Blazing Across the Pecos
Blazing Across the Pecos
NR | 01 July 1948 (USA)
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This time the Durango Kid confronts an expert gambler.

Reviews
Matialth

Good concept, poorly executed.

Maidexpl

Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast

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Quiet Muffin

This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.

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Brenda

The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one

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JohnHowardReid

Copyright 17 June 1948 by Columbia Pictures Corp. No recorded New York opening. U.S. release: 1 July 1948. U.K. release: September 1952. Not theatrically released in Australia. 6 reels. 55 minutes. U.K. release title: UNDER ARREST.SYNOPSIS: Gambling czar's efforts to seize control of the town are foiled by the Durango Kid.COMMENT: Above average Durango Kid western. There's plenty of action including a stagecoach chase with exciting running inserts and some good stunt-work (Jock Mahoney who has a brief two-or-three-line role doubles for the Kid) and some spectacular Indians-on-the-warpath stock footage. The patter-type musical numbers rendered by Mr Burnette and Red Arnall are very pleasant too, and Mr Burnette's foolery is fairly amusing. Charles Starrett does his usual competent job and we liked Charles Wilson's rubber-faced villain. Nazarro's direction is a cut above his usual standard and production values are generally adequate. Despite his prominence in the cast list, Thomas Jackson has only a minor role, the bulk of the support work being carried by Jack Ingram as Buckshot and Paul Campbell as Jim Traynor, neither of whom figure in the credits at all!OTHER VIEWS: A gambler wants to build a private empire out of Pecos Flats, so he bribes a band of Indians to terrorize the townsfolk and raid the wagon trains. Of course the Durango Kid sorts him out in time. Much the usual Starrett standard western, with plenty of pace and little subtlety. - E. Victor Dyer.

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classicsoncall

If memory serves correctly, my summary line quote sounds like something Yosemite Sam might have said to Bugs Bunny in one of those early Warner Brothers cartoons that frequently parodied Hollywood films. If not, then he should have.Fans of the Durango Kid know that the story writers regularly recycled his adventures so it's not unusual to run across films that are similar in nature. "Blazing Across the Pecos" has villainous mayor of Pecos Flats, Ace Brockway (Charles C. Wilson) selling rifles to the Indians who in turn raid a series of trading posts owned by Matt Carter (Thomas E. Jackson), in an effort to force Carter out of business so Brockway can take over all the local commerce. A few years later, the Durango Kid found himself in a similar situation in 1951's "Snake River Desperadoes", another early Western unique to my mind because it actually featured Smiley Burnette and his Silver Coronet Band performing a polka! Now that's versatile.Speaking of Smiley, he's got a gimmick here in which he tries to perform the old tablecloth pull from the table trick without losing any glasses. He didn't do too bad with three glasses but sort of goofed when he tried fifty eight. I'm sure he needed just a little more practice.Now here's a trick Durango manages to pull off that's even better than Smiley's. Remember when he was chasing the stagecoach with the outlaw inside who was guarding the carbines destined for the Indians? Well Durango shot the guy, who was sitting with his back to the rear of the stagecoach, and the bullet hit him in the chest! That would have been a trick shot enough by itself, but that bullet had to also make a ninety degree left turn into the stagecoach! That Durango sure had control of his weapon! Well none of this stuff was supposed to make sense for the matinée kid fans back in the day, as long as the good guys won and the bad guys got what was coming to them. A few tunes by Smiley Burnette and The Western Aces band provided some additional entertainment in this one, and on top of that, Smiley even let out with a 'Jumpin' Jehosophat' at one point. I guess he was having a pretty good time.

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Mike Newton

If you had seen as many Durango Kid westerns as you said you did, you should have realized that these were designed for kids some sixty years ago. Barry Shipman who wrote several of the screenplays admitted that they were written to a formula and as such the plots did tend to become a bit stereotyped. Frankly, we didn't care. We were there for a afternoon of fun and excitement where we could scream and yell to our hearts content without too much adult supervision. Obviously if you had been in the audience as an adult, we would have thought it was a little strange. The reason that the print quality is so bad is that Columbia cranked these things out on a budget. They were not meant to last several decades and in fact, many have disintegrated through the years because of poor storage. What I can't understand is if you were bored by the film, why didn't you turn it off. That way, you could have spent the rest of your hour more constructively. Incidentally, Charles Starrett hails from Athol, Massachusetts, whose family owned a machine tool business.

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TC-4

I have seen several Durango Kid westerns over the past few months on the Western Channel and they are usually somewhat entertaining with good writing and with a few twists. If this had been the first one that I had ever seen I would have never bothered to see any others. The plot was like a child's western and it lead up to nothing. What did not help was the unusually poor print quality. I wish I could have that hour of my life back.

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