Jeanskynebu
the audience applauded
Mjeteconer
Just perfect...
Brendon Jones
It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.
bkoganbing
Call Of The Prarie does not have its usual trio complement of Hoppy and two sidekicks in it. Apparently Harry Sherman was still experimenting with the series with William Boyd going pretty much his own way.He has to because James Ellison is again in trouble. On a cattle buying trip Hoppy made so much money that he brought presents for all the hands including a nice pair of spurs. But Ellison's fallen in with bad companions drinking and gambling and being regularly taken for his money in a crooked card game run by Al Bridge and assisted by Gabby Hayes.Yes Gabby's not part of the Bar 20 crew, he's a worthless no good bandit but he does have a pretty daughter played by Muriel Evans who is innocent of her father's crimes, but does keep Ellison dangling.It really gets bad when Bridge and his gang shoot Bar 20 foreman Buck Peters and pin it on Ellison. Later they rob the bank for which Ellison also gets the blame. All with Gabby's help.It's Ellison who needs the help and Hoppy gives it as you would expect he would.Making Hayes a bad guy was a bad idea. He'd played them before but now the movie going public expected him as the lovable old bragging codger forever dropping his "Gs". Bridge was a regular villain mostly in urban dramas. He was a favorite of Preston Sturges at Paramount.Not one of the better Hoppys.
chipe
A very different, but enjoyable, Hoppy outing. The movie has a slow pace with less action than the usual Hoppy film. There are no epic bad guy plans. Just a corrupt bunch of saloon denizens who learn of Buck Peters having cash from Johnny Nelson's (Hoppy's young sidekick) youthful blabbering in the saloon. Johnny gets blamed/framed for the outlaws'misdeeds. Most of the film concerns Johnny's self-loathing for ignoring Hoppy's warnings and associating with the bad saloon crowd.What impressed me most about the film is that is was it was so skillfully written. Each scene led believably to the next scene.As noted by others here, the film was also unusual in that Gabby Hayes was one of the bod guys here, though he reformed by film's end. In subsequent Hoppy films, Gabby played the comic sidekick.
Mike-764
Hoppy returns to the Bar 20 ranch after a successful cattle sale, but finds out while he was away, Johnny Nelson has spent the majority of his time drinking and gambling in town. When Hoppy and Buck Peters confront Johnny about this, he leaves the ranch in anger and heads for the saloon. Porter, head of the criminal gang that has won much of the money Johnny gambled away, get Johnny drunk enough to tell him about the money Buck has in his safe. Porter and his men ride to the ranch and hold up Peters (using Johnny's gun and kerchief for a pouch), who is shot after giving him the money, but Buck tricked Porter giving him a bunch of blank paper. Porter returns to the bar and tells Johnny that he is now wanted for shooting Buck, and when he confronts Porter, Johnny is overcome by Porter's men. Shanghai McHenry is ordered by Porter to kill Johnny, but is overcome and Johnny escapes. Meanwhile, soon after Hoppy puts the money in the bank, Porter's men rob it and head for McHenry's shack, where Johnny is being hidden by McHenry's daughter Linda. Hoppy also makes his way to McHenry to go after Porter, who has tied Johnny to a death trap and left McHenry to be caught by the law. Its up to Hoppy to save the day. Okay entry in the series, mainly due to the slow pacing of the film by Bretherton, where we have more drama in the film that action, even though the last reel of the film is a nice climax. Bridge seems wasted in the villain, considering I've seen him play the outlaw or badman better in several other B westerns. It's interesting to see Hayes as an outlaw here, but it is in the Windy/Gabby persona he would adopt in the next film. Rating, based on B westerns, 5.
helpless_dancer
A gang of thieves attempt to pin an a robbery and shooting on a foolish young man. Disbelieving his guilt, Hoppy sets out to prove his friend's innocence. After a bank is held up and his friend is once again in hot water, Hoppy must put himself in danger in a shoot-out with the gang at a lonely cabin in the hills. Seems like this kid is forever getting his butt in a wringer.