Purely Joyful Movie!
Perfectly adorable
Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.
View MoreThere's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.
View More. . . straight out of the 1880s, I immediately thought of that TWILIGHT ZONE episode in which a tank crew from the 1960s takes a wrong turn and winds up as victims of Custer's Last Stand. (If Brad Pitt had been in command of that tank crew, Custer would have WON that tussle, and we'd all be speaking Michigander--his native language--today!) The problem for PALS is that the whole story is taking place in 1938, as the Bush Brothers' Grandpops Prescott is secretly exporting the fuel additive necessary to run Hitler's Blitzkrieg War Machine to Germany in Real Life. Meanwhile, future Bushie\Reagan Henchman John "Il Duce" Wayne is pretending to chase down covered wagon-bound Nazis traipsing around in the desert of Pretend America. By 1938, America's Wastelands had been overrun by pick-up trucks, anybody's vehicle of choice for transporting the high explosives crucial to PAL's plot. While Warner Bros. studios was making hard-hitting realistic public service flicks such as THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT and CONFESSIONS OF A NAZI SPY, Republic Pictures' Fifth Column Outfit--led by "Il Duce"--was churning out Disinformation such as PALS to cover the tracks of the Bush Crime Family. If the so-called "Code of the West" was ever Real, these folks would have been strung up for High Treason!
View MorePals of the Saddle (1938) ** 1/2 (out of 4) The first of eight Three Mesquiteer films John Wayne made for Republic from 1938-39. In the film, Wayne is accused of murder so he and the two others must try and clear his name while bringing down bad guys trying to sell poison gas. This is one of the better films in the series that I've seen. Wayne is his usual self, although he certainly wasn't the legend he was to become. The story movies pretty fast at 55-minutes and the supporting cast adds nice support. The fight scenes are all pretty well done.
View MorePals of the Saddle find the Three Mesquiteers getting involved with a group of war profiteers in the time before World War I. Somebody has the bright idea to smuggle something called Monium out of the USA in violation of the Neutrality Act for use to make poison gas. People in 1938 still remembered the horror of poison gas used in the war and also recently by Mussolini in his invasion and takeover of Ethiopia. That made it a topical film and gave it a dimension we can't appreciate today.The bad guys use a salt mine as a cover and chlorides are what makes up salt. Why the scriptwriters were concocting some fictitious element called Monium to use when they could have just as easily said chlorine which was in the some of the poison gas used in World War I is beyond me.Doreen McKay is an undercover U.S. Secret Service agent who gets Wayne involved in her investigation when her partner is killed. Wayne takes the partner's place and nearly gets himself done in. Good thing Corrigan and Terhune are around. There's an exciting shoot out at the end as the Mesquiteers stop the wagon train of Monium from crossing the border. This was Wayne's first Mesquiteer film and it certainly was a step up from his Monogram films of the middle thirties. He and Doreen McKay have an interesting relationship, sort of like what Roy Rogers and Dale Evans had in some of their Republic Pictures.Pals of the Saddle is not however the best of Wayne's Mesquiteer films. Still it's entertaining and will please fans of the eternal Duke.
View More"Pals of the Saddle" is the first of eight Three Mesquiteer series westerns that John Wayne made for Republic's 1938-39 season. During this time, "Stagecoach" would be released, and the rest, as they say, is history.Comparing this film to some of his earlier efforts, one can see how far Wayne had developed his on-screen presence. He appeared much more confident and more at ease. In one scene he even impersonates a grizzled and hokey prospector complete with old clothes and whiskers. As was the case in many of the Mesquiteer films, this one is set in "modern" (the late 30s) times.In this outing he joins fellow Mesquiteers Ray "Crash" Corrigan and Max Terhune as "Stoney Brooke" in an effort to foil the evil doers plans to smuggle banned war materials out of the country to an unnamed foreign power to manufacture poison gas. At this juncture, America was still selling its neutrality in respect of the European conflict.The film is still quite entertaining and is enhanced by Wayne's performance. I was a little disappointed not to see any of Republic's familiar roster of bad guys in the picture. The supporting cast was for me totally unrecognizable. Anyway, Stoney Brooke is a long way from "Singin" Sandy Saunders.
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