This region of Arizona is lawless. Even when the criminal are captured, they are acquitted by the jury or the witness takes a sudden illness. Boone is a hard drinking, shoot up the town cowb... Read allThis region of Arizona is lawless. Even when the criminal are captured, they are acquitted by the jury or the witness takes a sudden illness. Boone is a hard drinking, shoot up the town cowboy who is trying to get in with the Dutton gang. As yet, he is unsuccessful and his action... Read allThis region of Arizona is lawless. Even when the criminal are captured, they are acquitted by the jury or the witness takes a sudden illness. Boone is a hard drinking, shoot up the town cowboy who is trying to get in with the Dutton gang. As yet, he is unsuccessful and his actions cause Lettie to break off their engagement. But Boone is undercover. He is the Captain o... Read all
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Letty Meade
- (as Laraine Johnson)
- Lieutenant Bob Ives
- (as Carlyle Moore)
- Tucson Jones
- (as Bobby Burns)
- Stagecoach Driver
- (uncredited)
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
- Prosecuting Attorney
- (uncredited)
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
- Swift
- (uncredited)
- Juror
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is a B-western from RKO. The story has a good spin which gives it a bit of freshness. There is plenty of horse riding and gun play although nothing too tricky. There is a little bit of good stunt work on a stagecoach, but that comes at the very end. I wouldn't mind more of that type of stunt work to spice things up.
It starts out well enough with a young Chill Wills as 'Whopper' telling a tall tale, before settling into more standard B mode. It is constricted a bit by the poor print that Turner Classic Movies has available. O'Brien is good, as always and the plot has its moments of excitement, as well as some good cinematography, including some nice stunt work and fighting atop a stage coach. But the short length of the film -- just under an hour -- and its abrupt ending emphasizes its B nature. While it's fine for what it is, you'd be better off starting your addiction to the series with another of O'Brien's westerns. Try the previous year's RENEGADE RANGER or PAINTED DESERT.
George O' Brien plays Boone Yeager, who is cleverly introduced as a hell-raiser and a lawbreaker, but later on we realise he's a Ranger, out to corral a bunch of robbers and learn who the secret leader is. The latter part lacks the intrigue needed, the focus is on a fast-paced plot and some lively spurts of action. It's a passable enough shoot em up.
George O'Brien is at his best here as Boone Yeager. Watch for the exciting climax when he appears to perform a dangerous stunt himself by jumping from his horse onto a moving stagecoach. It's very well done and worth waiting for. A very young Laraine Day is his desirable fiancé Letty. Chill Wills is on hand as Whopper. And that's Glenn Strange as George Kirby.
Watching Arizona Legion (1939) is a pleasant way to spend an early Saturday morning.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film loosely represents the real Arizona Rangers which was formed on 21 March 1901 and modeled after the Texas Rangers. They were disbanded in 1909 for political reasons shortly before Arizona became the 48th state in 1912. They were reconstituted in 1957 and as of 2021 continue to serve as a civilian auxiliary police force in the state.
- GoofsWhen Yeager goes to dive out of the window of the express office, he tosses his gun out the window ahead of him. But, in the next shot from outside, there is no gun visible on the ground and he is bare-handed running away from the building. He then dives behind a water trough for cover and suddenly has a gun again. And in typical "B" movie fashion he is seen firing at least seven shots from a six-shot revolver despite not having a gun belt or any other access to ammunition.
Details
- Runtime58 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1