This 20-minute short is a mini-western about lumber barons in California's Redwood country, fighting over land grabbers and a girl. The trio is comprised of lesser known actors, ROBERT SHAYNE, CHERYL WALKER and WARNER ANDERSON.
What sets the featurette apart from others is the heavy use of stock footage from an earlier Warner Bros. film, GOLD IS WHERE YOU FIND IT ('38), photographed in Technicolor in 1938. The contrast between the new footage from '44 and the older is quite evident, and it has been inserted with an attempt to match sound stage filming with actual outdoor footage that ends up looking fake.
Nor can anything be said for the flat performances, the tired script (full of the usual clichés about lumbermen vs. landowners), and the general look of the clumsy effort to spin a mini-western in brief running time.
Recommended only for the scene of the runaway train, the bridge collapse and the lumber shipment being dynamited, all taken from the earlier mentioned film.
What sets the featurette apart from others is the heavy use of stock footage from an earlier Warner Bros. film, GOLD IS WHERE YOU FIND IT ('38), photographed in Technicolor in 1938. The contrast between the new footage from '44 and the older is quite evident, and it has been inserted with an attempt to match sound stage filming with actual outdoor footage that ends up looking fake.
Nor can anything be said for the flat performances, the tired script (full of the usual clichés about lumbermen vs. landowners), and the general look of the clumsy effort to spin a mini-western in brief running time.
Recommended only for the scene of the runaway train, the bridge collapse and the lumber shipment being dynamited, all taken from the earlier mentioned film.