Very Good Western. Phil Carey one of my favorite actors playing the role of a bad guy. He usually played the good guy roles and this was unusual for me to see him playing this type of character role. The film has a excellent cast, story, direction and stock music score conducted by Mischa Bakaleinikoff. Thanks for the upload. Out.
increible comrncemospor la presentacio y la musica brillantisima a manos de no capte el director miwwh blq blq now predemos en frente de la accion congratulacion mil grqacias por darnos este privilegio
This movie was o.k Jay silverheels.tonto from the lone ranger t.v.serial. I worked with his daughter karen.she was a lead typewriter for a print shop in woodland hills Ca.in the 1980s.
Great cast. Always liked Phil Carey. He was an excellent actor, but never became a big star. He had more talent than many more famous actors. Also great to see Jay Silverheels not playing Tonto. Most of the best stories for movies were based on books, like this one. From the golden age of westerns.
Books were something every kid our age grew up with, not these Ipads or hand held things, you could get lost for hours reading a proper book, especially if it had a great story. And books gave a lot of ideas for Hollywood to work with, so that you'd want to go to the movies just to see the characters you'd just read about come to life. I haven't stepped inside a movie theater for about ten years, because there's been nothing worth spending 20 bucks on and losing a few precious hours over for such a long time. I'd rather read a book.
Kids in the old west had it pretty good. You didnt have to be 16 to get a "rider's license" and you could have your own Sorrel "Camaro" lots sooner too. LOLOL
"Warbow."(Western,Drama,Adventure); Cast: Philip Carey, Catherine McLeod, William Leslie, Robert J. Wilke, James Griffith, Jay Silverheels, and: Chris Olson."
Interesting little "B" Western. This was in the era when I was growing up, but I never heard of it. It had some good plot twists and the acting---particularly Phil Carey, Andrew Duggan and Jay Silverheels---was really good. *** out of ****
@@organplayer5843 I happen to be a big fan of Columbia. I think it is probably the most under-rated studio in Hollywood, going back to the "Golden Era" of Hollywood. In biographies of both Harry Cohn (the studio's founder) and Frank Capra (Columbia's most important director), it was always thought there was a pecking order in Hollywood. If you an actor or director or composer at MGM, Fox, Paramount, Warners or RKO, you were in the "Big Five," and if you worked at Columbia, Universal and United Artists, you slogged along at one of the "Little Three." Why? Because Columbia, Universal and UA didn't own movie theaters while all the "Big 5" did. The "Little 3" studios were always at the mercy of the "Big 5 studios' theater chains to find theaters for their films. This, of course, was absurd thinking because Columbia, which never lost money in a fiscal year until 1959 (the year after Cohn died), also consistently produced better movies than, say, RKO, the most mismanaged studio in Hollywood. Yet, I knew a guy who was a movie buff who shied away from talking about Columbia because that studio didn't had the large stable of signed stars that MGM or 20th Century-Fox had. That point was accentuated by stars at MGM or Paramount relocating at Columbia for one little thing called "It Happened One Night." Yet, to this day, the Best Picture Oscar winning "It Happened One Nght" provided Clark Gable (MGM) and Claudette Colbert (Paramount) with the only Oscars of their careers. However, the bottom line here is this film we talk about here probably was budgeted at roughly $400K-$500K (at the most) as compared to something similar at MGM which would cost twice as much. And, you lionize Phil Carey. Well, he was a fine character actor, but do you mention him in the same breath with A-list actors like Brando, Cagney or Jimmy Stewart? All the studios had their "B" units, films with less popular stars toiling away in smaller budgeted films. At Warners, for example, that studio had a producer named Bryan Foy, who was known as Holywood's "King of the Bs." Similarly, in Harry Cohn's book, "Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures," author Bernard F. Dick quotes Cohn's love of "lousy little B films." So, this is my definition of a "B." I love B films. They cost less to make. They usually had smaller running times (this Phil Carey yarn, for example, was only 66 minutes in length.). They provided less popular actors like Phil Carey with a chance for top billing. And, they were interesting films with sometimes better scripts.
error : at 5:00 minutes the guy says ''get the body out of the wagon and heave the wagon over the hillside , if the guy was dead why pull him out he can go over with the wagon, didn't they have stuntmen in those days ?
