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11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Two cowboy stars for the price of one !, 13 July 2006
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Author:
revdrcac from United States
This WWII era western features the great Ken Maynard in one of his
later films and Eddie Dean in one of his first featured roles. Both are
Marshals investigating a payroll robbery during the days of the Wild
West. Also featured are Max Terhune (of 3 Mesquiteers fame) as well as
Glenn Strange.
Maynard was one of the great silent film cowboy stars, but did not fare
so well in the talkies. In this one, he seems over the hill and a bit
dis-interested. Eddie Dean does well in his role and would go on to his
own film series.
I enjoyed seeing the unique casting in this western, despite a standard
script. For fans of classic era westerns, this one is worth seeing for
that alone ......
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Fun Movie, Fantastic Cast, 9 April 2010
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Author:
FightingWesterner from The Lonesome Prairie
Lawman Rocky Camron recruits old pals Ken Maynard, Eddie Dean, and Max
Terhune to help ferret out a gang of big-time bank robbers. The quartet
take cover in a medicine show in order to get close to the villains,
with each man doing his particular specialty for the show.
A final starring role for Maynard, this and other later pictures get a
lot of flack because of Ken's weight. However, this semi-remake of the
John Wayne vehicle Paradise Canyon (written/directed by the same
writer) is actually quite entertaining, with Ken still a lot of fun to
watch, performing some of the same cowboy tricks on the medicine show
that initially attracted the attention of Hollywood some twenty-years
earlier.
Also, Eddie Dean belts out a handful of great songs and Max Terhune
brings along his dummy. Rounding out the cast is western character
actor and final Frankenstein Monster Glenn Strange, pretty Ruth Roman,
and eternal heavy Charles King, a villain who seems to have come back
more times than Freddy Krueger!
Instead of being Maynard's last, it should have been the first in a
Three Mesquiteers/Range Busters type series. I would have paid money to
see it.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
"He couldn't track an elephant in five feet of snow!", 13 November 2007
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Author:
classicsoncall from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
In the oddest of coincidences, this is the second Western in a row I've
watched, picked entirely at random, to take place in a town called Red
Bluff. The other was the 1942 Rough Riders picture, "Riders of the
West". I don't recall the state ever being mentioned in the stories,
but a quick Google search brought up a bunch of hits for Red Bluff,
California.
"Harmony Trail" has a pretty interesting team up between star Ken
Maynard, Eddie Dean, and Max Terhune, and it made me wonder whether
this was one of the traditional Western 'B' trios that became a staple
of the genre. Terhune had been a member of The Three Mesquiteers, but
in this case, it was simply a matter of putting a number of top draws
together. Actually, for Maynard, this was his last hurrah following a
stint with Hoot Gibson and Bob Steele as part of Monogram Pictures'
Trail Blazers series. By this time, Maynard's girth had gained quite a
few inches, and he's quite paunchy, no longer the solid, youthful
looking cowboy that he was at the start of his career in the mid
1920's.
In the story, the three buddies hook up with a traveling medicine show
to get the goods on an outlaw gang who robbed twenty five thousand
dollars. In an interesting gimmick, the baddies sell a herd of five
hundred cattle to a local rancher for precisely the same amount, and
deposit the stolen marked money in a bank account, thereby throwing
suspicion on a local rancher. The main villain, Jim Sorrell is played
by veteran bad guy Charles King.
Besides bringing in the hoodlums, the picture offers a side story with
Eddie Dean romancing Ruth Roman's character, the daughter of the
medicine show owner. Dean, one of the top cowboy crooners, sings the
title song along with a couple of others, including an out of place but
entertaining boogie woogie tune. What's interesting about the medicine
show set up is that Max Terhune winds up delivering the sales pitch
usually done by the snake oil salesman. I wondered about that for a
while, especially since Pop Martin (Robert McKenazie) wound up with
virtually nothing to do for his part in the story.
If you're wondering about my summary quote above, I would be too, as it
doesn't seem like a comment that would be coming out of a Western.
Credit that to Terhune's ventriloquist dummy Elmer in response to
learning that the local sheriff would be tracking the bad guys. I've
seen Terhune's act with Elmer in a few of his Three Mesquiteers films,
but here's a bit of trivia coming out of this flick. Care to guess
Elmer's last name? - it's Sneezeweed!!!
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