Pecos Grant rides into a strange town only to find that everyone recognizes him, not as Pecos Grant, but as a presumed-dead man named Rawlins. Even Rawlins' wife thinks her husband has come back.

Is this thing worth the watch? If you have a soft spot for 1930s B-westerns where the plot moves faster than the horses, you might get a kick out of Texas Cyclone. If you need logic or character depth, just stay away. It’s for the folks who want to see John Wayne in his early days before he became, well, John Wayne. T...

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

D. Ross Lederman

Alexander Butler
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"Is this thing worth the watch? If you have a soft spot for 1930s B-westerns where the plot moves faster than the horses, you might get a kick out of Texas Cyclone. If you need logic or character depth, just stay away. It’s for the folks who want to see John Wayne in his early days before he became, well, John Wayne. The whole premise is just absurd. A guy rides into town and suddenly everyone is acting like he’s a ghost come back to life. It's the kind of misunderstanding that would be cleared ..."

Walter Brennan
Randall Faye, William Colt MacDonald
United States

