5/10
"A coyote never changes his bark".
7 June 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Old time Western movie fans get an unexpected treat in this Tim McCoy oater - future A-listers John Wayne and Walter Brennan are both on hand to lend support. Wayne's character goes by the unusual name of 'Duke' - who would have guessed that? Meanwhile Brennan finds himself cast as a villainous sheriff's deputy, coming on screen about the time Wayne disappears from the story.

The opening credits list the name of Kurt Kempler relative to 'Continuity', so I made it a point to see if he did his job or not in regards to the story. As with many of these B Westerns from the Thirties, continuity is one of the last things on anyone's mind during filming and true to form, this one was no exception. For example, right after Tim Clark (McCoy) loses his ranch, he's left with no earthly possessions other than his horse, so he decides to go silver prospecting. A subsequent scene shows him guiding his mount and another pack horse through rough country, followed immediately by another scene in which he's shown riding along with no more pack animal. What happened there?

Here's another one - recall when Tim Clark shows up following the express office robbery, town villain Russell (Wheeler Oakman) remarks on his 'new' bullet wound. Tim was shot in the shoulder a few days earlier and he was wearing a shirt, so how could Russell know he had been shot with no outward appearance of it's effect?

Another instance I got a kick out of occurred when Tim is back at the express office with the sheriff and Russell henchman Zeke Yokum (Richard Alexander). Attempting to sort out clues about the robbery, Tim casually looks down, and there on the floor happens to be a piece of paper with a boot print on it that matches the metal heel mark on Yokum's boot. With the robbery having occurred a couple days earlier, why wouldn't the sheriff or anyone else have noticed it before? At least in Sheriff Malcolm's (Tully Marshall) case, you might chalk it up to old age. At the time of filming, the actor was sixty eight years old and looking every bit of it. You have to wonder why the town couldn't find a younger lawman. And by the way, that boot heel impression on the piece of paper was somewhat laughable, it could have been made by any boot!

But I guess stuff like this didn't matter too much back in the day. These films were churned out in a matter of days and then it was on to the next one. However there was one interesting element here that I found kind of fascinating actually. It was when Tim McCoy took off on his horse after outlaw Russell, and his horse nearly stumbled before catching himself and getting upright again to continue the chase. If I had to guess, the horse might have been auditioning a near fall for a larger part in the next picture.
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