Below the Border (1942) Poster

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6/10
Three heroes save the day ............
revdrcac13 July 2006
In another film in their great western series, Buck Jones, Colonel Tim McCoy and Ray Hatton go undercover to solve a jewelry theft along the Mexican border. They each work covertly to rein in the dastardly thieves and restore order to the area.

Western film trios were popular during this era of film and this pairing was one of the best. Buck Jones and Tim McCoy were tough but personable on screen and ray Hatton was one of the best western character actors ever.

This film was above average, with good action, plot and casting. This one compares favorably with many of the better films of that other cowboy trio, the Three Mesquiteers. Enjoy !
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6/10
Cattle and jewels
bkoganbing10 May 2020
In this film our Rough Rider trio go below the border to investigate some cattle rustling. They end up checking into a jewelry robbery as well.

The Garcia ranch is being used by the foreman Dennis Moore to hide stolen cattle from rustling. Head villain and saloon owner Roy Barcroft has something on Moore which really isn't clear.

Raymond Hatton is more comic than usual in his undercover assignment as a swamper in Barcroft's saloon. Tim McCoy is a cattle buyer and Buck Jones is a fence for the jewels.

The guys work well together. Sad Buck Jones demise ended this series.
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6/10
Best of the Trigger Trio Series!
bsmith55526 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
"Below the Border" was another entry in Monogram's popular "Rough Rider" series starring Buck Jones, Tim McCoy and Raymond Hatton. All three had been around since the 20s and were considered to be past their prime when they were cast together in this series.

The premise of the series was that three marshals, Buck Roberts (Jones), Tim McCall (McCoy) and Sandy Hopkins (Hatton) would ride into a situation, Roberts from Arizona, McCall from Wyoming and Hopkins from Texas and clean up the problem.

In this one, Roberts, posing as John Robbins is riding in a stagecoach with Mexican ladies Rosita Garcia (Linda Brent) and her Aunt Maria (Eva Puig) when it is held up by a gang of outlaws. The Garcia family jewels are taken with Roberts' apparent assistance.

This was Buck's way of infiltrating the gang which is led by Scully (Roy Barcroft). In Scully's saloon, Sandy is working as a janitor. Tim arrives on the scene posing as a cattle buyer. We learn that the trio is there to avenge the murder of one of their marshal colleagues and break up a cattle rustling scheme run by Scully and his gang.

The Garcia rancho is located "below the border" where Joe Cllins (Dennis Moore) is working with the bad guys in the rustling scheme with the proviso that they leave the Garcia's alone. When he learns of the jewel robbery he tries to leave the gang but................

The Rough Riders eventually expose the villains and all are brought to justice, including gang members Charlie King, Bud Osborne and Kermit Maynard.

The "Rough Rider" series was held together by the chemistry between the three stars. This made the mostly mediocre scripts better than they were. There was surprisingly little action, rarely a knock down drag out type "B" western brawl and hardly anyone ever got killed. But it worked. The series lasted for eight films and ended in 1942 when McCoy went back into the army and Jones died tragically in a fire, after making one more film with just Hatton, the same year. Hatton continued on with Johnny Mack Brown in 1943.
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6/10
"... sheriff here's got my number but he's on the wrong street."
classicsoncall16 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
You've got to give Monogram some credit for the catchy Rough Riders theme song, it captures the spirit of the cowboy trio of Buck Jones, Tim McCoy and Ray Hatton rather nicely. Even though each of the cowboy stars was over fifty when the series was formed in 1941, the boys had a nice chemistry going that kept them popular with fans through eight pictures until World War II intervened; McCoy was an Army Colonel who returned to active duty!

As far as 'B' Westerns go, "Below The Border" is a fairly entertaining story given the standard formula it's operating with. Working undercover, Marshal Buck Roberts (Jones) infiltrates a cattle rustling gang by impersonating an outlaw, while Sandy Hopkins (Hatton) poses as a hired hand in bad guy Scully's (Roy Barcroft) saloon. McCall's (McCoy) cover is that of a cattle buyer, and as each partner takes his position, the outlaw scheme begins to unravel. There's some suspense when Slade (Charles King), one of the baddies, fingers Buck Roberts as an impostor but he's taken down in a rather awkward showdown. Even more awkward is the way Roberts brings down Scully attempting to get the drop on him in a cave. Actually the scene is downright lame considering Scully had the entire advantage, but then the good guys would have been down to two.

