The Driscolls learn that the Brown family's homestead has valuable marble deposits under it, and they scheme to acquire the property. They and the Browns all learn that the land title was never filed with the county registration office, and it becomes a break-neck race between them and their henchmen, and the Browns' friend Tom O'Brien to get to the land-office first.

"Gun Law," a 1929 Western, is honestly a quick little jaunt. If you're into those super early cowboy flicks, the kind where the story moves fast because they don't have much time or dialogue to waste, then yeah, give this a whirl. Folks who need complex plots or pristine sound design will probably be bored stiff. It’s ...

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Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Robert De Lacey

Bruno Ziener
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""Gun Law," a 1929 Western, is honestly a quick little jaunt. If you're into those super early cowboy flicks, the kind where the story moves fast because they don't have much time or dialogue to waste, then yeah, give this a whirl. Folks who need complex plots or pristine sound design will probably be bored stiff. It’s a silent, almost. The whole thing kicks off with a revelation: the Brown family’s dusty ranch land is actually sitting on a goldmine of marble. 💰 You just see a shot of some rock..."

Ethlyne Clair
Oliver Drake, Helen Gregg
United States

