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Stagecoach to Denver (1946)

Stagecoach to Denver (1946)

GENRESWestern
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Allan LaneRobert BlakeMartha WentworthRoy Barcroft
DIRECTOR
R.G. Springsteen

SYNOPSICS

Stagecoach to Denver (1946) is a English movie. R.G. Springsteen has directed this movie. Allan Lane,Robert Blake,Martha Wentworth,Roy Barcroft are the starring of this movie. It was released in 1946. Stagecoach to Denver (1946) is considered one of the best Western movie in India and around the world.

Lambert has the stagecoach wrecked killing the Commissioner so his phony replacement can alter Coonskin's land survey. When Red Ryder exposes the survey hoax, Lambert has his stooge Sheriff put Red in jail.

Stagecoach to Denver (1946) Reviews

  • The kind of Western they used to make

    bill-6882006-01-31

    Almost anyone who grew up during and after the World War II years will recognize this shoot 'em up as similar to hundreds of quickie Westerns filmed during the period. I bought the film for $5 or less just to see what they were really like and, boy, it is exactly as I remember. I have seen chases and gun fights in and around the same rocks and trails in this film as in countless other Saturday matinées. If you do remember what it was like to sit through two of these plus shorts, cartoons and previews, you can refresh your memory and step back to a time when the movies were innocent and the good guys really did beat the bad guys . . . every time, all in less than one hour.

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  • Uncle Red saves Dickie

    ejrjr2007-08-10

    Allan Lane is Red Ryder and Robert Blake is Little Beaver in this outing which revolves around a double-crossing stagecoach owner in Elkhorn, Colorado and Dickie, an injured orphan who needs a risky back operation. The script is above average and the ending although predictable has an unusual twist. There are some good chase scenes and gun battles plus several subplots which help make this a cut above average. Red is a stagecoach driver for the Duchess, owner of the line south of Elkhorn. However, for unexplained reasons, Red does not regularly work. Instead, he he is consumed with exposing a fake land commissioner and his cohorts including the sheriff of Elkhorn. If you like Red Ryder you will like this film. If you have not watched Red Ryder, this is a good choice to first watch.

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  • The usual b-western

    JLarson20062001-10-20

    This movie follows the b-movie western tradition. Red Ryder's sidekick, played by Robert Blake, appears little and has few lines, so if you want to find out about his acting as a child, this isn't the place. The story doesn't particularly stand out to me, but it's entertaining enough for the 10-year-olds it was produced for (although I'm not sure it would work with today's 10-year-olds). Peggy Stewart's character is the most interesting. She is a bad girl who spends the duration of the film turning good.

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  • Keeping everyone out of Denver

    bkoganbing2013-03-24

    Roy Barcroft has a nasty scheme in mind to get some land for a stagecoach right of way for his line to Denver. It involves murdering a real land commissioner and substituting his man to make some new surveys and move people's claims around. All he has to do is keep people from going to Denver and worse keep folks from Denver away from his town. Unfortunately it's the town where Red Ryder and Little Beaver reside. In the faked accident that killed the real commissioner and the stage driver a little boy was badly injured with a broken spine. Little Bobby Hyatt is taken to Emmet Lynn's place where he's doctored and his only living relative an aunt in Denver is sent for. That's what Barcroft has to avoid, someone from Denver who would know the real new commissioner. So he substitutes Peggy Stewart for the aunt, but he doesn't let her in on all his plans. And Stewart turns out to have a heart and real concern for young Hyatt. Of course Allan Lane and Robert Blake as the famous Red Ryder and Little Beaver figure it all out. As Barcroft says, Ryder's no fool. Lane was taking over the Red Ryder series from Wild Bill Elliott whom Herbert J. Yates was starting to put into some big budget items in the hope he might have a breakout the way his other contract cowboy John Wayne did. It never quite worked out for Lane, but he handles the Red Ryder role well and later did it on television. And of course he was the voice of that horse of course, the famous Mister Ed. Stagecoach To Denver might have rated another star had Barcroft who is presented to us as crafty and ruthless committed one more murder he should have. You'll have to see this Red Ryder western to see why.

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  • "It's no use, I'm afraid she's done for".

    classicsoncall2011-10-24

    I'm kind of partial to the Bill Elliott Red Ryder's, but this one's pretty entertaining with Allan 'Rocky' Lane in the lead role, and young Bobby Blake (that would be Robert Blake for you Baretta fans) as his sidekick Little Beaver. Actually, Little Beaver doesn't have a very prominent role here, in fact it was well after the half way point before he even got a line of dialog. The story has the crooked town boss Lambert (Roy Barcroft) having his henchman Blackie (George Chesebro) sabotage an Overland Stagecoach by tampering with the hitch, and it goes careening over a cliff, killing the land commissioner en route to Elkhorn. With the commissioner out of the way, Lambert's replacement will redraw the survey lines to gain control of property owned by Red's friend Coonskin (Emmett Lynn). As standard as the story is for a B Western, there's an unusual element offered here that I've only seen one other time in about five hundred I've watched to date. Lambert's attractive accomplice (Peggy Stewart) starts to go soft while caring for an injured young boy with a broken back, and she's just about ready to turn on her boss. Fearing the jig is up, Lambert unleashes his boys in a final shootout against the good guys, and Stewart's character gets shot in the back! Too bad, she was better looking than a lot of women who showed up in these pictures. For action fans, I would recommend catching the film for the brawl between Red Ryder and baddie Lambert. It was rather well done, with the boys taking out quite a bit of furniture in a realistic looking fight. The quick talking Lambert had Red arrested for his trouble, but it wasn't long before old Coonskin broke him out of jail in time for Red to make the save for the good guys.

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