He was a superb villain. Little is known about his private life, except that he was reckoned to have made more money on the golf course than in front of the cameras.
I see Harry Lauter's one of the deputies. For twenty years you couldn't step out to the movies or turn on the set without running into him- hospital orderly, ranch hand, lawman, outlaw. Always the same performance.
For you adult men watching this and complaining that it was so phony this is more a kids movie. Though the book was an adult Western when a child is a very active part of the film and the music is light and jolly you know it's been done for kids this is a kids Western so you can't have lots of blood you can't have serious talking, etc. The script has been written so kids can understand it. Shane was never written for kids to understand. Shane was written for adults and was played for adults it wasn't a kids movie that's why it struck home with the adult audience. This director pretty much knew what he was selling and who he was selling it to. This wouldn't even be called a B Western this is one down in the C/D range made for the afternoon Saturday kids movie matinee. Sadly it could have been better if the script have been written better and possibly a better director but it all has to do with the script.
Blood was thicker than water because the kid was willing to come to his real father who was a bandit and killer, which is called such a proverb in Korea that blood draws blood .
Pretty good old cowboy movie, pretty well acted, good plot. Everything except for the styrofoam rocks in the cave-in, lol. 1:00:50, maybe he is just Hulk strong.
The man playing Murray we bought his home when I was a kid even though he was a big Hollywood star he owned this regular Ranch House in Sylmar California on a regular city block. Everyone said he was the nicest person he and his wife. She gave the little girls next door all of her unwanted jewelry and evening gowns so they can have fun playing dress up. When he came from from taping in the television show he was in he wanted to forget that he was in Hollywood. When the show was finally cancelled because nobody was interested in westerns anymore he retired and they moved away. It was my parents first house. The properties were half acre Lots and he had built a beautiful Barn set up with a real saddle and tack room, chicken or poultry area and of course 6 horse paddocks & a small Arena. The back door open onto a covered patio which had a beautiful waterfall built in with a small pool it was a great place for us kids in the Heat of the summer although all we could do was put our feet in the Little Pond. I'm sure they might have had fish in it for us my dad said no he figured as kids would be harassing them more than them being allowed to look nice. It had a yard that's sadly had cactus in the corners as they hadn't raised children in it and of course me and my Affinity for a cactus found it on the slip and slide that first summer in my bathing suit. I was also the one to find the buried bricks in the corners of the Arena when my horse threw me and I flew a hundred feet sideways striking the bricks breaking my arm I was in a body cast for six months. The bricks have been there for so long that they were covered with grass and the flowers planted in the corners of the Arena. there were also trees in each corner of the Arena to provide shade. That was before people worried about watering and it had Lush specialty grass he had have sown and raised there specifically for the horses. My dad being a Horseman this was the property he had wanted above all the properties they saw it really wasn't big enough for our family it was big enough for the horses. The interior of the house had been customized with wrought iron and railroad ties polished for bookcases and fireplace trim in the living room. A really nice bar pass thru between the kitchen and the living room with fake brick to make things look more Western in the kitchen. There was a really nice den off the kitchen that the back door to the covered patio went out on the left and the door to the garage went out on the right. The strangest thing was the floor-to-ceiling wall to wall mirror in the main bathroom with black velvet Victorian pattern on white wallpaper in a style you would have found in a saloon. My parents bathroom in the master bedroom was red velvet. Because of the style of the house my parents bought Spanish style heavy late 1960s Furniture to match the decor of the interior with lots of wrought iron heavy dark wood and deep Latin colors. My mom and dad both loved Mexico very much and we spent our vacations down there. It was a fun home and a fun place to live. The kids next door had a pony that drank beer & soda out of bottles as he was an old movie Paint Pony and you couldn't trust him around anything bottled as the actors had taught him to drink out of them. Their mom bred the beautiful German Shepherds used in the movies from Rin Tin Tin to all the ones you saw up into the seventies. It was a family-owned business that stayed in the family and they were proud of the beautiful dogs they raised for police work as well as the movies. Sadly we moved away in early 70s & lost touch with our friends. Our horses had more room where we moved to but we were so far out that we didn't have the friends like we did in that neighborhood. This time however my parents bought an original Adobe that had been the original Hacienda portion of a Mexican land grant property. What a fascinating place. Another adventure.
