Paroled - To Die (1938) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
4/10
Disappointing
Kieran_Kenney28 July 2003
As Douglas Redfern, Bob Steele just isn't engaging. He's handsome and a decent actor (most times), but he doesn't have the energy or charisma that a role like this needs. Everybody else in the cast is extremely wooden, rarely doing anything other than recite their inane dialogue as though they were porposefully repressing any and all desire and ability to actually act. The camerawork is fairly static and in only a few scenes do the filmmakers attempt to show off the beautiful countryside the movie was shot in. So, yeah, the jokes aren't funny, some of the acting is (when it shouldn't be), the characters are as flat as cardboard cutouts and the story is predictable and slow. Only for Bob Steele fans and hard-core 1930s B-Western affectionados.
7 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
"Someday I'm gonna take that hombre apart just to see what makes him tick."
classicsoncall3 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
So let me see if I got this right - Doug Redfern (Bob Steele) is arrested for bank robbery, found guilty and sentenced to twenty years in the State Pen in just about the course of a single afternoon, and is paroled, oh, the NEXT DAY!!! I know these programmers liked to come in at just around an hour, but the story itself should probably have taken just a little longer.

With some hundred plus films to his credit, Karl Hackett had just the perfect weasely look to be the main villain here. Not the first time one of these stories would have the town's banker rob his own establishment to try and pin it on the hero, but he really needed to put a little more thought into this.

I know Bob Steele was a major cowboy film star dating back to the silent era, but I just don't detect the charisma. It probably didn't hurt that his father was director Robert North Bradbury. I guess he holds up his end of the picture well enough, but there's nothing here to write home about, even if I just did. Keep your eyes (and ears) open for futile comic sidekick Lucky Gosden (Horace Murphy). This is the only Western flick I've seen that utilizes that goofy sound effect gimmick that Lucky uses, which I'm sure was a hit with the matinée fans of the day.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Steele Needed More Action, Less Story...But it's A Good Story
boblipton27 May 2020
Bob Steele is a tough man with a gun, but he and Kathleen Eliot like each other a lot. This doesn't suit her father, sheriff Steve Clark, who wants her to marry her other suitor, banker Karl Hackett. Hackett frames Steele for for robbing his own bank. In reality, Hackett did it; he wants the money for an oil well. Steele is sentenced to 20 years.... and shows up the next day with a parole.

it's a nice little story, with some good sequences in it, but it's hardly a topnotch Steele western. He has little to do in the way of physical action, and while he's fine getting on and off a horse, there's no fighting or big stunts in this.

Steele had started out in the silents under the direction of his father, Robert Bradbury senior (Steele was junior), and although he would eventually learn to deliver a line, his flat, emphatic voice was not really suited for the talkies. Still, he was a fine physical presence, and this is a decent little B western.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Not especially good.
planktonrules18 October 2021
I've seen and enjoyed several Bob Steele westerns before I watched this one but there was just something about this one that left me flat. I think most of it is that Steele just didn't seem up to par...and his acting seemed rather stilted.

Doug (Steele) and Harvey Meline hate each other. However, while Doug apparently can see through this villain, the somewhat dim sheriff doesn't. Doug insists Harvey is up to something...but exactly what is still unknown. The rivalry becomes so bitter and Meline is worried Doug might find out exactly what he's up to, so he sets up Doug to take the rap for a bank robbery of Meline's bank.

Not only is the acting subpar, but the entire story is wrapped up by an external source that arrives to explain the plot and stop the baddie...which seemed pretty weak. Keep looking...there are much better B-westerns out there than this one.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Oil Drilling
StrictlyConfidential23 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"Paroled - To Die" was originally released back in 1938.

Anyway - As the story goes - An unscrupulous banker named Meline is embezzling funds from his own bank to finance a clandestine oil drilling operation. Finding a bandana left by Doug Redfern, he arranges for his bank to be robbed and lays the blame on Doug. When our hero is convicted, but released on parole, Meline plans to take him out of the picture on a permanent basis.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Decent Bob Steele Western
FightingWesterner22 January 2010
A crooked banker, tired of having Bob Steele thwart his repeated attempts to steal from his own bank and angry that Steele stole the girl he was interested in, frames him and has him thrown in prison. Bob gets a very quick parole though (The phrase, "revolving door" comes to mind.), coming back to straighten things out, once and for all.

Paroled - To Die (great title) isn't as atmospheric as other Republic B-westerns and has a few lapses in logic. However, it's fast-paced enough and Bob Steele, one of the most atypical in looks and mannerisms of all the Saturday matinée western stars, is always a lot of fun to watch.

Some of the best scenes involve Steele's crashing of the town dance and his cat-and-mouse games with the bad guys, in the hills outside of town.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Sheriff and the banker try to run Steele out of town
frank412215 May 2020
The action really begins when Karl Hackett uses Bob Steele's bandana to frame him for robbing his own bank.The sheriff (Steve Clark) wants his daughter (Kathleen Eliot) to marry the banker Hackett. They both try to run Steele out of town. Republic Pictures gets another winner thanks to a great cast and some familiar faces in Budd Buster and Frank Ball playing the judge. Good to see Tex Ritter's sidekick Horace Murphy playing the drifter Lucky.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed