Cowboy Movies

January 9, 2009

San Antonio

Filed under: 1940's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 10:22 pm
Movies Online

San Antonio is a 1945 western film starring Errol Flynn and Alexis Smith. The movie was written by W. R. Burnett and Alan Le May, and directed by David Butler as well as uncredited Robert Florey and Raoul Walsh.

The film was nominated for two Academy Awards; for Best Original Song and Best Art Direction (Ted Smith, Jack McConaghy)

Cast

  • Errol Flynn – Clay Hardin
  • Alexis Smith – Jeanne Starr
  • S.Z. Sakall – Sacha Bozic (as S.Z. “Cuddles” Sakall)
  • Victor Francen – Legare
  • Florence Bates – Henrietta
  • John Litel – Charlie Bell
  • Paul Kelly – Roy Stuart
  • Robert Shayne – Captain Morgan
  • John Alvin – Pony Smith
  • Monte Blue – Cleve Andrews
  • Robert Barrat – Colonel Johnson
  • Pedro de Cordoba – Ricardo Torreon
  • Tom Tyler – Lafe McWilliams

The Ox-Bow Incident

Filed under: 1940's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 10:20 pm
Movies Online

The Ox-Bow Incident is a 1943 western movie directed by William A. Wellman and starring Henry Fonda, Dana Andrews, Mary Beth Hughes, Anthony Quinn, William Eythe, Harry Morgan and Jane Darwell in an ensemble cast. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. In 1998, The Ox-Bow Incident was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”

The movie was adapted from the 1940 novel of the same name, written by Walter Van Tilburg Clark.

Production

Filming took place from late June to early August 1942. Additional sequences and retakes were made from mid-August to late August 1942.

Awards

  • 16th Academy Awards: Nominated for Best Picture

Cast

  • Henry Fonda – Gil Carter
  • Dana Andrews – Donald Martin
  • Mary Beth Hughes – Rose Mapen / Rose Swanson
  • Anthony Quinn Juan Martínez / Francisco Morez
  • William Eythe – Gerald Tetley
  • Harry Morgan – Art Croft (credited as Henry Morgan)
  • Jane Darwell – Jenny Grier
  • Matt Briggs – Judge Daniel Tyler
  • Harry Davenport – Arthur Davies
  • Frank Conroy – Maj. Tetley
  • Marc Lawrence – Jeff Farnley
  • Paul Hurst – Monty Smith
  • Victor Kilian – Darby
  • Chris-Pin Martin – Poncho
  • Willard Robertson – Sheriff

Ride ‘Em Cowboy

Filed under: 1940's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 10:17 pm
Movies Online

Ride ‘Em Cowboy is a 1942 film starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello.

Production

Ride ‘Em Cowboy was filmed from June 30-August 9, 1941 on location at both the B-Bar A and the Rancho Chihuahua dude ranches. It was originally intended to be the third starring film for Abbott and Costello, but its production was delayed so that the team could make In the Navy, and then its release was delayed so that Keep ‘Em Flying could be filmed and released first.

Re release

Ride ‘Em Cowboy was re-released with Keep ‘Em Flying in 1949, and Who Done It? in 1954.

Plot

The author of best-selling western novels, Bronco Bob Mitchell (Dick Foran), has never set foot in the west. A newspaper article has exposed this fact to his fans, and his image is suffering because of it. He decides to make an appearance at a Long Island charity rodeo to bolster his image. When a steer escapes while he is riding a horse nearby, he is thrown. Not knowing what to do, a cowgirl, Anne Shaw (Anne Gwynne), comes to his rescue and saves his life by bulldogging the steer.

During the rescue, she is injured and cannot compete and loses her chance to obtain the $10,000 prize. Although Bob is grateful, she quickly becomes angry and returns to her father’s dude ranch in Arizona. Bob follows her with the hopes of making amends, and actually learning how to be a real cowboy.

