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2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Kidnapping The Sheriff, 8 August 2008
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
The abbreviated version I saw of Red River Valley did not cut too much
out of the story that I had to make up for gaps. Still a director's cut
might be in order. Who knows if we'll ever get one.
Roy Rogers is a radio entertainer with The Sons of the Pioneers as his
backup singers and band as was the case in real life. He's also a
rancher in the Red River Valley and they've got some problems with a
new dam that's supposed to go up.
The government's kicked in its half share in the project, but as per
the agreement the residents have to raise half themselves. They do, but
some thieves working for chief villain Trevor Bardette have their own
ideas.
With the money gone and the dam only half finished, Bardette is
perfectly willing to let the dam go providing everyone turn over their
shares of stock in the company running the dam. Roy and editor Gabby
Hayes smell a rat as of course everyone in the audience did. But
sheriff Robert Homans is convinced of Bardette's honesty. And he's also
the biggest stockholder in the dam corporation.
What to do, but Roy kidnaps the sheriff to buy some time and he has to
keep buying more time until the villains are exposed.
Part of the problem as is usually the case with these films, the crusty
old sheriff develops a strange prejudice against Roy. In this case he
finds him frivolous, he should be tending to ranch business instead of
being a radio singer. That's no occupation for a substantial citizen,
especially if he's courting daughter Gale Storm.
Red River Valley might be the first film where Pat Brady has an
important role. He's the bass fiddle player with the Sons of the
Pioneers and he develops a secondary romance with Sally Payne who plays
Gabby's daughter and the town telephone switchboard operator.
If any film ever pointed out the need for a Tennessee Valley Authority
this one is it. Some very greedy capitalists might have controlled the
Red River Valley water supply if it weren't for Roy's intervention.
Still it does make one wonder where was the Department of the Interior
and its honest Secretary Harold Ickes were while all this skulduggery
was going on?
Maybe going to him would have violated the cowboy code.
A Change of Direction for Roy, 24 December 2011
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Author:
Henchman_Number1 from United States
Singing star Roy Rogers returns to his home to find that the the money
the town raised to finance their much needed dam project has been
stolen. The town desperate for water agrees to sell their interest in
the dam over to Allison (Trevor Bardette). Roy suspicious of Allison
tries to stop the rest of the town, headed by cranky Sheriff Sutherland
(Robert Homans) from signing over their water rights. Aided by Gabby
Whittaker (Gabby Hayes), his daughter (Sally Payne), and the Sons of
the Pioneers, Roy tries to thwart plans to steal the town's water. If
that means Roy has to commit a few felonies along the way to stop the
bad guys, then so be it.
Released in 1941 this Joseph Kane directed entry in the Roy Rogers
series marks a change in the style of Roy's westerns. His prior movies
were contemporaneous and historically oriented with Roy playing parts
like Wild Bill Hickok and Buffalo Bill. Red River Valley ushers Roy
into the Automobile Age Western where people hitch their horses beside
station wagons. Kane over a period of several years shifted to more
musically oriented releases eventually changing Roy's singing cowboy
movies into musical lollapaloozas. This one strikes a nice balance
between the singing and the action. Roy is re-united with his former
group, The Son's of the Pioneers, who get in several well done numbers.
This movie also marks the first teaming of Roy with future sidekick Pat
Brady. Brady would continue to be featured and become a mainstay of
Roy's movies continuing on through Roy's television series in the
1950's. Despite the fact that Roy's best movies lay ahead of him under
the direction of William Witney, this movie maybe more than any other,
marks the beginning of what most most fans would soon come to remember
as the classic Roy Roger's Western.
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