The Singing Buckaroo

1937
5.4| 0h50m| en
Details

Barbara Evans has $25,000 and Gifford is after it. When his henchman fail to get it he refuses to pay them. They then decide to double cross him and get the money for themselves. Gordon is trying to protect Barbara and he must not only take care of the two henchmen, but also Gifford and his phony Sheriff.

Director

Producted By

Spectrum Pictures (I)

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Trailers & Clips

Also starring Victoria Vinton

Also starring William Faversham

Reviews

Alicia I love this movie so much
Breakinger A Brilliant Conflict
Rio Hayward All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
Winifred The movie is made so realistic it has a lot of that WoW feeling at the right moments and never tooo over the top. the suspense is done so well and the emotion is felt. Very well put together with the music and all.
JohnHowardReid The last film and only sound movie directed by writer, Tom Gibson, who continued his writing career up to "Lost City of the Jungle" (1946). Singer and star, Fred Scott, is unlikely to win any converts with this entry. He plainly lacks both presence and charisma and has so little self-confidence that he allows the gloriously up-spoken, super-beautiful, pocket-sized blonde, Victoria Vinton, and most of the rest of the cast to walk all over him. In fact, the only person who doesn't put Scott in the shade and the only person, aside from Vinton of course, that we would have liked to be super-assertive, namely Howard Hill, is virtually a colorless nonentity. He doesn't assert himself at all. Bah! My main reason for buying this movie was to catch Howard Hill in action and I ran the movie right through and didn't even notice him! Normally, the director would have been a wake-up to the strategies employed by most of the players to take the audiences' attention away from Scott and concentrate it on themselves, but this was Gibson's only sound movie and he was feeling his way too. Available, coupled with another Fred Scott feature, "The Roaming Cowboy", on a very good Alpha DVD.
bkoganbing A very short lived outfit called Spectrum Pictures gave The Singing Buckaroo to the movie-going public in 1937. This was an attempt to make concert singer Fred Scott into a movie cowboy. The results you'll judge if you see this film.The plot is a pip. Victoria Vinton and her father William Favesham are fugitives with Favesham wanted for embezzlement and Vinton as his accomplice. But they did't do it really, no what he did was take the money so that villain Charles Kaley couldn't do it. Scott who owns a ranch takes Vinton in and foils the dastardly plot that Kaley has to get the money and run.Needless to say Scott does not come off a good singing cowboy hero. Other studios even the poverty row ones got their singing cowboys from the ranks of country music. But Spectrum got their's from the San Francisco Opera company where Scott was a leading baritone. The results are ludicrous.

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