Meanwhile, Willoughby (Lou Costello) and Duke (Bud Abbott) are vendors at the rodeo. They are not very good at their job, and soon cause enough havoc that they hide from their boss. Their hiding place winds up being a cattle car and they soon find themselves on their way out west. When they arrive, Willoughby accidentally shoots an arrow into an Indian tepee. Custom says that this is a proposal, but Willoughby and Duke soon run in fear when the Indian maiden inside the tent turns out to be plump and unattractive. They wind up at the same Dude ranch that Anne and Bob are at, and soon given jobs by the foreman, Alabam (Johnny Mack Brown).

Anne concedes and begins to instruct Bob on the ways of cowboy life, while Willoughby and Duke are still menaced by the Indians. Eventually Anne decides that Bob has improved enough to enter him on their team at the state rodeo championship. Unfortunately a gambler, Ace Henderson (Morris Ankrum), has made large bets against the ranch and has his gang kidnap Bob and Alabam. Willoughby and Duke unwittingly come to the rescue while they are running from the Indians, and everyone returns to the rodeo in time. Bob, finally a true cowboy, rides a bronco long enough to win the championship.

Western Union

Filed under: 1940's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 10:16 pm
Movies Online

Western Union is a 1941 western feature film directed by Fritz Lang. Filmed in Technicolor on location in Arizona and Utah, Western Union tells the story of a reformed outlaw named Vance Shaw who tries to make good by joining the team wiring the Great Plains for telegraph service in 1861. Edward Creighton is the man in charge of the operation, and Richard Blake is an easterner who is also part of the team. Sue Creighton, Edward’s sister, becomes the object of both Blake’s and Shaw’s affections. In addition to the love-triangle, conflicts arise between Shaw and his former gang, as well as between the team stringing the wires and the Native Americans through whose land the new lines must run. In this regard, the film is not historically accurate; the installation of telegraph wires was met with protest from no one.1

The movie is based on the novel of the same name by Zane Grey, although there are significant differences between the two plots.2

Western Union was only the second western made by Lang: The Return of Frank James being the first in 1940. Both movies explore the conflicts and obstacles of former criminals trying to return to law-abiding society. And both films were complicated by the Hays Code which stipulated strict moral conduct in films at the time.

Critical response

  • ”Any way you take it, “Western Union” is spectacular screen entertainment…” 3
  • “So, too, are the actors’ performances of superior quality.”4
  • ”…it rolls excitingly along with hard-riding, hard-shooting outdoor action, a blistering fire sequence and finally a beautiful pistol duel which is prefaced by some breathless suspense.”

Cast

  • Robert Young – Richard Blake
  • Randolph Scott – Vance Shaw
  • Dean Jagger – Edward Creighton
  • Virginia Gilmore - Sue Creighton
  • John Carradine – Doc Murdoch
  • Barton MacLane – Jack Slade
  • Russell Hicks – Provisional Governor of the Territory of Nebraska
  • Slim Summerville – Cookie
  • Chill Wills – Homer Kettle
  • Victor Kilian – Charlie

They Died with Their Boots On

Filed under: 1940's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 10:14 pm
Movies Online

They Died with Their Boots On is a 1941 western film directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland. Despite being rife with historical inaccuracies, the film was one of the top-grossing films of the year, being the last of eight Flynn-de Havilland collaborations.

Plot

The film follows the life of George Armstrong Custer (Errol Flynn) from attending West Point, wooing of Elizabeth Bacon (Olivia de Havilland) who becomes his loving wife, the American Civil War, and the Battle of Little Big Horn. In the film, the battle is blamed on unscrupulous corporations and politicians craving the land of Crazy Horse (Anthony Quinn) and his people.

Custer is portrayed as a fun-loving but almost saintly figure who tirelessly works for Indians and sacrifices himself for their benefit. His last stand is treated as far more significant than it was. In the movie’s version of the story, a few corrupt white politicians goad the Western tribes into war, threatening the survival of all white settlers in the West. Custer and his men give their lives at the Little Bighorn to delay the Indians and prevent this slaughter. A letter left behind by Custer absolves the Indians of all responsibility.

