Ghost Town Law
Ghost Town Law
NR | 27 March 1942 (USA)
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When two of their Marshal friends are killed, the Rough Riders are sent to investigate. They have to find the killers in a ghost town where the houses and an old mine are interconnected by secret passages and tunnels.

Reviews
CheerupSilver

Very Cool!!!

Odelecol

Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.

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Matylda Swan

It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties.

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Yazmin

Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.

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MartinHafer

In the 1930s, Buck Jones and Tim McCoy both starred in a variety of low-budget westerns. However, in the late 1930s Monogram Studios had an idea--put both these stars (plus Raymond Hatton) in a series of films to increase their drawing power. Their Rough Rider films are generally quite good for the genre, though they are also rather cheap B-movies nevertheless. The series ended, however, when Jones was tragically killed in a nightclub fire in 1942...making this one of the last entries in the series.The film begins with two lawmen being murdered while they're on the trail of a crook. Why the two men were killed in this ghost town and why there's a tunnel under the place...these are things the viewer will have to learn through the course of the film.The two Marshalls happened to be friends with Marshall Tim McCall (McCoy) and he's determined to investigate. Since this IS a Rough Riders film, you know that sooner or later Buck Jones and Raymond Hatton will arrive soon...and they play Marshalls Buck Roberts and Sandy Hopkins. And, as usual, they arrive separately and the pair are in disguise.The film is pretty much what you'd expect and will see in other Rough Riders films...nothing brilliant but an enjoyable and competent B-movie.

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bsmith5552

"Ghost Town Law" was part of Monogram's Rough Rider series starring Buck Jones, Tim McCoy and Raymond Hatton playing undercover marshals. It is, in my opinion, one of the best of the series.Two federal Marshals are murdered in a ghost town by an outlaw gang. Marshal Tim McCall (McCoy) is called in. He vows to avenge their deaths and calls in his partners, Buck Roberts (Jones) and Sandy "Killer" Hopkins (Hatton). The gang, headed by Ace (Tom London) and Gus (Charles King) are hiding out in an old gold mine which runs under the old town.Heroine Josie Hall (Virginia Carpenter) arrives to find out what has happened to her brother and her aunt. She insists on going to her aunt's creepy old house with McCall where they meet Judge Crail (Murdock MacQuarrie) and Tom Cook (Howard Masters), the foreman of her aunt's ranch. Roberts arrives on the scene posing as a miner lost in the desert and feigning amnesia. He also has saddle bags full of gold. Sandy, meanwhile, has befriended an old prospector, Luke Martin (Milburn Morante).Josie gets Luke to take her down into the mine where they are captured by Ace and the boys. As the Rough Riders close in on the bandits, they learn that they have a leader who is the brains behind them and.....................................................This film has a little more action than most in the series. In addition to the creepy setting, there is a dandy fight between Jones and Charlie King (rare for this series). It's also unusual in that there are several cold blooded murders and references to same. As Ace says to Josie referring to her brother: "Oh he's buried out in the desert somewhere". There's the usual shooting the guns out of the outlaw's hands but the boys also appear to kill some of the bad guys. It was a mystery to me why the bad guys had to wear masks when they went up into the town. Who would recognize them in any event?The chemistry between the three stars is what raised this trio above the other trigger trios of the day.

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398

I found this about as good as "B" westerns get. Buck Jones and Tim McCoy made a superb team, with Raymond Hatton as solid support. It was fun to see cowboys who really were at home on a horse. These old westerns might have been simple, but the men who made them were often from the west and it shows in all sorts of little things, from the way they handle the dialog and behave around the the ladies to the way they mount and sit a horse. Such things go beyond acting and give these vintage horse operas a flavor that later, more prestigious, films simply could not match. The plot wasted no time on side issues, and the fact that the three Rough Riders were United States Marshals doing their duty made for clean and straightforward motivation, with the villains forceful and the action fast and furious. I found it fun all the way and would highly recommend it to fans of old westerns or to anyone who might be interested in why they were once so popular.

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wrbtu

A Rough Riders film. Interesting B western that contains some haunted house elements. Well acted (Buck doesn't do quite as well as the others), decent plot involving bad guys hiding out in the ghost town of Pickwick, Nevada, sometime after 1880. Some exciting chase scenes & shoot-outs near the end. Both Tim & Buck were in their early 50s here & instead of the two of them together, the Rough Riders probably could have used a younger romantic interest to complete the usual trio formula.

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