After the owner of the Circle T Ranch is murdered by a ghostly serial killer, owner Carol Thorp resists offers to buy the ranch and is helped defend her property by the Range Busters.After the owner of the Circle T Ranch is murdered by a ghostly serial killer, owner Carol Thorp resists offers to buy the ranch and is helped defend her property by the Range Busters.After the owner of the Circle T Ranch is murdered by a ghostly serial killer, owner Carol Thorp resists offers to buy the ranch and is helped defend her property by the Range Busters.
- 'Crash' Corrigan
- (as Ray 'Crash' Corrigan)
- 'Alibi' Terhune
- (as Max 'Alibi' Terhune)
- Rocky - Henchman
- (as 'Duke' Mathews)
- Circle T Hand
- (uncredited)
- Murdered Cowhand
- (uncredited)
- Sheriff Dod Clayburne
- (uncredited)
- Corrigan's Horse
- (uncredited)
- Cowhand
- (uncredited)
- Joe - Henchman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Homer Thorp, owner of the Circle T Ranch, finds himself in deadly danger when the mysterious Phantom strikes, terrorizing the land and killing his ranch hands.
Thorp sends for immediate help from the Range Busters, 3 heroic cowboys, who have a vast reputation for bringing justice, law and order to the untamed West.
When the Range Busters arrive at the Circle T Ranch they discover that Thorp has unexpectedly been murdered by the Phantom.
In their noble quest to uncover the true identity of the Phantom, the Range Busters come into fierce conflict with a notorious outlaw named Torrance, along with his ruthless gang of mighty mean hombres.
The Range Busters is an enjoyable Western.
Crash and Dusty are typical white-hat cowboy heroes. Their friend Alibi, the comedy relief, is a ventriloquist cowpoke who spends a lot of time conversing with his dummy. (As a 'vent', Max Terhune is technically more proficient than Edgar Bergen, but not nearly as funny.)
Somebody keeps shooting the ranch hands at Carol Thorp's spread. Annoyingly, everyone keeps referring to the unknown killer as a 'phantom' even though he hasn't claimed any paranormal powers. We get one of those cliché murder scenes from the viewpoint of the killer, as his victim backs away from the camera and begs for mercy. Naturally, our heroes decide to sign on at Carol's ranch.
There's some very crude expository dialogue, and some overripe wisecracks. 'What good is a job that may lead to a passport to eternity?' is one example. As the squinty villain sees the heroes riding into town, he tells his henchman: 'See that they don't hang up their hats in this town.' Carol's helpful comment is: 'The Phantom always does what is least expected.' So it should be easy to catch him, then: just figure out what's least expected, and be one jump ahead of him.
SPOILERS COMING: Carol's uncle Rolf is ostensibly blind: he wears dark glasses and uses a stick to feel his way. However, the movie plants several blatantly obvious clues that he isn't really blind. Despite this imposture, Rolf isn't the Phantom. He's just a red herring ... or maybe a smoked herring, because he's wearing smoked glasses.
It's no spoiler to say that the white hats beat the black hats. One of my least favourite clichés is the one about the two buddies and the girl: when one buddy develops an interest in a woman, the other buddy decides he has to 'save' his friend from that hideous fate. We get that ending here, except that it's two against one ... with Crash and Alibi uniting to keep Dusty away from Carol. Still, 'Range Busters' was clearly made for a juvenile audience, so I understand the decision to cut out the 'mushy stuff'.
'Range Busters' is no 'Citizen Kane' or 'Battleship Potemkin', but I strongly feel that all films should be judged by their genre and their intentions. By that standard, 'Range Busters' succeeds in most of what it meant to do, and I'll rate this movie 7 out of 10. Saddle up, pardners!
A vintage western featuring the range busters is a mystery western, with a serial killer at large, which is quite rare in the annals of the horse opera. It's a bit shaky, but it's quite a pleasant time pass with a neat unravelling of the killer at the end. Was surprised to see who the killer was, especially when I thought it was some one else. The red herring is used expertly. What happens between the mystery bits is the average shoot em up. I do find the inclusion of a ventriloquist dummy quite bizarre, but this series was aimed for children like me.
Did you know
- TriviaThe earliest documented telecast of this film occurred Monday 19 May 1947 on New York City's pioneer television station WNBT (Channel 4). It first aired in Atlanta Monday 21 November 1949 on WSB (Channel 8), and in Philadelphia Sunday 25 December 1949 on Frontier Playhouse on WPTZ (Channel 3).
- GoofsWhen Alibi is climbing to get the bad guy, a poured concrete bridge is clearly visible, a practice that was not in use in the late 19th Century West.
- Quotes
'Dusty' KIng: Why did you change your handle from Lullaby to Alibi?
'Alibi' Terhune: Aw... prepraredness, Dusty. You see, Elmer here gets me into so many stampeded, heck, I have to do something to fall back on, so I use Alibi.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Rapt à l'ouest (1940)
Details
- Runtime
- 56m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1