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IMDbPro

Bells of Coronado

  • 1950
  • Approved
  • 1h 7m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
245
YOUR RATING
Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, and Trigger in Bells of Coronado (1950)
Home Video Trailer from Republic Pictures
Play trailer1:58
1 Video
12 Photos
DramaMusicWestern

Roy is an insurance investigator looking into the theft of uranium ore. He must prevent the thieves from taking off in a plane with the stolen ore.Roy is an insurance investigator looking into the theft of uranium ore. He must prevent the thieves from taking off in a plane with the stolen ore.Roy is an insurance investigator looking into the theft of uranium ore. He must prevent the thieves from taking off in a plane with the stolen ore.

  • Director
    • William Witney
  • Writer
    • Sloan Nibley
  • Stars
    • Roy Rogers
    • Trigger
    • Dale Evans
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    245
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Witney
    • Writer
      • Sloan Nibley
    • Stars
      • Roy Rogers
      • Trigger
      • Dale Evans
    • 11User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Bells of Coronado
    Trailer 1:58
    Bells of Coronado

    Photos11

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Roy Rogers
    Roy Rogers
    • Roy Rogers
    Trigger
    Trigger
    • Roy's Horse
    Dale Evans
    Dale Evans
    • Pam Reynolds
    Pat Brady
    Pat Brady
    • Sparrow Biffle
    Grant Withers
    Grant Withers
    • Craig Bennett
    Leo Cleary
    • Dr. Frank Harding
    Clifton Young
    Clifton Young
    • Ross
    Robert Bice
    Robert Bice
    • Jim Russell
    Stuart Randall
    Stuart Randall
    • Sheriff
    John Hamilton
    John Hamilton
    • Mr. Linden, Insurance Company Official
    Edmund Cobb
    Edmund Cobb
    • Rafferty
    Eddie Lee
    • Shanghai, the Cook
    Rex Lease
    Rex Lease
    • Shipping Company Foreman
    Lane Bradford
    Lane Bradford
    • Shipping Smuggler
    Foy Willing
    • Foy
    Riders of the Purple Sage
    • Power Co. Linemen…
    George Bamby
    • Fiddle Player - Riders of the Purple Sage
    • (uncredited)
    Duke Green
    • Henchman Pete
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William Witney
    • Writer
      • Sloan Nibley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    5.9245
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    Featured reviews

    6ma-cortes

    Roy Rogers with his horse Trigger and spouse Dale Evans taking on uranium smugglers

    The film starts when a mines proprietary shipping a load uranium is attacked .Later the mines passes into a rancher owner named Bennet(Grant Withers,who played for John Ford and appeared over 200 movies until his suicide),he reclaims the company which sends to Roy Rogers(1914-1998) as an undercover insurance agent.Posing as a cowboy looking for employment,he gets a work along with a crew called ¨the riders of the purple sage¨ .Meanwhile happen songs alongside with a secretary(played by his spouse Dale Evans), pursuits and struggles against the uranium smugglers.He must avoid the robbers from taking off an airplane with the stolen load and he gets an exciting final confrontation on high voltage tower.The movie contains action Western,suspense,shoot outs,fighting and is quite entertaining.The film is produced by Republic picture, usual in serials of low budget .The motion picture is well directed by William Witney ,a prolific director of short budget and TV episodes(Daniel Boone, Bonanza,Virginian).

    The picture is starred by famous Roy Rogers,he played in various musical groups,in 1934 he formed a group called sons of pioneers,they appeared in numerous Westerns(Rhythm on the range,Son of the pioneers,On the Spanish trail among others).Roy was married three times.Arlene Wilkins ,his second wife,died a few day after giving birth to their son,¨Roy Rogers Jr or Dusty¨ and Dale Evans his third spouse,became his four children's mom .Inducted along with his wife Evans into the Hall of great Western performers of the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum and also as member of the Sons of pioneers.Their nicknames were,Roy as ¨King of cowboys¨, Dale Evans ¨Queen of the West¨and Trigger ¨Smartest horse in the movies¨. Roy got his horse ¨Trigger¨in 1938 and rode him in every one of his film and TV shows after that.He had appeared in one early movie,being ridden by Olivia de Havilland in ¨¨ The adventures of Robin Hood¨. Trigged died in 1965,aged 33 years.
    jimyshin

    Uranium ore is the prize for an unnamed foreign power, but undercover insurance agent Roy stops them cold.

    Solid Rogers film, speedy and fun. The advent of television eliminated these formulaic, but competent, oaters. A shame they can't be seen on the big screen today. Vivid Trucolor helps greatly.
    6boblipton

    Up-To-Date Maguffin

    When Grant Withers puts in a claim for uranium hijacked from his mine, the insurance company sends Roy Rogers in to investigate.