“Custer’s Last Stand” sequence

Only 16 of the extras were Sioux Indians. The rest of the Native American army were Fillipino extras. Knowing the scene would be dangerous, Anthony Quinn ordered a hearse on the day of shooting as a joke. Two extras did die during the filming of the sequence. One untrained rider died in a fall from his horse, reportedly while drunk.

Trivia

  • The character of “Queen’s Own” Butler, while English, is essentially a composite of two real-life officers who were from other parts of the British Empire: Canadian William W. “Queen’s Own” Cooke, and Irishman Myles Keogh, who is linked to an apocryphal account of introducing the song “Garryowen” to the 7th Cavalry.

Cast

  • Errol Flynn as George Armstrong Custer
  • Olivia de Havilland as Elizabeth Bacon Custer
  • Arthur Kennedy as Ned Sharp
  • Charley Grapewin as California Joe
  • Gene Lockhart as Samuel Bacon
  • Anthony Quinn as Crazy Horse
  • Stanley Ridges as Maj. Romulus Taipe
  • John Litel as Gen. Phil Sheridan
  • Walter Hampden as William Sharp
  • Sydney Greenstreet as Lt. Gen. Winfield Scott
  • Regis Toomey as Fitzhugh Lee
  • Hattie McDaniel as Callie

The Westerner

Filed under: 1940's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 10:12 pm
Movies Online

The Westerner is a 1940 film directed by William Wyler, and written by Niven Busch, Stuart N. Lake, and Jo Swerling. It stars Gary Cooper as fictional interloper Cole Harden and is often remembered for one of Walter Brennan’s best performances, as Judge Roy Bean, which led to him winning his record-setting third Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. James Basevi and Stuart N. Lake also received nominations for the Academy Award for Best Art Direction, black-and-white, and the Academy Award for Best Story respectively.

Synopsis

Drifter Cole Harden (Cooper) is accused of stealing a horse and faces hanging by self-appointed Judge Roy Bean (Brennan), but Harden manages to talk his way out of it by claiming to be a friend of stage star Lillie Langtry, with whom the judge is obsessed, even though he has never met her. Harden even claims to have a lock of her hair, so Bean goes easy on him.

Tensions rise when Harden comes to the defense of a group of struggling homesteaders who Judge Bean is trying to drive away. Harden gets himself appointed a sheriff and obtains a warrant against Bean. When Langtry is scheduled to perform in a nearby town, Bean buys up every ticket and eagerly awaits her appearance alone in the audience, leaving his henchmen outside. Harden takes the opportunity to force a showdown. Bullets fly and Bean is fatally wounded. In the final scene, Harden carries his dying friend backstage to meet the woman he has adored for so long.

Cast

  • Gary Cooper as Cole Harden. Cooper was reluctant to take the part because his character was secondary to that of the judge.
  • Walter Brennan as Judge Roy Bean
  • Doris Davenport as Jane Ellen Mathews
  • Fred Stone as Caliphet Mathews
  • Forrest Tucker as Wade Harper
  • Paul Hurst as Chickenfoot
  • Chill Wills as Southeast
  • Lilian Bond as Lily Langtry
  • Dana Andrews as Hod Johnson
  • Charles Halton as Mort Borrow
  • Trevor Bardette as Shad Wilkins
  • Tom Tyler as King Evans
  • Lucien Littlefield as The Stranger

Dark Command

Filed under: 1940's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 10:10 pm
Movies Online

Dark Command is a 1940 western film loosely based on Quantrill’s Raiders in the American Civil War. Directed by Raoul Walsh from the novel by W.R. Burnett, the film features Claire Trevor, John Wayne and Walter Pidgeon. Dark Command is the only film in which western icons John Wayne and Roy Rogers appear together, and was the first film Wayne and Raoul Walsh made together since Wayne’s first leading role in the widescreen western The Big Trail a decade before.

