
    Lew Meehan
    Lew Meehan
    • Red - Henchman
    • (uncredited)
    Vester Pegg
    • Naab Man
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Pennick
    Jack Pennick
    • Fred
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Henry Hathaway
    • Writers
      • Zane Grey
      • Harold Shumate
      • Frank Partos
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    5.8213
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    Featured reviews

    8F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    She fingers his plumb bob.

    'Heritage of the Desert' is an excellent western that will appeal to viewers who don't normally like westerns. Made early in the career of the underrated director Henry Hathaway, this is a splendid example of his skills.

    Veteran character actor J Farrell MacDonald gives one of his best performances here as Naab (unnecessarily weird name), a rancher who permits neighbouring ranchers to run their cattle drives through a narrow pass on his land ... all except rancher Judd Holderness (great name!), whom Naab knows to be a rustler. I usually dislike actor David Landau, with his coarse features and unpleasant voice, but here he has some great dialogue ... baiting his henchman Lefty with lines like 'How often have I told you not to think? You can do a lot better with your gun' and 'You got a six-gun where your brains oughta be.' When a morally ambiguous rancher (good performance by Gordon Westcott) tries to appeal to Holderness's conscience -- 'You wouldn't do a thing like that, would you?' -- Holderness calmly replies 'I do things like that every ten minutes.' Sally Blane, Loretta Young's sister, gives a strong and appealing performance as the heroine. I'm a fan of Loretta Young, but I've always found her just a little too beautiful to be believable in most of her roles. (I have the same problem with Nicole Kidman, whom I also like.) Blane strongly resembled her famous sister but was slightly less beautiful, and this makes her far more credible than Loretta in roles such as the one she plays here. Blane spends much of the film in a set of culottes which show off her lissome figure, but which are probably not historically accurate.

    Vince Barnett, a character actor whom I usually like, is saddled here with some painfully thick-witted dialogue which he enunciates in one of the most bizarre and implausible accents I've ever heard. Randolph Scott is excellent as the surveyor who arrives at Naab's spread, where Sally shows interest in his plumb bob.

    SPOILERS COMING. Hathaway's directorial hand is sure throughout. I was especially impressed by one staggeringly beautiful desertscape, and by a long series of dissolve shots as Randolph Scott's stand-in, wounded by a cowpoke's bullet, stumbles through the alkali.

    Later in the film, there's an impressive sequence in which two characters draw their pistols and stand each other off. The camera pans to Sally Blane's reaction as two shots are fired off-camera. She screams, and we know that *somebody* got plugged ... but we don't learn the outcome until later.

    Considering that this film was made on a low budget in 1932, its sound recording is very impressive. I'll rate 'Heritage of the Desert' 8 out of 10.
    10tcchelsey

    REMEMBERING RANDOLPH SCOTT AND SALLY BLANE

    Randolph Scott and Sally Blane made several films together for Paramount in the early 1930s, this their first western, based on the Zane Grey novel.

    This was Scott's first official western, but Blane got more attention because she played opposite legendary Tom Mix in three of his action films during the late 1920s. And if she could ride a horse and keep up with Mix, she was a natural for the part. Here, Scott plays an earnest land surveyor who is hired by ranch owner J. Farrell MacDonald to protect his property, which may be snatched by an unscrupulous land baron --who just happens to be wooing Sally! She catches the attention of Randy, or vice versa, and you know what comes next.

    Action and some good fistfights are guaranteed, but its the romance angle that gets equal time, and rightly so. Behind the scenes, Randolph Scott and Sally Blane were a Hollywood item, on the front pages of fan mags of the era, making the cover of TRUE ROMANCE in 1933, which is now a collector's item.

    Director Henry Hathaway, who made his debut with this film, cleverly let the cameras roll on their romantic scenes together... and they seemed to be havin' fun. HERITAGE OF THE DESERT was also notable for its on location photography, which for a lower budget film, was a smart move. With the success of this western, Paramount immediately produced Zane Grey's WILD HORSE MESA, which may have attracted even more of attention because of Sally Blane's PRE-CODE low cut dress on several posters and studio publicity shots. They are still in circulation! Whether this had anything to do with their on screen/off screen relationship, who knows, but audiences loved it.

    More over, in a juicy bit of gossip... Sally was later criticized (by conservative organizations) of dressing too casually on film. These crazy, young Hollywood kids! "Be young, be foolish, but be happy."

