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10 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Who Was That Masked Man?, 17 June 2002
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Author:
(bsmith5552@rogers.com) from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
"Jesse James Rides Again" was the first of three serials that featured the
James character that were produced by Republic between 1947 and 1950. Of
course Jesse James in these serials bears no resemblance to the real Jesse
James. In fact, Jesse is the hero rather than the villain in all three. But
who among the Saturday Matinee crowd really cared?
This entry involves the familiar "B" western plot of the villains trying to
take over the local ranches because there's oil under the land. Meanwhile
Jesse James (Clayton Moore) and his pal Steve Lane (John Compton) flee
Missouri and wind up in the middle of the conflict assisting the ranchers.
They take a particular interest in crippled rancher Tom London and his
daughter (Linda Stirling) who are being raided by the Black Raiders led by
Roy Barcroft. Tristram Coffin, a "respectable" town citizen is the brains
behind the outfit.
The serial contains the usual cliffhangers and relies heavily on stock
footage from the 1943 John Wayne film "War of the Wildcats" for the race to
the refinery sequence. And yes, we see that famous shot of the exploding oil
derrick in this one too. The stuntwork is top notch as usual. Two of the
stunt men, Tom Steele and Dale Van Sickel in addition to doubling most of
the actors in the action scenes, appear in four different bit roles each
over the course of the film.
Clayton Moore, soon to become TV's Lone Ranger, plays Jesse not unlike the
masked man. Linda Stirling in her final serial, has little to do except act
helpless and look beautiful. Compton is simply awful as the hero's pal.
Barcroft and Coffin make a formidable pair of villains. Holly Bane (aka Mike
Ragan) and Charlie King are also part of the gang. "B" western veterans
Edmund Cobb, LeRoy Mason (on the right side of the law for a change), Gene
Roth and Edward Cassidy round out the cast. Keith Richards, who would play
Jesse in the 1950 serial "The James Brothers of Missouri" has a bit as a
phony drunk trying to find out what Jesse's next move is going to
be.
This serial is as good as any turned out by Republic at that time and
though predictable, is enjoyable nonetheless.
5 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Standard Republic Serial, 9 January 1999
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Author:
Harold-10 from United States
Another cliffhanger from the formula. Clayton Moore plays Jesse James, who leaves Missouri to hide in Tennessee (I think) where he uncovers a plot to move farmers off their land so the "bad guys" can drill the large reservoir of oil underneath. In other words, Jesse James is a good guy, and no one in town knows his identity, except for farmer Linda Stirling and her crippled father. Along with his trusty side-kick, there are fights-a-plenty, chases and explosions, too. But all in all, this is very mediocre, even for a cliff-hanger.
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