If you stop to consider that the characters of Buck Jones, Tim McCoy and Ray Hatton went back home respectively to Arizona, Wyoming and Texas in between adventures, in an era before motorized transportation, it's a virtual impossibility that they were able to complete eight investigations in the span of less than two years. But that certainly didn't bother theater goers back in the 1940's, who didn't really worry about those kinds of obstacles. Especially when that theme song started up again - 'The Rough Riders ride, beware...'
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4/10
Worth seeing just so you can see one of the worst performances in westerns!
planktonrules13 October 2011
Warning: Spoilers
"Below the Border" is pretty typical of a Rough Riders film because it once again finds the heroes, Buck Jones, Tim McCoy and Raymond Hatton all playing characters that are undercover--and pretending as if they are not friends and lawmen. In other words, the three always work independently but are actually all working for the same side...niceness.

In this installment, the Rough Riders are investigating a gang who is holding up stage coaches. Buck poses as a customer on the stage and when it's held up, he is very helpful--hoping they'll eventually ask him to join the gang. McCoy plays a cattle buyer, as they're also investigating cattle rustling (this is a multi-talented gang). As for Hatton, as usual, he poses as a low-life--spending his time in town doing crappy jobs and keeping his eyes open to see what's cooking. And, to convince the gang that Buck is evil, he spends much of the film slapping and bullying poor Hatton. Why was Hatton always given these not too glamorous jobs?! For the most part, the rest of the film is very typical except for one scene near the end where Buck Jones plugs a guy--no beating him up or shooting him in the hand! This was a nice plus.

One of the low points of this film is the performance of Linda Brent as 'Rosita'. Her performance as a Mexican lady is, frankly, worse than a no-talent kid in a high school play. Yes, she's pretty but the accent she puts on is LESS authentic than the Frito Bandito's! In fact, it's downright terrible and she couldn't act. Was she the producer's girlfriend or the studio chief's daughter?! All I know is that she's one of the worst actresses I've ever seen in a B-western--and that covers a lot of territory. While I'd normally give a film like this a 6, in this case I'm deducting a couple points due to Brent alone. She was THAT bad!

By the way, one reviewer said that the series stopped because of WWII. This really wasn't the case. Sadly, it stopped because Buck Jones was tragically killed in a fire.
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6/10
Blackmail
StrictlyConfidential27 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"Below the Border" was originally released back in 1942.

Anyway - As the story goes - The Rough Riders, three friends who work on bringing justice to the West, are embarking on their new case involving a murderous criminal with eyes on a family's fortune in jewels. Each of the Rough Riders poses as complete strangers to each other in order to better investigate the case.
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3/10
Same plot, different actors, different character names.
mark.waltz17 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
If you were to take every western ever made and categorize them, you'd probably find that a good 40% had something to do with wagon train rustlers, and that if seen back to back, the ones made between 1930 and 1945 all followed similar patterns. This one is practically identical to a dozen that I have seen in low budget Z grade programmers that probably played double bills together in cheap theaters and rarely were part of a bottom of the double or even triple bill.

This is part of one of the many triple heroes together out to capture or kill these one dimensional villains, usually played by the same actors in black clothing and always with a mustache. The heroes here, named the Roughriders, are as good as good can get, and of course, there's the damsel in distress who is always in the wrong place at the wrong time. The team of Buck Jones, Tim McCoy and Raymond Hatton strive to keep this exciting, but it is simply just more of the same.

As these films are normally under an hour and in the public domain, they end up on cheap DVD collections, featuring weak print transfers with wretched sound quality. Monogram had a few good B westerns, but this isn't one of them. This one is just too tedious and without humor. It took a lot to retain my attention.
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10/10
Buck gives up the family jewels
hines-20004 October 2020
It all starts when Buck Jones is riding in a stagecoach in the badlands with the lady voted the "prettiest white girl in Shanghai", Linda Brent and her aunt (Eva Puig). Ray Hatton is undercover as a janitor in a bar and Tim McCoy as a cattle buyer from Kansas. Dennis Moore is playing both sides of the fence but he's playing with fire with the likes of Ed Scully (Roy Barcroft) and Steve Slade (Charles King). No one plays a better sheriff than Jack Rockwell. A great Rough Rider scene when Tim stops a bully picking on Ray, "Well, some people are born to handle mops; some are not, as you seem to know so much about. Just pick up that mop and show him how". Our trio of stars work great together in this one. Makes you wish there were more movies in the Rough Rider series.
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