Murry is a scene looking for his wife in the mine with his hat on. When he finds her right away he's missing the hat. Clay comes out from behind the cave in knocking over Styrofoam rocks, lol.
An average film. After running the horses to exhaustion whilst escaping, the escapees did not even release them to drink in the river. They did not even have a drink themselves , when they went into the river. What kind of direction is this? I notice these omissions in lots of westerns from this era. The directors had no concept of what it is like to be thirsty in these desert like conditions.
A second chance at killing question mark you pretty much know that they weren't going to change their stripes by the way they're talking. Maybe the man who thinks he's going to get the money from his brother may not be a bad guy who knows we don't know but we know the two other guys are just Killers but he needed to trust somebody to get out of prison. Not all criminals are misunderstood.
Being pedantic. It so much annoys me that in almost every western they never give the Horses a drink. The posse rode up to the house and were all thirsty from midday (shadows of tree) sun, What about the blessed Horses folks.
Dont knowcof people like this ,all of this you call americans.Over here we eould call thm mental retired. From the prison guards over that silly woman to the bandits .All of them.
I'm sorry for being such an ass. But there are certain things about this Film that Made Me want to Laugh; A Blind man resting his hand on a Stable Horse box lintel and then saying that he could Take them to a Back way into the Mine: But what Makes me Laugh as always whenever people Go underground into a Mine: they walk within the Mine without as Much as an oil Lamp and don't even feel their way about the Place I Hate stupid Miss haps; and of course everything about the Movie from breaking out of the Chain Gang everything was predictable from then on
This movie sucks. The problem with a lot of these B-western movies is that there's really no good guy to root for. Philip Carey wasted in this B western.
Did you think they used real rocks with actors in film. One of the guns was a modern revolver, and it seem to jump into different holsters …. that was funny.
Really good B western drama. Thank you very much. 🙏
Loved it!!! Great storyline.
Very Good Western. Phil Carey one of my favorite actors playing the role of a bad guy. He usually played the good guy roles and this was unusual for me to see him playing this type of character role. The film has a excellent cast, story, direction and stock music score conducted by Mischa Bakaleinikoff. Thanks for the upload. Out.
Classic western.
Hollyweird could never make em like this again. Sadly.
I Love these old movies
increible comrncemospor la presentacio y la musica brillantisima a manos de no capte el director miwwh blq blq now predemos en frente de la accion congratulacion mil grqacias por darnos este privilegio
Me too - Im a mid 6sy kid !
Great Movie!
Good movie and plot.
Great movie❤️
Thanks for uploading this.
This a very good low-budget movie with a good cast including Robert J. Wilke, Phil Carey, and Andrew Duggan.
This movie was o.k Jay silverheels.tonto from the lone ranger t.v.serial. I worked with his daughter karen.she was a lead typewriter for a print shop in woodland hills Ca.in the 1980s.
Typesetter not writer.
I love the wild wild west..
Muito bom, muito obrigado!,
Great movie
That's a good movie!
great movie and true story .
Good movie!
Pretty good, thanks for sharing.
Good movie sad ending
THANKS
Great cast. Always liked Phil Carey. He was an excellent actor, but never became a big star. He had more talent than many more famous actors. Also great to see Jay Silverheels not playing Tonto. Most of the best stories for movies were based on books, like this one. From the golden age of westerns.
Books were something every kid our age grew up with, not these Ipads or hand held things, you could get lost for hours reading a proper book, especially if it had a great story. And books gave a lot of ideas for Hollywood to work with, so that you'd want to go to the movies just to see the characters you'd just read about come to life. I haven't stepped inside a movie theater for about ten years, because there's been nothing worth spending 20 bucks on and losing a few precious hours over for such a long time. I'd rather read a book.
