The Old Oregon Trail (1928) Poster

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3/10
Not a great film, but interesting regional history
alisonms16 June 2005
Much of "The Old Oregon Trail" was filmed in north-central Oregon (Gilliam County, near the county seat of Condon), in the valley of the John Day River, not the Snake River Valley as at least one commentator has guessed. The valley is still part of the ranch my family owns, and and the ranch buildings that appear in the film are still in use.

Art Seale (the correct spelling of the family name, not "Seales" as listed in the credits), was the younger brother of Sid Seale, then owner of the ranch. Sid Seale, who rode with Tom Mix in Wild West shows on the West Coast, appears in uncredited roles as wagon driver and buckaroo.
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8/10
A real surprise!
JohnHowardReid28 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Now for a really nice surprise, Alpha have a really beautiful print of "The Old Oregon Trail" (1928).

Admittedly, a gorgeous copy of an Art Mix picture doesn't sound all that appealing, but the story (by Art Mix, of course) is not only quite thrilling but almost as engrossing as the spectacular scenery.

Also to my surprise, the direction (again by Art Mix himself of course) is almost as fluent as the story, and the acting.

Mr. Mix leads a reasonably talented group of players led by Mrs Mix, of course - Dolores Booth - plus Art Seale, Sid Seale and Grace Underwood.

Indeed, all told, the acting here is almost as surprisingly competent as the direction and the photography.
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10/10
"The Old Oregon Trail"
kennewickjim2 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
My Grandfather, Sid Seale was in the film as a wagon driver. His brother, my great uncle Art Seale was a leading character in the film. His most memorable line in the film was "Stay away from the women, they're Pizzin'!"(poison)...The movie was filmed on my Grandfather's wheat ranch in Gilliam county, Oregon, 18 miles west of Condon, Oregon. the barn in front of which the fist fight occurs is still in use, and was repainted in 1984.

My grandparents and I and many family members watched the film together on several occasions, usually on my grandparents wedding anniversary.

The thing I remember most about the movie(I have not seen it in many years) , was the wild wagon ride my grandfather took down the face of horseshoe bend, a very steep canyon on the edge of his ranch.It was quite a stunt, but he was up to it, as he had been a champion cowboy in his younger days,winning grand marshal of the Pendleton roundup three times. He also had a trick riding and roping act he performed in movies and rodeos.He even had a Stetson cowboy hat named for him, the Sid Seale Stetson.

I hope this is interesting to someone out there!
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Worth Viewing For the Locations
Michael_Elliott30 March 2011
Old Oregon Trail, The (1928)

** (out of 4)

If people know Victor Adamson's name it's probably because they're aware of his more famous son Al who would turn out some of the biggest camp movies of all-time with titles such as FIVE BLOODY GRAVES, Dracula VS FRANKENSTEIN and BRAIN OF BLOOD. When one watched Victor's movies it's rather funny how common the films were between father and son because they were often made for a popular genre (silent Western/drive-in horror) and on very small budgets. The story here is rather straight and simple as Art Mix plays a cowboy who saves a young woman and her father on a coach through Oregon. Years later he's working in a rodeo show when he comes across the father and daughter again but this time they're fighting with some bandits so sure enough Mix agrees to help. At just 41-minutes this film is ultra cheap and right to the point as the screenplay doesn't allow for too much plot. In fact, this film pretty much goes from A to Z without any sort of plot twists or anything else because it's clear Adamson was just wanting to get anything on film and into theaters. So, how is the picture? I'd have a hard time recommending it to anyone unless they simply have to see every Western ever made during the silent era. This is certainly far from a bad movie but at the same time there's not an ounce of quality seen anywhere and with so many better Westerns out there it's really not hard telling someone to skip this one. The one saving grace and the only reason I'd recommend people to check this out is for the beautiful locations. This was shot in Oregon (a couple posts at IMDb give different actual locations) and the scenery is downright breathtaking during certain moments. At the start there's a lot of scenes looking down a cliff to a valley and some more stuff dealing with the mountains and rivers. All of this looks wonderful well and one really wishes that Adamson would have just shot a nature documentary and let the silly action for a different movie.
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