- A cavalry officer helps save a family's ranch from land grabbers.
- In old California Captain John Holmes must convince landowner Don Jose Cantares to register his land or face having it become public domain. Don Luis Gonzales, with rather selfish motives, is trying to convince him to do otherwise.—Ed Stephan <stephan@cc.wwu.edu>
- Captain John Holmes has been sent to encourage the Spanish landowners in California to register their land. To keep Don Jose from registering his, Don Pablo kidnaps him. Earlier Holmes did a favor for Morgan and his ruffian gang by keeping them from being arrested. Now he calls on Morgan to repay that favor by helping him fight Don Pablo and his men.—Maurice VanAuken <mvanauken@a1access.net>
- The Rancho Castanares, near the Pueblo Santa Barbara and stretching from the mountains to the sea, is threatened by a decree of the American government requiring Spanish land-grant owners to register their holdings by June 15th, or see them revert to public domain. Scheming Don Pablo Gonzales advises his wealthy friend Don Jose Castanares to defy the government decree, as he wishes to grab the Rancho Castanares for himself, and it is obvious that his lazy son, Luiz, will not obtain the property through marriage to Jose's daughter Dolores, who dreams of meeting a dashing storybook hero. Knowing an entrance cue when he heard one, in rides U.S. Army Captain John Holmes on his horse Duke, sent by the government to convince the land-owners to protect their property by registration. John, guided through the countryside by a fast-talking gent of shady fortune, Felipe Guadalupe Constacio Delgado Santa Cruz de la Verranca, wins the trust of Don Jose and the wrath of the steaming and still-scheming Gonzales. John wins an unlikely ally when he prevents the arrest by U.S. Army troops of outlaw Jake Morgan, who promises to leave the Rancho Castanares alone and provide help anytime John might need it.Which turns out to be soon.Don Jose, on his way to meet John and register his land, is kidnapped by Gonzales' henchmen, and when Dolores goes searching for her father and arrives at the Gonzales ranch, she is held hostage and forced to consent to marriage to Don Luis to save her father. But among the guests at the hastily-assembled wedding are John and Jake in the company of Luis'jilted lover, Anita and her outraged "aunt" who is Felipe in disguise. Greatly outnumbered by Gonzales' hired henchies, John, Jake and Felipe fight with swords and ceramic projectiles (as might be expected from a man in drag) while Duke (the Miracle Horse) leads Jake's gang to the rescue. A remake of 1928's "The Canyon of Adventure" and features a few scenes where, courtesy of stock footage, John and Duke magically turn into Ken Maynard and Tarzan. Warners reissued this in 1939 and the other westerns Wayne made for producer Leon Schlesinger, with revised artwork (ugly) and updated tagline identifying Wayne as the "hero of "Stagecoach" and "Allegheny Uprising", but Duke, the Miracle Horse kept his accustomed billing.—Les Adams <longhorn1939@suddenlink.net>
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Top Gap
By what name was The Man from Monterey (1933) officially released in Canada in English?
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