Lotta familiar faces in this one, Carey makes a very sympathetic villain, excellent actor
I can tell that this is going to be a good Western Movie!🐂🐃🤠
Mais um para a minha extensa e longa lista de westerns .so "maluco" por estes classicos
A good old one. ..
Kids in the old west had it pretty good. You didnt have to be 16 to get a "rider's license" and you could have your own Sorrel "Camaro" lots sooner too. LOLOL
"Warbow."(Western,Drama,Adventure);
Cast:
Philip Carey,
Catherine McLeod,
William Leslie,
Robert J. Wilke,
James Griffith,
Jay Silverheels,
and: Chris Olson."
Excelente gran pelicula gracias, saludos desde Venzuela 30-10-19.
Fine Western. Excellent plot right from the start. Somehow I had missed P. Carey in his many other appearances. He was really good here.
Mighty fine acting Aza Buchanan also Beau.
I love the curtains
I like these old Western movies John Wayne's old movies are my favorite, especially since Wyatt Earp tought him alot about the real cowboy ways
Interesting little "B" Western. This was in the era when I was growing up, but I never heard of it. It had some good plot twists and the acting---particularly Phil Carey, Andrew Duggan and Jay Silverheels---was really good. *** out of ****
correction: *** out of ****
Little "B" Western?? Produced by Columbia, in Technicolor, staring Phil Carey??… Suggest you need to redefine your evaluation of a "B" movie Snyder!!
Organ Player jnnk1
@@organplayer5843 I happen to be a big fan of Columbia. I think it is probably the most under-rated studio in Hollywood, going back to the "Golden Era" of Hollywood. In biographies of both Harry Cohn (the studio's founder) and Frank Capra (Columbia's most important director), it was always thought there was a pecking order in Hollywood. If you an actor or director or composer at MGM, Fox, Paramount, Warners or RKO, you were in the "Big Five," and if you worked at Columbia, Universal and United Artists, you slogged along at one of the "Little Three." Why? Because Columbia, Universal and UA didn't own movie theaters while all the "Big 5" did. The "Little 3" studios were always at the mercy of the "Big 5 studios' theater chains to find theaters for their films. This, of course, was absurd thinking because Columbia, which never lost money in a fiscal year until 1959 (the year after Cohn died), also consistently produced better movies than, say, RKO, the most mismanaged studio in Hollywood. Yet, I knew a guy who was a movie buff who shied away from talking about Columbia because that studio didn't had the large stable of signed stars that MGM or 20th Century-Fox had. That point was accentuated by stars at MGM or Paramount relocating at Columbia for one little thing called "It Happened One Night." Yet, to this day, the Best Picture Oscar winning "It Happened One Nght" provided Clark Gable (MGM) and Claudette Colbert (Paramount) with the only Oscars of their careers. However, the bottom line here is this film we talk about here probably was budgeted at roughly $400K-$500K (at the most) as compared to something similar at MGM which would cost twice as much. And, you lionize Phil Carey. Well, he was a fine character actor, but do you mention him in the same breath with A-list actors like Brando, Cagney or Jimmy Stewart? All the studios had their "B" units, films with less popular stars toiling away in smaller budgeted films. At Warners, for example, that studio had a producer named Bryan Foy, who was known as Holywood's "King of the Bs." Similarly, in Harry Cohn's book, "Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures," author Bernard F. Dick quotes Cohn's love of "lousy little B films." So, this is my definition of a "B." I love B films. They cost less to make. They usually had smaller running times (this Phil Carey yarn, for example, was only 66 minutes in length.). They provided less popular actors like Phil Carey with a chance for top billing. And, they were interesting films with sometimes better scripts.
@@williamsnyder5616 WOW, I wonder how long your defensive reply would be if I made a really profound comment on here??
error : at 5:00 minutes the guy says ''get the body out of the wagon and heave the wagon over the hillside , if the guy was dead why pull him out he can go over with the wagon, didn't they have stuntmen in those days ?
