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Scarlet River

Scarlet River (1933)

March. 10,1933
|
6.1
|
NR
| Comedy Western Romance

Unable to find open range near Hollywood, western actor Tom Baxter and his troop head to Judy Blake's ranch to shoot their film.

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Hellen
1933/03/10

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Cubussoli
1933/03/11

Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!

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BootDigest
1933/03/12

Such a frustrating disappointment

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Kien Navarro
1933/03/13

Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.

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kevin olzak
1933/03/14

1933's "Scarlet River" was a Tom Keene Western depicting how a Hollywood studio (in this case RKO) goes about making such films, the same thing Lugosi's "The Death Kiss" did for murder mysteries. Judy Blake's Scarlet River Ranch is the perfect location for Keene's latest, but the unscrupulous foreman, Jeff Todd (Creighton Chaney), is in cahoots with villainous 'Clink' McPherson (Hooper Atchley), seeking to put her out of business and foreclose. Judy (Dorothy Wilson) has a younger brother who falls under Todd's bad influence, smoking, chewing tobacco, even lying to his big sis, until Tom manages to get things straightened out by the 54 minute mark. One scene shows a galloping horse making a pickup with the camera speeding alongside by car, in case you were wondering how it was done in those early days. Despite its lack of background music, it's 54 minute running time keeps things moving. The most famous sequence takes place early on in the studio commissary, as Keene is greeted by Joel McCrea, Myrna Loy, Julie Haydon, Bruce Cabot, and Rochelle Hudson, all playing themselves (in that order). In only his fourth film, 'Creighton Chaney' was to change his name two years later, building on these RKO efforts as 'Lon Chaney Jr.' Impressively third billed, 26 year old Creighton acquits himself well, yet after one more opposite Tom Keene ("Son of the Border") left RKO to freelance.

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Robert J. Maxwell
1933/03/15

An inexpensive Western starring Tom Keene in a ten-gallon corker and directed by nobody you ever heard of, but it's enjoyable in its own quiet way, a playful descent into the vulgate.The story has Edgar Buchanan trying to direct an old-fashioned Western in the Hollywood area and being unable to find a suitably remote location. He accepts an invitation to shoot the movie on a real cattle ranch. El Patrón is more than happy to have the cast and crew because the ranch is in trouble.Okay so far. Now you must hold on because the time line gets a little tortured. This is a modern ranch we're talking about. Yet there are cattle rustlers, the ranchers wear real cowboy outfits, including real old-fashioned pistol belts with real pistols and real bullets, and the villains wear black hats while the actor/hero, Tom Keene, wears a large white hat. And although Keene is a popular movie star, he too carries a real chrome-plated Peacemaker. Things get all mixed up. A galloping horse pursues another galloping horse, or a 1933 bus pursues a galloping horse, or -- well, it doesn't matter. There's a lot of action.These old Westerns look rudimentary but sometimes they have to be admired, if only for having overcome the difficulties of shooting an action picture on location. The equipment was bulky and stolid. An earlier reviewer claimed that the cameras were encased in containers as big as dog house. This is nonsense. They were bigger than that. They were bigger than blimps. They were bigger than the Hindenburg.Yakima Canutt is the stunt man who "does all of Tom's tricks himself." It's fascinating to have your attention deliberately drawn to the effort and skill of what was called a simple "pickup." That is, a girl is injured on a path, a cowboy gallops up and swings her to the saddle behind him. We've seen it dozens of times without really thinking about what would happen to our own spines if we were to try such a simple trick. Stunt men are a clubby lot, and Canutt has always been considered one of the most accomplished. He worked in Hollywood Westerns for years. With Canutt in the saddle, man and horse seemed to be the same animal, just as the Aztecs are said to have believed of Cortez's horsemen.Other notables in the cast include Betty Furness who went on to a successful career as a spokesman for Westinghouse and a consumer advocate in Washington. Also present is Lon Chaney, Jr., who went on to a career as the Wolf Man and ultimately an alcoholic.

