The Marauders (1947)
5/10
"You got more nerve than you got brains!"
11 September 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The title makes things sound kind of ominous, doesn't it? The story didn't deal with marauders as much as a passel of bad guys attempting to tear down an old church to make way for a mining camp. It didn't make sense to me why they couldn't just work their way around the building, what would have been the problem with that? I saw this film under the title "King of the Range" and that one didn't bear much relationship to the story either. If one wanted to claim Hopalong Cassidy (William Boyd) as King of the Range, any of his movies could have been called that.

There was a hint of a ghost story as this one opened, with Hoppy and his sidekicks Lucky (Rand Brooks) and California (Andy Clyde) seeking shelter from a thunderstorm in an abandoned church. That's another thing - for an abandoned church, there was sure a lot of furnishings left behind, especially in the rectory area. Anyway, various noises emanating from the church proper manage to put California's guard up, with his braver buddies seeking out the source. Most of it's chalked up to the wind playing havoc with the organ (?), but then they find someone actually playing a hymn in the middle of the night! I don't think a whole lot of thought was put into this one.

If all this seems curious to you, you can bet that Hoppy thought the same thing, and wound up confronting a crew foreman named Riker (Harry Cording) in the morning whose men were starting to take the church apart. With some controversy over who actually owned the building, Riker's men leave, but take up positions outside the church to lay siege against Hoppy and his pals, along with the two women who arrived earlier.

I have to second another reviewer here who already mentioned it, but with Riker's men surrounding the church, how come no one saw Hoppy slip out the back door and head to town? A couple of henchmen do give chase after Hoppy took one of the gang out, but that felt like lowering the odds for the folks left inside. The funniest thing though, was when the shooting broke out, one of the baddies lied down to take a nap! It didn't last long, but come on, who wrote that into the story?

Well, no need to prolong the agony. Hoppy and his boys come out on top after a deacon of the church (Ian Wolfe) reveals his hand in a scheme to take over the properties in the area due to an oil discovery. In one of your more unique resolutions to a B Western, Cassidy gets the better of the guy who scrambled up into the church tower to gain a vantage point. I won't give it away completely, let's just say that Hoppy rang his bell real good.
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