Bom filme
Good CoWboY movie!😀
Good 🌃
Robert Wilke was inevitably cast as a minor villain in Westerns, however, in the Hollywood community was rated the best golfer among them.
He was a superb villain. Little is known about his private life, except that he was reckoned to have made more money on the golf course than in front of the cameras.
OBRIGADO. ADORO WESTERNS DA DECADA DE 50. AMAZING...….
This is a sad story with a good ending. I always liked Jay Silverheels wish he'd have had better and bigger roles. I loved him as Tonto.
I see Harry Lauter's one of the deputies. For twenty years you couldn't step out to the movies or turn on the set without running into him- hospital orderly, ranch hand, lawman, outlaw. Always the same performance.
Good movie thank you
For you adult men watching this and complaining that it was so phony this is more a kids movie. Though the book was an adult Western when a child is a very active part of the film and the music is light and jolly you know it's been done for kids this is a kids Western so you can't have lots of blood you can't have serious talking, etc. The script has been written so kids can understand it.
Shane was never written for kids to understand. Shane was written for adults and was played for adults it wasn't a kids movie that's why it struck home with the adult audience. This director pretty much knew what he was selling and who he was selling it to. This wouldn't even be called a B Western this is one down in the C/D range made for the afternoon Saturday kids movie matinee. Sadly it could have been better if the script have been written better and possibly a better director but it all has to do with the script.
Blood was thicker than water because the kid was willing to come to his real father who was a bandit and killer, which is called such a proverb in Korea that blood draws blood .
Pretty good old cowboy movie, pretty well acted, good plot. Everything except for the styrofoam rocks in the cave-in, lol.
1:00:50, maybe he is just Hulk strong.
Good movie
The man playing Murray we bought his home when I was a kid even though he was a big Hollywood star he owned this regular Ranch House in Sylmar California on a regular city block. Everyone said he was the nicest person he and his wife. She gave the little girls next door all of her unwanted jewelry and evening gowns so they can have fun playing dress up. When he came from from taping in the television show he was in he wanted to forget that he was in Hollywood. When the show was finally cancelled because nobody was interested in westerns anymore he retired and they moved away. It was my parents first house. The properties were half acre Lots and he had built a beautiful Barn set up with a real saddle and tack room, chicken or poultry area and of course 6 horse paddocks & a small Arena. The back door open onto a covered patio which had a beautiful waterfall built in with a small pool it was a great place for us kids in the Heat of the summer although all we could do was put our feet in the Little Pond. I'm sure they might have had fish in it for us my dad said no he figured as kids would be harassing them more than them being allowed to look nice. It had a yard that's sadly had cactus in the corners as they hadn't raised children in it and of course me and my Affinity for a cactus found it on the slip and slide that first summer in my bathing suit. I was also the one to find the buried bricks in the corners of the Arena when my horse threw me and I flew a hundred feet sideways striking the bricks breaking my arm I was in a body cast for six months. The bricks have been there for so long that they were covered with grass and the flowers planted in the corners of the Arena. there were also trees in each corner of the Arena to provide shade. That was before people worried about watering and it had Lush specialty grass he had have sown and raised there specifically for the horses. My dad being a Horseman this was the property he had wanted above all the properties they saw it really wasn't big enough for our family it was big enough for the horses.
The interior of the house had been customized with wrought iron and railroad ties polished for bookcases and fireplace trim in the living room. A really nice bar pass thru between the kitchen and the living room with fake brick to make things look more Western in the kitchen. There was a really nice den off the kitchen that the back door to the covered patio went out on the left and the door to the garage went out on the right.
The strangest thing was the floor-to-ceiling wall to wall mirror in the main bathroom with black velvet Victorian pattern on white wallpaper in a style you would have found in a saloon. My parents bathroom in the master bedroom was red velvet. Because of the style of the house my parents bought Spanish style heavy late 1960s Furniture to match the decor of the interior with lots of wrought iron heavy dark wood and deep Latin colors. My mom and dad both loved Mexico very much and we spent our vacations down there.
