Linbeymusol
Wonderful character development!
BelSports
This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Kinley
This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows
Cristi_Ciopron
The evening showdown was very good. Jones had something boyish, emotive (or maybe this was just his acting ideal) and playful, unalike his physic, which was manly and impressive. The funny scenes were convincingly so, with ideas from the silent cinema (and the quite rude slapstick at the beginning). This atmospheric and self-referential (the lines about prettiness, spookiness, the dirge) western has a surprising freshness and a sense of the places and the events, despite the clumsiness; Jones looked workmanlike and manly, but here he aims at the silent style of acting (the overacting in the funeral sequence), and he seems emotive when he should of looked made of granite and imposing, but it's a movie, so the result of more than one guy's work, and it also doesn't seem a kids' movie. The storyline (a revenge: a cowman, drifter by vocation, has a friend who settled as the foreman of the titular ranch, and the friend has been killed by a local despot) is about the emotions of the events; so, it has a dramatic plot. Good acting from the bit players: some henchmen, an iron-smith. It begins with cowmen indulging in singing, then Jones' lame and mean pranks.Jones was a _congener of McCoy (Gibson was a bit younger than them).
MartinHafer
Buck Jones stars in this modest B-western. The film has a prologue in which you learn that Sim is a drifter and happy to be one. You also learn that his friend Ranny is looking to settle down. Some time passes and they go their separate ways when Sim receives a letter from Ranny—inviting him to come work for a nice lady on her ranch. However, by the time Sim arrives, Ranny has been murdered—shot in the back by a gang of jerks bent on controlling all the ranches (a very typical western theme). Sim vows to exact revenge and the rest of the movie is simply lead up to the finale—a finale in which Sim CANNOT just shoot the killer when he apprehends him (that would violate the B-western unwritten code). All in all, this is a very, very typical sort of western with few surprises. However, Buck Jones was a good actor and the film is entertaining provided your expectations aren't too high. My biggest problem was simply that I felt like I'd seen all this before—which will be your reaction if you've seen many of these old lower-budgeted westerns.By the way, I am not sure why but the original title screen appears to have been hastily replaced. And, the film is currently in the public domain.
romanorum1
Best friends and cowpunchers Sim Baldwin (Buck Jones) and Ranny Williams get fired for horsing around at campfire on the range. Ranny, now tired of constant wandering all his life, decides to settle down to a permanent job. He later finds one as foreman at Shadow Ranch, owned by Ruth Cameron. Sim continues his own roaming for a time, and then decides that he wants to hook up with Ranny. As he's riding up to Shadow Ranch he notes a burial in progress, not cognizant that it was Ranny's funeral. Then Sim finds out that a no-good varmint shot Ranny in the back when he was in town. Meanwhile, cattle are being rustled and the ranch help has been intimidated to leave. Sim learns that Dan Blake has been trying to get control of Shadow Ranch. Before long, Sim has taken up the fight for Ruth, so Blake wants him out of town. Sim is not going anywhere. Movie ends nicely with a town gunfight, fistfight, and chase on horseback. Guess who wins?
tom-ord
This is a great early Buck Jones western. It is Buck's second talking movie and was made for Columbia in 1930. It is neatly packaged and represents, in my opinion, one of the very best of the B-Western genre. Buck plays a wandering cowboy whose best friend is an older gent named Ranny Williams. Ranny is played by Frank Rice who turns in a top notch performance, especially when he tells Buck that he is tired of wandering from one outfit to another, and when he reminisces about his old friend right before he goes off to town and is shot in the back.Another great scene is when Buck comes to Shadow Ranch just as the townspeople are burying Ranny. Buck silently rides by the graveside service and removes his hat as he passes by in respect, not knowing it is his old friend they are burying.The rest of the film deals with Buck taking up the fight for his old pal and the female owner of Shadow Ranch.This is a special movie.