    Thank you, Randy and Sally, for blazing the trail. Always on dvd, collectors box released via Alpha Video 2006.
    6bkoganbing

    All's Fair In Love And Range War

    In his very first starring western Randolph Scott plays an easterner. He's one who learns the western ways very fast because of the trouble he's walking into.

    Heritage Of The Desert one of the many Zane Grey novels that Paramount was filming during these years casts Randolph Scott as an eastern surveyor hired by J. Farrell MacDonald to get an accurate read on his boundary. That's something that neighboring rancher David Landau doesn't like probably because the result he knows would go against him.

    Landau's our villain of the piece and is cut from the Snidely Whiplash mold which becomes abundantly clear when toward the end of the film he decides that he ought to marry Sally Blane who has no interest in him believe me. In fact that's the second part of the trouble Randy's walked into.

    Blane is the daughter of MacDonald's late partner and she has a piece of the MacDonald spread outright. It's been assumed that she'd be marrying Gordon Westcott who is MacDonald's son. But Westcott's a weak sort who Landau has taken much advantage of. And until Scott arrives on the scene looking at what else was around, Blane probably thought she was getting a bargain.

    So mix the elements of love and land feud and the answer is all's fair in love and range war.

    It's very apparent that even cast as a somewhat green easterner Randolph Scott would have a good future in westerns. Blane's resemblance to her more well known sister Loretta Young is unmistakable and Landau is his usual villain, mean and tough and he does work through the more old fashioned aspects of his stock villain character.

    And for double historical interest, Heritage Of The Desert is the first feature film directed by Henry Hathaway who was contracted to Paramount for many years starting with this film.

    I'm sure the Saturday matinée crowd delighted in this one.
    3rsoonsa

    Modest starting point of an excellent director.

    With this adaptation - as intrusion - of Zane Grey's novel Heritage of the Desert, Henry Hathaway begins his career as a director of feature films although little of his later imprint appears in this effort. The screenplay leaves in tatters Grey's powerful work, which deals strongly with Mormon culture in Utah in 1890, and is only recognizable by the names of characters as a product of Grey. Judson Holderness (David Landau), a cattle rustler and owner of the White Sage Saloon and Gambling Hall, is a pestilence to landowners near his ranch, and has purchased or stolen all nearby property, except for that belonging to Adam Naab (J. Farrell MacDonald). Holderness requires Naab's land in order to have a direct corridor for driving his mostly stolen herd to water, but Naab rejects the saloon owner's offer to buy, and mounts a challenge against any attempt to jump his claim by hiring a surveyor to document his boundaries. When the surveyor, Jack Hare (Randolph Scott) arrives, he spends a good deal of his time wooing Judy (Sally Blane), the ward of Naab and the fiancee of Naab's son Snap, which naturally raises the tension level at the Naab ranch. Despite this romantic conflict, Jack sides with Adam against Holderness with neither realizing that Snap is beholden to the rustler due to gambling debts incurred at the latter's saloon, and the action is prepared to go towards a violent climax. Henry Hathaway enjoyed years of critical success for his films, but in this beginning attempt there are only glimmers of his budding skill, although a poor script and ragged editing are of no assistance. David Landau's villain is pitched to an interesting sardonic level, and Sally Blane is vivacious and strives with some success to make her character interesting, but most of the cast is defeated by its dialogue.
    9glennstenb

    "Heritage of the Desert" Is an Excellent Daydream of a Movie

    Watching the higher than grade B-western "Heritage of the Desert" from 1932 is rather like experiencing a dream that one is not really sure they are a part of. The settings seem so very vivid and ethereal, but yet one feels it is being looked at from on-high. Everything in view seems busy and lush, from the vegetation-rich outdoor gang-gathering spots to the fully appointed and so seemingly authentic interiors. The ranch complex's buildings and grounds are wonderfully detailed and oh-so dusty, and the spectacularly rustic White Sage Saloon, with its many ceiling-supporting timbers, is truly a marvel to behold. The saloon even has an imaginatively-situated office, perched just a few stairs above the main floor with a view to the bar's action when the office door is open. Such detail-rich sets just are not normally found in an average B-western.