It was a fun home and a fun place to live. The kids next door had a pony that drank beer & soda out of bottles as he was an old movie Paint Pony and you couldn't trust him around anything bottled as the actors had taught him to drink out of them. Their mom bred the beautiful German Shepherds used in the movies from Rin Tin Tin to all the ones you saw up into the seventies. It was a family-owned business that stayed in the family and they were proud of the beautiful dogs they raised for police work as well as the movies. Sadly we moved away in early 70s & lost touch with our friends.
Our horses had more room where we moved to but we were so far out that we didn't have the friends like we did in that neighborhood. This time however my parents bought an original Adobe that had been the original Hacienda portion of a Mexican land grant property. What a fascinating place. Another adventure.
Não tem legenda em português
Murry is a scene looking for his wife in the mine with his hat on. When he finds her right away he's missing the hat. Clay comes out from behind the cave in knocking over Styrofoam rocks, lol.
Filma¢o. 👍
cowboy passes out drunk on his own hollywood stardom at the end . the end .
I love these old westerns, but its so obvious when they switch from actors to stuntmen for the fight scenes
1958 DUH!!!!
was that a little predictable ?
If Frank was broke and knew where the money was hid, why didn't he just go and get it? Clay was in jail for life.
ooops... just saw the end. He did.
Robert Wilkey could ride
Chris Olsen is in this Flick. little Cindy Brady's from brady bunch real life brother...
Y el castellano q pasó
56:43 HAHA funny
Where they will go? Their homes? They will be caught.
An average film. After running the horses to exhaustion whilst escaping, the escapees did not even release them to drink in the river. They did not even have a drink themselves , when they went into the river. What kind of direction is this? I notice these omissions in lots of westerns from this era. The directors had no concept of what it is like to be thirsty in these desert like conditions.
G
Hugh
I wanted the convicts to get the money, and have a second chance.
BIG MOUTH !
A second chance at killing question mark you pretty much know that they weren't going to change their stripes by the way they're talking. Maybe the man who thinks he's going to get the money from his brother may not be a bad guy who knows we don't know but we know the two other guys are just Killers but he needed to trust somebody to get out of prison. Not all criminals are misunderstood.
Being pedantic. It so much annoys me that in almost every western they never give the Horses a drink. The posse rode up to the house and were all thirsty from midday (shadows of tree) sun, What about the blessed Horses folks.
Dont knowcof people like this ,all of this you call americans.Over here we eould call thm mental retired.
From the prison guards over that silly woman to the bandits .All of them.
How handy is that--3 cowboys, three horses, 3 more guns, food--what more could a escaped convict expect?
Hi
Tonto, {JS}, played a poor @$$ role in this oater, you think?
He had to eat !
He had to eat since and Ranger separated !
Film nije preveden.😂😂😭😭😷
?б
I'm sorry for being such an ass. But there are certain things about this Film that Made Me want to Laugh; A Blind man resting his hand on a Stable Horse box lintel and then saying that he could Take them to a Back way into the Mine: But what Makes me Laugh as always whenever people Go underground into a Mine: they walk within the Mine without as Much as an oil Lamp and don't even feel their way about the Place I Hate stupid Miss haps; and of course everything about the Movie from breaking out of the Chain Gang everything was predictable from then on
Very stupid movie. Prisoners escape and kill the guards and no effort is made to trace them and bring them to justice!!! Makes no sense ❤❤❤
At the beginning they could at least free the horses....but to this day humans are inhuman to animals as well as ppl. human Traffic !!!!
This movie sucks. The problem with a lot of these B-western movies is that there's really no good guy to root for. Philip Carey wasted in this B western.
Cheap special effects aside, I've seen much worse
Thumbs up for posting. Bad plot and worse acting lol
A blind Tonto. lol
What a crap movie, so phoney and the dialogue sucked! Tonto must have really needed work!!
I agree.
Double action Colts, plaster rocks in the mine, total crap movie .
Did you think they used real rocks with actors in film. One of the guns was a modern revolver, and it seem to jump into different holsters …. that was funny.
Sucks
Good movie