Jim Warren is starting a range war by getting his boss Duke Bradley to fence off part of the range used by other ranchers. This pits father against son when Tom Bradley sides with a newly arrived nester family.


Is it worth your time? Honestly, only if you have a very specific craving for black-and-white horse operas from the thirties. If you like your pacing snappy and your dialogue natural, stay away. If you find comfort in the sound of spurs clinking and men in hats pointing at each other in the desert, you'll be right at h...

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

J.P. McGowan

J.P. McGowan
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"Is it worth your time? Honestly, only if you have a very specific craving for black-and-white horse operas from the thirties. If you like your pacing snappy and your dialogue natural, stay away. If you find comfort in the sound of spurs clinking and men in hats pointing at each other in the desert, you'll be right at home. The plot is exactly what you expect. A foreman wants to fence off the range, the boss follows along, and the son—Tom Tyler—decides he'd rather stand with the little guy. It's..."
Oliver Drake
United States

