Jeff arrives in town to see the Sheriff only to find him just killed. The culprit is Clay Wheeler. When Jeff becomes friendly with Letty, Clay sends his man Ortega to kill him.Jeff arrives in town to see the Sheriff only to find him just killed. The culprit is Clay Wheeler. When Jeff becomes friendly with Letty, Clay sends his man Ortega to kill him.Jeff arrives in town to see the Sheriff only to find him just killed. The culprit is Clay Wheeler. When Jeff becomes friendly with Letty, Clay sends his man Ortega to kill him.
Ed Cassidy
- Sheriff Jim
- (as Edward Cassidy)
Anita Camargo
- Lolita
- (as Ana Camargo)
Chuck Baldra
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
Horace B. Carpenter
- Judge
- (uncredited)
Art Dillard
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Bert Dillard
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Al Haskell
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
George Hazel
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Clyde McClary
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Bud McClure
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Sheriff Jim (Ed Cassidy) needs help and calls his Texas Ranger pal Jeff (Johnny Mack Brown) to town. Jeff arrives, only to learn about a series of murders including that of the sheriff. The law is paralyzed and the town falls in the hands of a gang of outlaws, headed by manipulative Clay Wheeler (Ted Adams). Jeff quickly slips into the role of a quick-witted investigator.
The main villain almost fooled me into thinking he's a model citizen. But it's Ted Adams so I knew he was the bad hombre, the one who shot the sheriff and the doctor. He's standout in the role as the duplicitous slime ball who wants to marry the daughter of the man he had killed, but he certainly doesn't have good judgement in picking henchmen as the one he has is pretty useless. It's quite an entertaining western, with some detective elements, though Mack Brown's character figured out who the bad guy is mid-way; it's never explained how, but in a 60 minute film you can't explain everything.
The main villain almost fooled me into thinking he's a model citizen. But it's Ted Adams so I knew he was the bad hombre, the one who shot the sheriff and the doctor. He's standout in the role as the duplicitous slime ball who wants to marry the daughter of the man he had killed, but he certainly doesn't have good judgement in picking henchmen as the one he has is pretty useless. It's quite an entertaining western, with some detective elements, though Mack Brown's character figured out who the bad guy is mid-way; it's never explained how, but in a 60 minute film you can't explain everything.
Ted Adams kills the sheriff. This makes it impossible for visiting ranger Johnny Mack Brown to see his old friend. The townsfolk ask Brown to fill in, and he investigates amidst some mediocre comedy bits by Horace Murphy. He also courts Louise Stanley. Since Adams wants to marry her, he starts some plots against Brown.
It's a loosely written B western, meant to rely on Brown's star power, but it doesn't really deliver. While Jack Greenhalgh's cinematography is fine, just the sort of work that made him the youngest member was of the ASC, the dialogue direction by Bernard B. Ray is slow and dull.
It's a loosely written B western, meant to rely on Brown's star power, but it doesn't really deliver. While Jack Greenhalgh's cinematography is fine, just the sort of work that made him the youngest member was of the ASC, the dialogue direction by Bernard B. Ray is slow and dull.
Johnny Mack Brown is the broad-shouldered hero of this cheap but amiable b-movie. He's a ranger who stumbles upon the double-murder of a town's sheriff and doctor and sticks around to woo the naive girl targeted by the bad guy. It's routine stuff and the acting is dreadful - but it's no less than we expect from a '30s programmer.
This seems to have been made as a matinée feature in the day. But it still holds up after all these years. Some of the acting is a bit bad, but some is pleasantly good. Very few stereotypical characters in this western, not very common for the genre and the time. Some very memorable lines, and delivery of those lines. I am by no stretch of the imagination a film scholar, so I don't know if the notable dialog in this film was borrowed from earlier work. My point? Much of the dialog in this movie can be recognized in many a well known movie that came later, including recent releases, and not just in westerns. If you come across this one, and enjoy a good story set to a western backdrop, you won't regret watching it.
Lawless Land casts Johnny Mack Brown as a Texas Ranger who upon arriving in town hears that the sheriff has been killed only minutes earlier. As it was the sheriff Brown had come to see, he decides to stay awhile and see what's going on.
From the gitgo it's rather obvious that the town's leading citizen is responsible not only for the sheriff's murder, but a couple of others besides. Ted Adams is a villain in the grand tradition of Snidely Whiplash. If he had only let his mustache grow out into a handlebar he could have twirled them, let out a cackling laugh, and everyone would know.
Everyone has to know because this film was meant for the juvenile trade so you could not be subtle. When anything is subtle in one of these B picture horse operas, it's a rarity indeed.
All this on Adams part mind you because also in the grand tradition of those Victorian/Edwardian melodramas, Adams has designs on Little Nell in the form of Louise Stanley.
Both Brown and Adams can't get any good help, Brown enlists storekeeper Horace Murphy in his service and Adams chief henchman is Julian Rivero who can't do anything right. Rivero bungles one job after another for Adams usually in a way that provokes a lot of laughs.
I found Lawless Land to be thoroughly enjoyable taken on its own terms. I think it will still be viewing pleasure.
From the gitgo it's rather obvious that the town's leading citizen is responsible not only for the sheriff's murder, but a couple of others besides. Ted Adams is a villain in the grand tradition of Snidely Whiplash. If he had only let his mustache grow out into a handlebar he could have twirled them, let out a cackling laugh, and everyone would know.
Everyone has to know because this film was meant for the juvenile trade so you could not be subtle. When anything is subtle in one of these B picture horse operas, it's a rarity indeed.
All this on Adams part mind you because also in the grand tradition of those Victorian/Edwardian melodramas, Adams has designs on Little Nell in the form of Louise Stanley.
Both Brown and Adams can't get any good help, Brown enlists storekeeper Horace Murphy in his service and Adams chief henchman is Julian Rivero who can't do anything right. Rivero bungles one job after another for Adams usually in a way that provokes a lot of laughs.
I found Lawless Land to be thoroughly enjoyable taken on its own terms. I think it will still be viewing pleasure.
Did you know
- TriviaThe saloon set featured in the beginning of this film was used in several Westerns produced by Supreme Pictures. It was also used in the exploitation films The Road to Ruin (1934) and Marihuana (1936).
- SoundtracksLa Cacuracha
Played by the Chiquita Hernandez Orchestra
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- De lovløses land
- Filming locations
- Walker Ranch - 19152 Placerita Canyon Road, Newhall, California, USA(exterior action sequences)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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