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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| WHEN THE DALTONS RODE (director: George Marshall; screenwriters: from the book "When the Daltons Rode" by Emmett Dalton & Jack Jungmeyer/Harold Shumate; cinematographer: Hal Mohr; editor: Ed Curtiss; music: Frank Skinner; cast: Randolph Scott (Tod Jackson), Kay Francis (Julie King), Brian Donlevy (Grat Dalton), George Bancroft (Caleb Winters), Broderick Crawford (Bob Dalton), Stuart Erwin (Ben Dalton), Andy Devine (Ozark), Frank Albertson (Emmett Dalton), Mary Gordon (Ma Dalton), Harry Stephens (Rigby); Runtime: 80; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: George Marshall; Universal; 1940) |
| "One of
the best
made B-Westerns."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz George Marshall ("Destry Rides Again"/"Texas") marvelously directs one of the best made B-Westerns. It's taken from a book by Emmett Dalton & Jack Jungmeyer and crisply written by Harold Shumate. When The Daltons Rode is a very entertaining, action-packed, but highly fictionalized telling of the notorious Dalton gang. It whitewashes them as outlaws and makes us view them as heroes who were forced into a life of crime by the crooked land grabbing railroad. This repeats the same formula from Henry King's Jesse James of 1939, that also starred Randolph Scott. The film is noted for its outstanding stunt work, some of the best ever done in a Western. In one tricky stunt, men on horseback jump from a moving train and then ride off down a sandy incline. Another has the men take over a fast moving stage by jumping onto it from their pursuing horses. It's set by the border between Kansas and Oklahoma in the
late 19th
century. Lawyer Tod Jackson (Randolph Scott) is on his way by stage to
open his first practice in Guthrie, Oklahoma, but during the stopover
pays
a visit to his old childhood friends--the Daltons. They live on a farm
with their elderly mom (Mary Gordon), who speaks with a heavy brogue.
Bob
(Broderick Crawford) is the town sheriff, Grat (Brian Donlevy), Ben
(Stuart
Erwin) and Emmett (Frank Albertson) run the farm. Tod is convinced to
stay
overnight to attend the birthday party the boys are giving their mom.
That
afternoon he had fallen in love with the telegraph operator Julie King
(Kay Francis), not knowing she was engaged to Bob. When the boys tell
Tod
they need his legal help because a mysterious syndicate called the
Kansas
Land and Development Company is using strong-arm tactics to kick the
local
farmers off their land, Tod decides to stay in Kansas. While Bob is
out-of-town
on business, Julie tells him that she loves him. But Tod doesn't know
how
to tell this to Bob, and decides to leave. At this time, a sniveling
baddie
named Rigby (Harry Stephens) brings surveyors out to the Daltons in a
roughshod
attempt at land grabbing and one of the surveyors falls and dies
hitting
his head against the stone when Grat knocks over his equipment. Ben is
charged with murder and Tod stays on to defend him. But when Bob
realizes
the trial is rigged, he pulls his guns and escapes with Ben. In the
melee
both Ben and Rigby are killed, and the Daltons become wanted outlaws.
They
are joined on-the-run by the oafish womanizing Ozark (Andy Devine), who
wishes to escape from a forced marriage. The Daltons are falsely blamed
for all the bank robberies in the area, and when they try to visit
their
mom (her house was burned down) there's a shootout where several locals
get killed. The Daltons now become outlaws for real, and get wind that
the railroad is behind the land-grabbing. Their specialty becomes train
hold-ups. It ends with the Daltons all gunned down in a shootout while
they are robbing the bank in their hometown of Coffeyville. This clears
the way for Tod to marry Julie and move on to greener pastures in
Oklahoma. Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |