Shadow Ranch

1930 "ALL-TALKING Whirlwind Western"
6.8| 1h4m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 27 September 1930 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Summoned to Shadow Ranch by his friend Ranny Williams, Sim Baldwin arrives to find Ranny has been ambushed and murdered. Sim learns ranch owner Ruth Cameron is under pressure to sell out to Dan Blake, as the dam on the ranch controls the town's water supply. Vowing to avenge his old friend's death, Sim takes up Ruth's fight and incurs Blake's hostility.

Genre

Action, Western, Music

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Director

Louis King

Production Companies

Columbia Pictures

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Shadow Ranch Audience Reviews

Linbeymusol Wonderful character development!
NekoHomey Purely Joyful Movie!
SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
ActuallyGlimmer The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.
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).
bkoganbing In his second talking film Buck Jones proved in Shadow Ranch that he had a voice that would serve him well in sound westerns. However one rule of B westerns was violated here.Buck and sidekick Frank Rice split up and go their separate ways when Jones gets a letter from Rice about trouble on a place he's working on called Shadow Ranch. Someone is trying to frighten owner Margaret De La Motte and her aunt Kate Price into selling the place. When Jones arrives he finds his old sidekick shot dead and being buried on Boot Hill.Sidekicks are not killed in B westerns they have to provide comic relief and Rice was funny in his time in Shadow Ranch.Of course Jones finds who's responsible and exacts some justice. Some kudos have to go to shotgun wielding Kate Price who is sidekick to the leading lady. A formidable woman with both Brogue and buckshot.Nice film, but nothing new here.
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?