One of three films made by Columbia circa 1936-37 based on behind-the-scenes film making with a "western" setting ("The Cowboy Star", "Hollywood Round-up" and "It Happened in Hollywood"), plus RKO weighed in the same year with George O'Brien's "Hollywood Cowboy." It had been done before, RKO's 1933 "Scarlet River", and would be done again, "Shooting High" from 20th Century-Fox and Republic's "Bells of Rosarita", among others with a western setting, but this Coronet production with Buck Jones may well be the best of the lot as it devotes more footage to actual film-making both on studio sets and locations.

Is it worth your time? Look, if you have a soft spot for 1930s B-movies and the weird, internal politics of old Hollywood, you’ll dig this. It’s not for people who need high-octane pacing or a complex script. If you find the meta-commentary of films like Szenzáció interesting, you might like seeing how the sausage was ...


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

Ewing Scott

Dallas M. Fitzgerald
Community
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"Is it worth your time? Look, if you have a soft spot for 1930s B-movies and the weird, internal politics of old Hollywood, you’ll dig this. It’s not for people who need high-octane pacing or a complex script. If you find the meta-commentary of films like Szenzáció interesting, you might like seeing how the sausage was made in the era of horse operas. It’s a bit clunky, honestly. But it’s got a personality that most of the stuff from that year just lacks. The industry hierarchy The best part of..."

Frank Ellis
Ethel La Blanche, Joseph Hoffman, Monroe Shaff
United States

1936 · IMDb 7.1