    With their reliance on good and sometimes original stories, Rogers' westerns kept up with the times -- except that people insisted on riding horses -- and raw material for nuclear bombs and an implication of foreign spying was as up-to-date as you can get. There's a early comic scene in which Dale Evans, thinking Roy is some evil-doer, sets four guys on him, and then tries to help them out by hitting Rogers with a frying pan ... and hitting them instead. This one also has a couple of plot twists that caught me unaware, and if the songs were not quite as good as usual, they're still pretty good, just like the stuntwork.
    BrianDanaCamp

    Peculiar mix of cowboys and atomic age treason bathed in Trucolor

    I watched BELLS OF CORONADO (1950) on Friday, November 5 in commemoration of what would have been Roy Rogers' 99th birthday. I have it in a legit edition on DVD (released in 2004 by LionsGate Home Entertainment and Republic Pictures). It's a beautiful print and the transfer is far superior to most of the VHS copies I have of Roy's Trucolor westerns. The film was beautifully photographed by John MacBurnie and shot mostly on location. I've now seen eight of Roy's Trucolor westerns and have reviewed four on IMDb, the others being TRAIL OF ROBIN HOOD, NORTH OF THE GREAT DIVIDE, and UNDER California STARS. Trucolor was a two-color film process developed exclusively for Republic Pictures and was used from 1946-1957.

    BELLS has got an odd plot about a power company and a uranium mine in the remote town of Coronado. When a shipment of uranium ore has gone missing and the mine owner found unconscious, only to subsequently die in the doctor's office, the insurance company sends Roy Rogers to investigate by going undercover. Given how these films usually cast local businessmen as the villains, we can't be blamed for quickly assuming that gruff power company owner Bennett (Grant Withers) has got to be the culprit. However, in a big twist, the identity of the actual mastermind, who plans to sell the ore to a foreign power, comes as quite a shock. Can no one be trusted in Republic Pictures' baroque alternate western universe?

    Dale Evans plays Bennett's ditzy secretary, quite a far cry from her proactive roles in other Roy westerns (see SUSANNA PASS, for instance). At one point, she shows an irrational fear of nice, gentle Roy and provokes a senseless fistfight between him and three company men. It's so completely out of character for Dale's usual screen persona. Other Roy Rogers regulars in the cast are Pat Brady and the singing group, Foy Willing and the Riders of the Purple Sage, who play linemen for the power company. Despite their presence, there are far fewer songs than usual here. Clifton Young, the chief thug in Roy's TRAIL OF ROBIN HOOD the same year, where he stole Christmas trees of all things, plays Coronado's General Store proprietor, who works after hours carrying out the thefts of uranium ore for the traitor selling it to the enemy. Which is quite baffling given the high odds of someone recognizing him.

    As usual in these later Roy westerns, the setting is contemporary, but everyone wears cowboy clothes, rides horses and carries a gun belt, even when working on the electric towers. At one point, Roy and his new ally, an undercover federal agent, ride out on horseback, armed only with six-guns, to try and stop a plane which has landed to pick up the ore from the gang. They shoot at the gang from the rocks while waiting for Dale, Pat and the "posse" on horseback to show up when what's really needed is a full team of FBI agents with fast sedans, automatic weapons, and helicopters.

    There are plenty of great bits of action and stunt work and the location shooting is as good as anything I've seen in these films. I just wish the plot weren't so far-fetched. I also wish Republic had made some color westerns with Roy in a traditional western period setting. Why couldn't he have done something along the lines of what Randolph Scott was doing at the time over at Warner Bros. or Audie Murphy at Universal? Heck, even Republic was making some fine period westerns in Trucolor at the time, but they usually put 2nd-tier stars like Bill Elliott (HELLFIRE, BRIMSTONE) or Forrest Tucker (ROCK ISLAND TRAIL, JUBILEE TRAIL) in them. Would it have hurt to try out Roy in one of them?
    5planktonrules

    Another Roy Rogers ersatz western.

    "Bells of Coronado" is a rarity--a full-color Roy Rogers film. This is probably the case because it's one of Roy's later movies--and his popularity was at its peak and color film a little less costly than it had been in the 1940s. However, aside from the use of color and an absence of the usual sidekicks like Gabby Hayes, Andy Devine or Smiley Burnett (in this case, it's a lesser-known and less goofy Pat Brady), the film is very much like a typical Roy Rogers 'western'. In other words, aside from Roy and the rest riding about on horses out west, the film really is NOT a western but a modern ersatz cowboy film. Think about it--how many westerns have plots about stolen uranium and feature bad guys trying to escape by airplane?!

    So is everything exactly like his other films? Well, close, but not exactly. Dale appears as usual but she sports brown hair and isn't annoying or stupid (a role they usually had her play). Also, unlike most Rogers films in the public domain, this version has not been trimmed down for a one-hour TV slot and its running time is about 67 minutes.

    Overall, the film is very ordinary for a Rogers film, though with a little less music and a feeling that you've really seen this sort of thing several times before--which is true if you've seen many Roy Rogers films. It's entertaining but certainly won't tax your brain or leave a lasting impression. Thoroughly adequate with little to distinguish it one way or the other.

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    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Connections
      Edited into Zombies of the Stratosphere (1952)
    • Soundtracks
      Save a Smile For a Rainy Day
      Written by Sid Robin and Foy Willing

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 8, 1950 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Campanas de Coronado
    • Filming locations
      • Sable Ranch - 25933 Sand Canyon Road, Santa Clarita, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Republic Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 7m(67 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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