Disappointment for a huge fan!
It’s an especially fun movie from a director and cast who are clearly having a good time allowing themselves to let loose.
View MoreIt isn't all that great, actually. Really cheesy and very predicable of how certain scenes are gonna turn play out. However, I guess that's the charm of it all, because I would consider this one of my guilty pleasures.
View MoreThis is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
View MoreCAST: William Boyd, Andy Clyde, Rand Brooks, Elaine Riley, John Kellogg, Don Haggerty, Stanley Andrews, Harry Strang, John Butler, Herbert Rawlinson, Will Orleans, Wayne C. Treadway. Running time: 59 minutes. (Available on an excellent Platinum Disc DVD).COMMENT: If you're not a railroad fan, you'll probably not enjoy this movie a quarter as much as I did. Actually photographed in the Owens Valley yards of the Carson and Colorado Railroad, it's a real feast for steam locomotive buffs. Admittedly, the story, such as it is, runs a distinct second place. Little more than an excuse to photograph freight trains, it offers nothing along the lines of conventional "B"-western action and not a great deal more in the way of suspense. We know who the villain is right from the start - and Hoppy himself is on the right trail from the word "go" too. Alas, there's no femme interest either. The one girl in the cast is placidly played by Elaine Riley, minus the enigmatic demeanor she vividly brought to her role in The Devil's Playground (number 55 in the series). Stanley Andrews plays the railroad chief in his usual bombastic style and almost manages to convince us that he's as stupid as the script paints him (although how such a thickhead comes to be in charge of a railroad is not explained). Hoppy, looking particularly well-groomed in light gray, does not carry a gun and leaves all the action to the hired help. This must be the only entry in which his long-time stunt double, Ted Wells, was not employed. Best acting comes from little-known Will Orleans as a shakedown hobo. Not that it matters. In this one, the trains take center stage!
View MoreFor some reason William Boyd decided not to wear his six guns for this film Sinister Journey. It made for a rather actionless climax something Hopalong Cassidy fans are not used to.This film has Hoppy and his sidekicks Rand Brooks and Andy Clyde answer a call from Hoppy's old friend Stanley Andrews a railroad Vice President. Things are going wrong on his railroad construction gang and he thinks the culprit is his own son-in-law John Kellogg who ran away with his daughter Elaine Riley. Kellogg he thinks is a fortune hunter.Hoppy, Lucky, and California all met Kellogg and Riley before getting to camp and Hoppy formed a good opinion of him. Good enough that it withstood the revelation of Kellogg's prison time.There is in fact a plot against Andrews and his family, one very carefully conceived and nearly brought off. And isn't Kellogg who Andrews should have been concerned about.More plot than most Hoppy films, but a lot less action.
View MoreAKA "Two Gun Territory." Unfortunately, neither of the two guns in the alternate (rerelease?) title belonged to Hoppy. He's completely gunless throughout this movie (is this the only movie in the series in which he never carries a gun?). Although I was tipped off at the outset by his rancher's (non-black) clothes & hat, I did expect at least a little action in this film. It's hardly a "western," in that there are no gunfights involving Hoppy (although others use guns a couple of times), no horse chases, & only one fist fight (again, not involving Hoppy). Lucky doesn't even get to do his "usual thing" with the young heroine, because in this movie, she's married! The plot is set up like a mystery in a western setting; the music soundtrack is also much more that of a mystery movie than a western movie. Plenty of comedy, though, & some of it was pretty good, but this film is one of the poorest in the Hopalong Cassidy series, as well as being one of the last half dozen films Boyd made as Cassidy. Even the Hopalong Cassidy TV series had more action (& certainly more mystery) than this film. Disappointing, even to a great Hoppy fan. I had to rate it only 4/10.
View MoreI have been watching all the Hoppy movies on the Western Channel for over a year and from what I saw and what critics have said is that the ones made from 1935 to about 1942 were the best ones and from that point they started to go downhill and the ones produced by William Boyd which this one was were the poorest in quality. Well I cannot agree as this one was certainly one of the best ones ever. It had to do with problems at a railroad co. and there were plenty of scenes of trains and they did not look like stock footage and the plot was not boring. I enjoyed this Hoppy movie and I recommend it.
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