The Showdown (1940) Poster

(1940)

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6/10
"I'll give you an hour to get out of town,,,"
classicsoncall27 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
After catching a handful of Hoppy films over the last couple of weeks I'm beginning to rely on his stories to introduce elements I haven't seen before in a Western. For example in this one, Cassidy takes part in a rigged card game against a character calling himself the Baron (Morris Ankrum), and discards an Ace while holding three others in a hand he's dealt. Figuring the Baron is setting him up to lose against a straight flush, Hoppy winds up with the nine and ten of spades that the Baron would have been dealt if Hoppy stayed fast. It was a clever ruse to put one over on the outlaw, and fortunately, I didn't need to have it explained a couple of times like Cassidy's sidekick Speedy (Britt Wood) did.

From there, Hoppy's winnings are stolen by the Baron's henchmen, and wouldn't you know it, the bills show up later when the Baron shows up to put a down payment on some race horses he's buying, but Hoppy marked the bills so he has him dead to rights. In fact he told Speedy - "You know, I have a hunch that money's comin' right back to us". You might think Cassidy wrote the script here.

The business with Colonel Rufe White (Wright Kramer) was a puzzler though. He bilked his niece Sue Willard (Jan Clayton) out of her mother's inheritance, but was one of Hoppy's pals who was on hand to make sure he wasn't swindled by the Baron. He takes a heart attack midway through as a convenient way for Sue to get her ranch back, but it didn't seem to me she even knew about it. Very strange.

Say, keep an eye out for a sign above the bar in the Silver Dollar Saloon - 'No Liquors Served to Minors or Indians'! Better yet, keep an eye on that tricked out hay wagon the Baron had fixed up to make off with the race horses! You have to give these guys credit for creativity!

Well this time Hoppy's pal Lucky (Russell Hayden) gets the girl even though he had to pout his way through the story to do so. Hoppy's such an understanding guy he just knows things will work out in the end. Also on hand were The King's Men as singing cowhands, but this time out they didn't earn their pay - they didn't sing!
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6/10
A touch of the continental
bkoganbing21 July 2014
Morris Ankrum who appeared in several Hopalong Cassidy movies does this one with a touch of the continental. He arrives at Wright Kramer's horse farm with a nice European accent passing himself off as Baron. This baron is really a horse thief, but he's got a pair of quality race horses involved here and he wants them to disguise and help fix races and clean up on bets.

At the same time young Jan Clayton arrives saying she's Kramer's long lost niece. Coincidence or not? It's up to Hopalong Cassidy and Lucky and Speedy to sort it out, or at least Hoppy to and the others follow his lead.

That might not be easy for Lucky Jenkins. He's more impulsive and headstrong than normal in this Cassidy feature. In real life Russell Hayden was married to Jan Clayton at the time.

A good Hoppy feature with Hayden especially standing out.
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7/10
How Many Confidence Tricksters Are There?
boblipton15 December 2019
The 28th Hopalong Cassidy movie has Morris Ankrum showing up, sporting an accent, claiming to be a baron interested in buying Wright Kramer's harness-racing horse for a European syndicate. When he speaks with his associates, it's clear he's a con man. This casts doubt on Jan Clayton, who shows up riding the rods, when a letter arrives claiming she's the rightful owner of Kramer's ranch.

It's one of the best written Hoppies, because of that tension. There's even tension between series lead William Boyd and regular sidekick Russell Hayden. Miss Clayton, in her third and final appearance in the series, clearly relies on Boyd's assistance, kicking off Hayden's jealousy. I'm pretty sure it was just acting; later in the year, Boyd would marry Grace Bradley, and Miss Clayton would marry Hayden. Miss Clayton was not just another pretty starlet. She would originate the role of Julie Jordan in Rodger & Hammerstein's CAROUSEL; tv viewers would also recognize her as Ellen Miller, Timmy's put-upon mother in the first version of LASSIE. She would die in 1983 at the age of 66.
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6/10
An Enjoyable Western from Days Gone By
Uriah4318 January 2023
This film essentially begins with a man by the name of "Baron Render" (Morris Ankrum) arriving on the train to the small town of Sundance to meet with a rancher named "Colonel Rufe White" (Wright Kramer). His goal is to purchase some horses from Colonel White so that he can make a hefty profit from them when he returns to Europe. At almost the same time, a young woman named "Sue Willard" (Jan Clayton) also shows up at the ranch and tells Colonel White that she is his niece. Naturally, Colonel White welcomes her with open arms and invites her to stay with him for as long as she wants. The problem is that things are not what they seem and it's up to a cowboy named "Hopalong Cassidy" (William Boyd) to straighten things out. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this turned out to be an enjoyable Western from days gone by with William Boyd putting in a solid performance as the lead character. I especially liked the rather surprising twist around the mid-point of the film which I didn't see coming. But then, by his own admission, neither did Hopalong Cassidy. In any case, although the film is clearly dated, it was still entertaining enough, and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
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7/10
'Baron' Bender...horse thief!
planktonrules3 October 2020
Like most of the Hopalong Cassidy westerns, "The Showdown" is posted on YouTube AND it's fully restored to its original length and the print is pristine. This is important because many of the other B-western stars had their films cut down to television time slot length...but with the Cassidy films, William Boyd kept original copies...so these are NOT trimmed and look much like they did when they were first shown in theaters.

