XoWizIama
Excellent adaptation.
Kidskycom
It's funny watching the elements come together in this complicated scam. On one hand, the set-up isn't quite as complex as it seems, but there's an easy sense of fun in every exchange.
Deanna
There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
bkoganbing
When Charles King and Bud Osborne are released from prison they've got some unfinished business to attend to, namely US Marshal Buck Jones. Buck only escapes wounded from a blazing cabin fire by the grace of God and the trustiness of his steed Silver. It's why cowboys love their horses. But what these two geniuses do is put the Rough Riders on their trail as King and Osborne join saloon owner Tris Coffin in a scheme to extort a partnership from freight line owner Dave O'Brien. With Buck Jones out of action for a bit Tim McCoy and Raymond Hatton start their own investigation and decide to play a long to see what Coffin is up to as he seems like the brains. In fact when Jones arrives he nearly kills his companion's scheme.Forbidden Trails again with a title that makes no sense to the story, the hallmark of the B western is a fast moving western with a bit more plot than normal in one of these type films. Fans of the B western and the stars will like it.
MartinHafer
Late in their film careers, Buck Jones and Tim McCoy got together to make a string of 'Rough Rider' westerns--pleasant but rather unremarkable B-movies. Unlike most of this films, suddenly McCoy was getting second billing--and perhaps this will explain why he was pretty much retired (with a few exceptions) after this short series was complete. McCoy is THE reason I watched this movie--he is my favorite of the B-western stars, though Buck Jones is pretty good as well since neither was pretty nor sang in the films--definite pluses for me. Now Roy Rogers and Gene Autry were more famous and WERE pretty and sang, so what do I know?! In "Forbidden Trails", the film begins in prison. Some inmates are grumbling how they hate Buck and want to track him down and kill him since he was responsible for putting them in prison. This seems a bit spiteful, as this sheriff has announced he's retiring to work his ranch. Their plan in somewhat successful, as they do shoot Buck but not fatally. Tim comes to Buck's aid and goes undercover as a professional gambler--a familiar sort of plot for Tim McCoy. Eventually, Buck is able to join his friends and together, naturally, they kick butt and save the day.Overall, this is a very pleasant very typical sort of western for Jones and McCoy--though it also not especially distinguished as well. The pluses are a few decent stunts and restrained acting from the leads, though a few of the actors did seem to have trouble with their lines (particularly the little girl). It lacked polish but was enjoyable nevertheless.
classicsoncall
"Forbidden Trails" was the third of the Rough Riders films from Monogram, all of the first three released in 1941. It always amazes me how the lawman trio could get together so quickly with only horseback as their transportation, and the boys coming in from Arizona (Buck Jones), Wyoming (Tim McCoy) and Texas (Ray Hatton). I guess as a movie goer you weren't supposed to wonder about such things back in the Forties, and since most viewers were young kids at the matinée, I'm sure it didn't bother them much either.This one's a pretty good romp for the heroes though, decent action with a bunch of gimmicks I haven't seen before. Like Silver's rescue of Buck from the cabin he was trapped in by the bad guys. Buck lassos his horse and drags behind Silver while the villains think he's a goner in the burned out shack. Speaking of fancy rope work, catch that scene later on when Tim McCoy lassos a gun right out of a villain's hand, while giving chase on horseback! Those guys were good.As was standard for the Rough Rider films, Buck Roberts (Jones), Tim McCall (McCoy) and Sandy Hopkins (Hatton) all work the same case while appearing to be strangers to each other. I never really noticed it before, but Buck likes to call Sandy 'Killer', and in this one he did it a lot. For his part, Sandy was saved from walking down the aisle just in the nick of time when Buck's message arrived asking for his help. I had to do a quick rewind in that scene when Sandy smacked Buck in the face with his ten gallon, that looked like it might have hurt!For me, the story is almost always secondary to watching these cowboy greats get together. The adventures are pretty predictable, so the fun comes from seeing the boys have a genuinely good time. Each was over fifty years old when they got together to do the Rough Rider films, and it appears that they had long gotten past the point of taking it all too seriously.
rsoonsa
This is one of the better entries from the pleasing Rough Riders series, as it benefits from a startlingly intricate script and some capable acting, with precious few verbal clinkers appearing in a film in which there are no budget gobbling retakes, while maintaining a successful formula of three United States Marshals: Buck Roberts (Buck Jones), Tim McCall (Tim McCoy), and Sandy Hopkins (Raymond Hatton), none apparently knowing the others while they maneuver their way inside a felonious enemy's ramparts. Dave O'Brien plays a struggling mine owner who is being pressured into signing a partnership agreement that he does not want in order to safely transport his high-grade ore, with the principal villain of this piece being the cunning Ed Nelson (Tristram Coffin), assisted by a pair of henchmen performed by old file Western culprits Charles King and Bud Osborne, and there is a fine turn from Christine McIntyre who is cast in her second of the four Rough Rider adventures in which she appears, this item being perfectly paced by Robert Bradbury in his final stint as a director.