    This is noted director Henry Hathaway breakout picture and he offers up some nice panoramas and carefully composed shots, which serve to give this movie its poetic or even dreamlike atmosphere. But, for the realist, the jumping from Joshua Tree-studded desert to oak woodlands to pine-studded ridge tops and back again in the confines of a local story is a bit hard to accept, unless one accepts being in a dream.

    The story is involving, as one might expect, being that it is sourced from Zane Grey. It struck me that the delivery of the dialog was powerfully effective and engaging, so much so that it was disappointing to see the program come to a close. Why the story unfolded so satisfyingly was in large measure owing to the faces delivering it, which are diverse and fascinating, and to the voicing, which although admittedly delivered a little stiffly at times, is strong and consistently appropriate for each character.

    The men in this story exist in a harsh and dangerous world, but this is contrasted with softness with the appearances of the very feminine Sally Blane. Sally's very non-1890 look is just one more example of the film's dreamlike demeanor. She of course photographs beautifully, including in the warm glow of a campfire's light. Deeper into the film Sally walks along a windswept rocky ridge studded with pine trees looking for Randolph in the softest of summer dresses, fluffing her hair as she anticipates seeing him. Obviously this scene couldn't be from real life! The soft-focus scene where the two "bed down" in the moonlight in close proximity to one another after having had a romantic day together, he in a bed of pine needles on the ground and she perched above him on a platform in a pine tree, is perhaps one of the most romantic of moments in cinematic history.

    The film has plenty of great dialog. One fun passage occurs out of doors in a tree grotto when the villain Judd Holderness (actor Daniel Landau) tells one of the men under his thumb, in his ominously-toned voice, "I staked you to plenty, savvy? Maybe your old man would like to know what happened to his horse money!" The character Snap Naab replies nervously, "You wouldn't do a thing like that, would you?" Holderness kicks at the ground like a horse and replies sternly, "I do things like that every ten minutes." This is really great stuff, as they say!

    For 1932, "Heritage of the Desert" is a slice above a standard B-western in budget and appointment, and even has some appreciated music, including a beautiful medley as backdrop in the bar scenes as well as non-intrusive scoring in well-up moments when romance or tension develop. In summary, "Heritage of the Desert" has a fine story; a strong romance story line; the requisite horse, gun play, and fistfight action; considered cinematography; and riveting dialog delivery. It is an excellent hour's worth of lush and dreamy western movie entertainment.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The 20 Zane Grey stories sold by Paramount to Favorite Films for theatrical re-release, and then to Unity Television Corp. for television broadcast, are as follows: The Light of Western Stars (1930) (aka "Winning the West"), La grande caravane (1931) (aka "Blazing Arrows"), Heritage of the Desert (1932) (aka "When the West Was Young"), The Mysterious Rider (1933) (aka "The Fighting Phantom"), The Thundering Herd (1933) (aka "Buffalo Stampede"), Man of the Forest (1933) (aka "Challenge of the Frontier"), Jusqu'au dernier homme (1933) (aka "Law of Vengeance"), Wagon Wheels (1934) (aka "Caravans West"), Rocky Mountain Mystery (1935) (aka "The Fighting Westerner"), Drift Fence (1936) (aka "Texas Desperadoes"), Desert Gold (1936) (aka "Desert Storm"), The Arizona Raiders (1936) (aka "Bad Men of Arizona"), Arizona Mahoney (1936) (aka "Arizona Thunderbolt"), Forlorn River (1937) (aka "River of Destiny"), Thunder Trail (1937) (aka "Thunder Pass"), La ville du diable (1937) (aka "Hell Town"), The Mysterious Rider (1938) (aka "Mark of the Avenger"), La terreur de la savane (1939) (aka "Heritage of the Plains"), Knights of the Range (1940) (aka "Bad Men of Nevada"), The Light of Western Stars (1940) (aka "Border Renegade").
    • Goofs
      The story takes place in 1890, but Sally Blane's hairstyles, make-up and demeanor are strictly 1932, likewise the girls in the saloon.
    • Quotes

      Dance Hall Girl: Hello, Stranger

      Jack Hare: How did you know I was a stranger?

      Dance Hall Girl: Because I don't know you. Anybody I don't know is a stranger.

    • Connections
      Featured in Golden Saddles, Silver Spurs (2000)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 30, 1932 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Way of the West
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Ranch - 2813 Cornell Road, Agoura, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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