The film was nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Original Score and Best Art Direction by John Victor Mackay.

Plot summary

Mary McCloud (Claire Trevor) marries a seemingly peaceful Kansas schoolteacher William Cantrell (Walter Pidgeon), before finding out that he harbors a dark secret. He is actually an outlaw leader who attacks both sides in the Civil War for his own profit. After capturing a wagon loaded with Confederate uniforms, he decides to pass himself off as a Confederate officer. Her naive, idealistic brother Fletcher (Roy Rogers) joins what he believes is a Rebel guerrilla force. Meanwhile, Cantrell’s stern, but loved mother (Marjorie Main) refuses to accept any of her son’s ill-gotten loot.

A former suitor of Mary’s, Union supporter Bob Seton (John Wayne), is captured by Cantrell and scheduled for execution. After being rescued by a disillusioned Fletcher McCloud, Seton and Mary Cantrell race to the town of Lawrence (site of an actual infamous Quantrill-led massacre) to warn the residents of an impending attack by Cantrell’s gang.

Cast

  • Claire Trevor as Mary McCloud
  • John Wayne as Bob Seton
  • Walter Pidgeon as William ‘Will’ Cantrell
  • Roy Rogers as Fletcher ‘Fletch’ McCloud
  • George ‘Gabby’ Hayes as Andrew ‘Doc’ Grunch
  • Porter Hall as Angus McCloud
  • Marjorie Main as Mrs. Cantrell, aka Mrs. Adams
  • Raymond Walburn as Judge Buckner
  • Joe Sawyer as Bushropp (guerrilla)
  • Helen MacKellar as Mrs. Hale
  • J. Farrell MacDonald as Dave (gunrunner)
  • Trevor Bardette as Mr. Hale

Adventures of Red Ryder

Filed under: 1940's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 10:08 pm
Movies Online

The Adventures of Red Ryder (1940) is a 12-Chapter Republic Movie Serial starring Don “Red” Barry and Noah Beery, Sr. based on the western comic strip “Red Ryder”. It was directed by William Witney and John English. This serial was the eighteenth of the sixty-six serials produced by Republic. Westerns, such as this serial, made up a third of all serials produced by the studio.

The plot follows a standard B-Western pattern of a villain trying to run the legitimate owners off their valuable land. In this case, the value comes from the building of a railroad.

Plot

A gang, led by banker Calvin Drake, plans to drive off ranchers from their land in order to profit from the building of a railroad. However, on one of these ranches, the Circle R, lives the Ryder family who resist the gang. After his father, Tom, is killed by One Eye Chapin, Red Ryder swears revenge and sets out to defeat the gang once and for all.

Production

Adventures of Red Ryder was based on the comic strip “Red Ryder” by Fred Harmon.

The serial was budgeted at $144,852 although the final negative cost was $145,961 (a $1,109, or 0.8%, overspend). 1940 was the first year in which Republic’s overall spending on serial production was less than in the previous year.

It was filmed between 27 March and 25 April 1940. The serial’s production number was 997.

Special Effects

The special effects in this serial were created by the Lydecker brothers, Republic’s in-house effects team.

Stunts

  • David Sharpe as Red Ryder (doubling Don “Red” Barry)
  • Duke Green
  • Ted Mapes
  • Post Park
  • Ken Terrell
  • Bill Yrigoyen
  • Joe Yrigoyen

Cast

  • Don “Red” Barry as Red Ryder. Donald Barry retained the nickname from this serial as Don “Red” Barry.[2]
  • Noah Beery as Ace Hanlon
  • Tommy Cook as Little Beaver
  • Maude Pierce Allen as Duchess Ryder
  • Vivian Coe as Beth Andrews
  • Harry Worth as Calvin Drake
  • Hal Taliaferro as Cherokee Sims
  • William Farnum as Colonel Tom Ryder
  • Bob Kortman as One-Eye Chapin
  • Carleton Young as Sheriff Dade

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