In the Arizona Territory of 1868, a fugitive army scout and a crooked Indian Agent lock horns over the treatment of the cheated Natives and over the affections of a local beauty.In the Arizona Territory of 1868, a fugitive army scout and a crooked Indian Agent lock horns over the treatment of the cheated Natives and over the affections of a local beauty.In the Arizona Territory of 1868, a fugitive army scout and a crooked Indian Agent lock horns over the treatment of the cheated Natives and over the affections of a local beauty.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Cedric Hardwicke
- Lord Warrick
- (as Sir Cedric Hardwicke)
Stanley Andrews
- Major at Court Martial
- (uncredited)
Chris Willow Bird
- Indian
- (uncredited)
Ed Brady
- Soldier at Hitching Rail
- (uncredited)
John Cason
- Officer at Court Martial
- (uncredited)
Chester Clute
- Wilbur
- (uncredited)
Iron Eyes Cody
- Indian
- (uncredited)
Frank Coleman
- Man on Street
- (uncredited)
Chester Conklin
- Soldier at Hitching Rail
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
James craig, lucy, tom tyler. Tucson is still a territory, with a wide mix of settlers, and the first americans. It's chris' wedding day, and the whole town is buzzing. The army is already squabbling with a scout and the crooked agent. The scout is on the run, after getting court martialed for standing up for the indians. And of course, chris' husband-to-be is caught up in the shenanigans. A typical western, with some extra humor thrown in here and there. Some silliness over using red ants to delay a wedding. Billy gilbert, who made a career out of sneezing his way through movies. Even cochise and geronimo are here. This was still the awkward part of lucy's career where they weren't really sure what to do with her. She made some good comedies in the 1940s, and of course, had her own series with ricky in the 1950s. Very pretty scenery of the southwest. Its actually not bad. A bit silly, but mostly good. We can see the beginnings of lucy and her comedy bits. Directed by george marshall. Based on the stories of clarence kelland.
Curious head-scratcher of a western directed by George Marshall features James Craig as a drifter in 1868 Tucson who disrupts the wedding of feisty barmaid Lucille Ball, later stopping a war between the white man and an Apache Indian tribe! Lucy-completists will want to take a look, but this may be one example of why her movie-career never caught fire. The picture is just a second-string quickie, despite writers Clarence Budington Kelland and Horace McCoy tossing in some comedic overtones (which help). Unfortunately, it just doesn't add up to much. I'd trade all those tumbleweeds for a cameo by William Frawley. ** from ****
Valley Of The Sun is an offbeat comic western that stars Lucille Ball in a role you would normally see Dale Evans do over at Republic with Roy Rogers. But Lucy and the rest of the cast acquit themselves well under the handling of director George Marshall.
Lucy runs the Busy Bee Cafe in Yuma where she's all set to marry Indian agent Dean Jagger who makes a nice living cheating the Indians. That was a great racket in the old west and who's to complain as they don't have the right to vote as yet. Army scout James Craig cares however, but he's had to bust jail after helping a couple of falsely accused Apaches escape.
In making his escape Craig runs into both Lucy and Jagger and then has a dual mission to stop that wedding and get some justice for the Indians. Do you doubt he will succeed?
This western moves at a really nice clip with the comedy some of the rough house kind like Jagger having a stagecoach run over some cactus to dislodge Craig who is riding by hanging on to the boot. Nevermind though Craig pays him back good in stopping that wedding and I won't reveal how.
George Marshall was one of the great comic directors from the last century and never gets the due that he should. This minor picture for RKO shows him at his best.
I remember back in the day in New York City when I was a kid, Valley Of The Sun was run frequently on WOR TV as they owned the entire RKO Library. It seems to have fallen out of favor in the past several years though for reasons I can't explain. This is a really fine film.
Lucy runs the Busy Bee Cafe in Yuma where she's all set to marry Indian agent Dean Jagger who makes a nice living cheating the Indians. That was a great racket in the old west and who's to complain as they don't have the right to vote as yet. Army scout James Craig cares however, but he's had to bust jail after helping a couple of falsely accused Apaches escape.
In making his escape Craig runs into both Lucy and Jagger and then has a dual mission to stop that wedding and get some justice for the Indians. Do you doubt he will succeed?
This western moves at a really nice clip with the comedy some of the rough house kind like Jagger having a stagecoach run over some cactus to dislodge Craig who is riding by hanging on to the boot. Nevermind though Craig pays him back good in stopping that wedding and I won't reveal how.
George Marshall was one of the great comic directors from the last century and never gets the due that he should. This minor picture for RKO shows him at his best.
I remember back in the day in New York City when I was a kid, Valley Of The Sun was run frequently on WOR TV as they owned the entire RKO Library. It seems to have fallen out of favor in the past several years though for reasons I can't explain. This is a really fine film.
Not being a particular fan of westerns, I watched this primarily because I wanted to see Lucille Ball in something other than an "I Love Lucy" or "Lucy Show" type of role. Here she plays Christine Larson, owner of a saloon in the Arizona Territory in 1868 who's about to be married to the unscrupulous local Indian agent (Dean Jagger.) Ball's performance was OK - nothing really more than that; she didn't blow me away. It succeeded for me in that the role was very different from what I'm accustomed to seeing her in - there was very little of the outrageous physical comedy she later became famous for, although the movie tried to maintain a gently amusing feel throughout. (A typical funny line - "there's two ways to deal with women - and no one knows either one of them!") I didn't find the story all that compelling, although I appreciated that the Indians were shown as the victims of the Indian agent. There's typical shootout action and a lot of horses - your typical western in other words. As to Christine - we pretty much can guess from the beginning how her planned marriage is going to end up; it's just a question of how she's going to get there. If you like westerns, this would be a pretty typical one with a bit of humour thrown in. If you're not big on the genre, this will be lacking. I'm not big on the genre. 3/10
10sdiner82
This thoroughly enjoyable RKO comedic Western from 1942 used to be shown regularly on TV in the '50s and '60s, but seems to have faded into obscurity and deserves a TCM revival. A swift 79-minute running time packs in plenty of action, rambunctious humor, and sparkling romantic chemistry between leads James Craig (why he didn't become a major star remains a mystery) and luscious Lucille Ball (exuding the volcanic combo of dazzling beauty and an innate flair for slapstick that would come to full fruition a decade later in "I Love Lucy" on the home-screen). Dismissed by most critics as a forgettable low-grade oater, "Valley of the Sun" was a high-budget class-A RKO production, and shows in the caliber of the witty screenplay, eye-catching production design, and shimmering black-and-white photography. Excellent entertainment, and still a thorough delight from start to finish.
Did you know
- TriviaMade near the end of her seven-year contract with RKO, where she had become known as "Queen of the 'Bs'", in about 15 years Lucille Ball, along with her husband Desi Arnaz would own the studio.
- GoofsThough the self-proclaimed year of the film is 1868, the sidearm of choice of everyone is the 1873 Single Action Army (aka The Peacemaker).
- Crazy creditsListed also as cast members: "Indians from the pueblos of Taos, Santa Clara, Jemes, San Juan and Tesuque"
- ConnectionsReferenced in Lucy & Desi: Before the Laughter (1991)
- SoundtracksThe Battle Cry of Freedom
(uncredited)
Written by George Frederick Root
[In the score after the court-martial]
- How long is Valley of the Sun?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $646,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 18m(78 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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