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kidboots
1933/03/16

Dorothy Wilson was a charmingly natural actress who started her career as a "secretary to the stars". Her boss, director Gregory La Cava organised a screen test and she was on her way. Even the Westerns she appeared in were among the more memorable and quirky.Around the mid thirties, an entertaining Western spin off series came about - the making of Western movies ("The Cowboy Star", "Hollywood Cowboy") often combining real cowboys with "reel" cowboys. Tom Keene was RKO's Western star (they were the only major studio with a regular "B" Western schedule) so he fitted in right at home in "Scarlet River" as a Hollywood cowboy who was more than a match for the real McCoy!!! The film is a real delight as an intrepid group of movie makers try to film a western but civilization keeps getting in the way - the wagon train breaks down, the settlers are done for - suddenly an estate agent's bus pulls up, they try to film in front of a lonely mountain hut but it is being converted into a Southern Fried Chicken Restaurant and in the middle of a love scene they are invaded by a cross country marathon ("say "52" looks kinda cute"). Where can the company go to get away from modern life. They find the perfect place - "Scarlet River Ranch" - but the ranch is falling on hard times. The bank is foreclosing on the mortgage - ranch hand Ulysses (Roscoe Ates) is too busy sending in movie scripts to attend to ranch business. His latest plot is about a crooked foreman who is robbing the girl he is working for!!! He doesn't realise how close to home he is - but the foreman does!! Jeff (Creighton Chaney, before he became Lon Chaney Jnr.) is in cahoots with an agent and is trying to force Judy, the owner, off the ranch. Dorothy Wilson is such a peach as Judy, it was very unfortunate that she didn't have a bigger career. The motion picture company is a welcome relief - Judy will now have the money for the next payment. After the first day, Tom is taken for a tour of the ranch and starts putting two and two together as far as Jeff, the foreman is concerned - there have been too many odd accidents - hay ricks catching fire in the middle of the night, drinking water being mysteriously poisoned so the cattle have to be shot. In addition he is disgusted at Jeff's influence over Judy's little brother, Buck (Billy Butts), who has been taught to smoke and lie!!! Buck soon comes to his senses and, together with Tom, sets out to rescue Judy, who has been kidnapped. There is more action in this film than in a whole swag of Westerns as Tom Keene (with a lot of help from Yakima Canutt) does some fancy riding and stunts and shows "reel" cowboys are every bit as tough as the real thing. In addition to all this fun, you get a sneak peak at "stars at play" - okay, they are only in RKO's cafeteria but still you can see Myrna Loy (she flew in to RKO for a couple of pictures) sitting with Frances Dee (just a glimpse). Julie Haydon (a Ann Harding / Virginia Bruce lookalike), Bruce Cabot and Rochelle Hudson engage in small talk and Joel McCrea gets to tell a joke at the newstand.Highly Recommended.

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howdymax
1933/03/17

Until this movie popped up on TCM, the only time I ever saw Tom Keane was in a commie propaganda movie from 1934 called "Our Daily Bread". I would never have remembered him in that except his overacting was so bad, it was hard to forget. I'm not much for Saturday am oaters, but when I saw his name, I thought it would be good for a laugh. I was really surprised.This was a movie in a movie. A notch up from the standard western programmers of the day. Tom plays a cowboy hero with a poverty row production company trying to find an isolated ranch to film their two reelers on. He's ably supported by Edgar Kennedy as the director, Betty Furness as his heroine, and Yakima Canutt as a stuntman. (Of course, everybody who knows anything about the genre, realizes that he was the ultimate western stuntman in real life.) They eventually find an isolated ranch outside LA only to get tangled up in a complicated land grab plot. The pretty owner is played by Dorothy Wilson who seems to have vanished from film history. The crooked foreman is played by Lon Chaney Jr in a very early role, and the comic relief is played by Roscoe Ates. I won't bother to outline the plot except to say that the hero saves the day.The surprise is that this was a thoroughly enjoyable movie. Tom Keane was likable and hardly overacted at all, the heroine and love interest were both lovely, and the contrast between make believe movie magic and what passed for real life was entertaining. One added bonus: I'm in the business myself, and the opportunity to see the primitive cameras, lights, and sound equipment was really amazing. They really had to work at it in those days. The boom mikes looked like telephone poles. The cameras were the size of dog houses. Humping that stuff around must have been murder. Watching the crew strut around in jodphurs, leather jackets and silk scarfs was a delight.All in all, a thoroughly enjoyable experience. Anybody interested in the nuts and bolts of film making should enjoy it as well.

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