When the story begins, Speedy (Britt Wood) is preparing a speech when he meets Baron Bender on the train. The Baron is in town to talk to the Colonel about buying some of his horses...but the Baron is a fraud. He's no baron and he plans on stealing the Colonel's prize racing horses! Now everyone SHOULD have known this as Morris Ankrum plays this character...and he ALWAYS played bad buy in the many Hopalong Cassidy films in which he appeared. In fact, it would have been very funny had Hoppy said something to this effect! Instead, the normally cautious Cassidy spots that the Baron is a fraud when he marks some money....and finds it later in the Baron's possession after Hoppy is robbed! And, surprisingly, the Baron isn't the only one who is committing fraud...which leads to a second and unrelated plot.

This is an interesting film because Hoppy was such a 'perfect' cowboy. He never drank alcohol, nor smoked, nor seriously chased women and he never gambled...or almost never gambled. In this one, he plays Poker with the Baron. It is important to the plot....just a bit unexpected since Cassidy was usually so squeaky clean.

So is it any good? Yes. I am not as fond at seeing Britt Wood playing the third sidekick as Gabby Hayes ('Windy') or Andy Clyde ('California')...his Speedy just wasn't quite an interesting character by comparison...which is probably why he appeared in far fewer films than the other two. But I could look past this since the rest of the movie was quite good...though Lucky's actions late in the film are pretty nonsensical.

By the way, among the supporting actors in the film are Kermit Maynard and Eddie Dean...both who both were minor B-movie stars themselves when they weren't playing various characters in other stars' films. Dean plays the Sheriff and Maynard plays Johnson...one of the Baron's henchmen. Finally, Jan Clayton played Lucky's love interest...and in real life she and Russell Hayden were actually married at the time.
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6/10
Sundance! Where have I heard that location mentioned?
JohnHowardReid6 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Copyright 8 March 1940 by Paramount Pictures Inc. A Harry Sherman Production. No New York opening. U.S. release: 8 March 1940. Australian release: 20 June 1940. 5,841 feet. 65 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: At the Sundance railroad station, where the townsfolk are awaiting the arrival of Baron Rendor, Cassidy and his pals, Lucky and Speedy, get into a fight with a group of toughs who are in the employ of the baron. The same train brings Sue Willard, disguised as a boy, into town, and Cassidy saves her life as she is about to be swept under the train. (An excellent Platinum Disc DVD).

NOTES: Number 28 of the 66-picture series (Zinman's numbering. Paramount's number is 30). Jan Clayton was Mrs Russell Hayden.

COMMENT: "Pop" Sherman's picture-making philosophy of a powerful opening and a bang-up finish is well exemplified by this entry. In fact, the impactful opener, reminiscent of Wellman's Wild Boys of the Road, is one of the most exciting of the entire series. The actionful climax is great too. But in between, apart from Russell Harlan's fine location photography, the picture's interest level is no more than fair to middling.

OTHER VIEWS: Britt Wood, a replacement for George Hayes, was a seasoned vaudeville performer who played the harmonica and told mildewed rustic jokes. Wood was out of place in the series, but the entries in which he appeared had compensating virtues.
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7/10
The Showdown
coltras3513 February 2024
Baron Rendor (Morris Ankrum) arrives in town under the pretence of being a horse trader from across the sea in Europe. What no one in town realises is that Rendor is in fact a crooked gambler who is more adept at a bit of horse theft. What the Baron doesn't count on is the suspicious tendencies of Hopalong Cassidy (William Boyd) who arrives in town to and immediately thinks there is something dodgy. His feelings are backed when he enters a game of cards with the Baron and after being dealt 4 aces pulls one over on the Baron and then marking his winnings because he knows a sore loser will try and steal them back.

I like how Hoppy expresses his suspicions of someone dodgy with that face expression of his - and when Morris Ankrum, who plays the Baron, appears Hoppy's suspicious mind starts ticking - especially when he sees regular B-western bad guy Roy Barcroft talking to the horse trader - this briskly-paced western has an intriguing storyline, a tense poker game, a subplot of whether the girl who Lucky takes a shine to his Colonel's niece and Hoppy gets trapped in a burning barn. Lucky gets the wrong idea about Hoppy and the Colonel's niece and the villain uses this to his advantage.
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10/10
Hoppy Classic
hines-200014 June 2022
Showdown has an intriguing plot and some good acting performances with one of the best in Morris Ankrum playing under the false pretenses of being a European horse trader. Of course Hoppy (William Boyd) smells a rat after a crooked poker game and with Speedy (Britt Wood) they aim to set a trap. Well known TV and movie performer, Jan Clayton comes on strong as the Colonel's niece, or is she? Russell Hayden, her real-life husband is caught in a three-way crossfire not knowing who to trust. One of the best heavies, Roy Barcroft does his henchman role to perfection and The King's Men Quartet croon some great tunes. The greatest singing cowboy, Eddie Dean and Kermit Maynard round out a great cast.
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