This B-western with Tim Holt is an entertaining mix of the
genre’s usual elements, with some excellent western swing songs by Ray Whitley.
Holt is a likable presence on screen and bears a resemblance at
times, in both looks and temperament, to the young Roy Rogers.
Playing opposite Holt was Marjorie Reynolds, whose long
career in both film and TV included the role of Peg Riley in the 1950s TV
series, The Life of Riley. A familiar
and distinctive face in the cast is character actor Byron Foulger as the
kidnapped father. Foulger is credited with over 450 screen roles over a
film and TV career of more than four decades.
Plot. Holt is hired
by the G-men to find a kidnapped engraver (Byron Foulger), whose
disappearance is linked to the passing of counterfeit money at a dude ranch
casino near Silver City, Nevada. The missing man’s daughter (Marjorie Reynolds)
turns up at the ranch in search of her father, about the same time as Holt.
The two find him slaving away in a cave, where the casino
owner (Eddie Kane) has set up the counterfeiting operation. Holt’s true identity
is discovered by Kane, whose henchmen take Holt prisoner. He escapes, and a
chase follows an exchange of gunfire. Holt and Reynolds rescue the exhausted Foulger, and
the sheriff apprehends the crooks.
In a comic subplot, a hawker of patent medicine (Lee
“Lasses” White) attracts the attention of a dude ranch guest (Helen Holmes) who
gamely pursues him. Discovering that he and Holt are being held captive, she
inadvertently helps them get away. Attempting to follow them as they leave the
ranch, she saddles and rides an uncooperative mule. In the end, she has become
owner of the ranch and brings in a parson to tie the knot with White, who
quickly heads for the hills.
Tim Holt, c1948 |
Tim Holt. Still
in his early twenties, Holt doesn’t quite have the stature of other
cowboy stars. There’s a boyish quality about him, and he laughs often, in a way
that suggests wholesomeness and decency, but also inexperience. A sidearm on
his hip is more of an accessory than a weapon. You hope he doesn’t have to use
it. Costuming him in a bulky coat and a flat crowned hat tends
to diminish his already diminutive size. But he looks comfortable on a horse.
You have to give him that.
Holt’s obvious youth may be what allows him to duck a
romantic involvement with either of his female co-stars. A brassy blonde at the
dude ranch (Louise Currey) sets her eye on him and comes on strong. But he
politely evades her come-ons. As he and Marjorie Reynolds rescue her father,
it’s all business between them. He rides off at the end saying he’ll call, but
there’s no reason to think he will.
Tim Holt had been a juvenile actor, growing up the son of
Jack Holt who was a film actor and whose extensive career began with the
early Silents. By the time he’d become established in B-westerns, Tim Holt had
already appeared as the cavalry officer in John Ford’s Stagecoach (1939).
The peak of his career would come later in the 1940s, with
roles playing Virgil Earp in My Darling Clementine (1946) and in The Magnificent Ambersons (1942) and The Treasure of the Sierra
Madre (1948). It should also be noted that he was a decorated member of the Armed Forces during WWII, receiving the
Purple Heart among several other honors.
Marjorie Reynolds |
Wrapping up. As an
example of the genre, the script by Morton Grant and direction by David Howard
are both competent and confident. Grant wrote a dozen westerns during the
war years of the 1940s, sharing credits for the 1943 adaptation of Clarence
Mulford’s Bar 20 (1943), which starred William Boyd as Hopalong
Cassidy. Howard had directed numerous B-movies in the 1930s, and his
career stopped in mid-stride with this his final film before his death in 1941.
Ray Whitley |
The film was shot on ranches in Thousand Oaks and Simi
Valley and in the Bronson Caves of Griffith Park. The period in which the story takes place is that ambivalent
Hollywood mix of Old and New West. The train in the opening scene looks
modern, but there are no automobiles, and transportation is provided by
horse-drawn wagons. Meanwhile, the dude ranch is served by a telephone, and the
women characters are duded out in 40s-style western outfits with 40s hairstyles.
For real added value, the film features tunes sung by Ray Whitley, manager of the western singing group The Sons of the Pioneers. Whitley wrote music for numerous films and is remembered for Gene Autry's signature song, "Back in the Saddle Again." Here's a clip of Dude Cowboy with Holt and Whitley.
For more of Tuesday’s Overlooked Movies, click over to Todd Mason’sblog.
For more of Tuesday’s Overlooked Movies, click over to Todd Mason’sblog.
Source: imdb.com
Coming up: Alfred Henry Lewis, Wolfville (1897)
Coming up: Alfred Henry Lewis, Wolfville (1897)
That title would turn me off.
ReplyDeleteI've seen one or two of Holt's movies, and I'd like to see more—I like him and Ray Whitley.
ReplyDeleteCaught this one not long ago on the Western Channel, I liked it, although like Charles I was turned off by the title and just about skipped it. I love these old westerns with mixed up Hollywood times and events.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen this film though I remember watching "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" long ago. The script by a Western writer like Grant must have made this film that much more convincing.
ReplyDeleteIt's always good to see Tim Holt come up. His films are certainly a notch or two above the usual series Westerns of the period.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I prefer his post-war films.