Cheap Neath Arizona Skies (Video) (John Wayne, Sheila Terry) (Harry L. Fraser) Price
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| ACTORS: | John Wayne, Sheila Terry |
| CATEGORY: | Video |
| DIRECTOR: | Harry L. Fraser |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 05 December, 1934 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Vid-America |
| MPAA RATING: | Unrated |
| FEATURES: | NTSC |
| TYPE: | Western |
| MEDIA: | VHS Tape |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 082087180592 |
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Customer Reviews of Neath Arizona Skies
One of John Wayne's better acting performances at Lone Star John Wayne turns in one of his better performances in a Lone Star/Monogram B Wester in "'Neath Arizona Skies." In this 1934 film, directed by Harry L. Fraser, Wayne plays Chris Morrell, who is helping a young Indian girl, Nina (Shirley Ricketts) search for her missing father (actually she is considered a half-breed by those less enlightened times, which effectively reduces her to being an Indian in the eyes of the cowboys) . Complicating the situation is that in the absence of her father she is the heir to a rich oil field, which is the target of outlaw Sam Black (Yakima Canutt) and his gang. The rather ridiculous twist on this one is that Sam knocks out Chris and rather than simply killing him they dress him up in the clothes of a wanted bank robber (some wanted posters apparently described clothes more than the face of the outlaw). This means as Chris chases down Nina and the outlaws, the law is on his heels while ignoring the outlaws that our hero is chasing.
Sheila Terry is Chris' love interest Clara Moore because, if you remember, Nina is an Indian (besides he is her guardian, which would make anything more wrong). However, despite the flaws in the plot screenwriter Burl Tuttle does give Wayne a couple of choice lines of memorable dialogue in this one (e.g., "Snakes like you usually die of their own poison," and the philosophical observation "Some men are like books written in a strange language, and that makes it awfully hard to read them"). George Hayes, who is perfecting his Gabby persona, has a minor role as Matt Downing in this one, and normal heavy Earl Dwire plays Nina's father Tom in another small role. My guess is that with a different director (Robert N. Bradbury did most of the Wayne films at Lone Star) the casting decisions ended up being different. Maybe shaking up the stock company had an impact on Wayne, because his acting is noticeably better in this one.
A good story that comes off rather bland
This Lone Star Pictures feature from 1934 doesn't seem to hold up as well as many of John Wayne's other early pictures. The technical quality is a little less pristine, and the plot is a little less enjoyable. 'Neath Arizona Skies a little different from many westerns in that a child lies at the heart of this story. John Wayne is "Daddy Chris" Morrell to a little Indian girl named Nina; Nina's mother is dead, and no one knows where her white father is or if he is dead or alive. Thanks to the discovery of oil on Indian lands, little Nina is suddenly worth fifty thousand dollars; this fact does not go unnoticed by desperadoes such as Sam Black (Yakima Canutt) and his gang. Morrell manages to escape town with Nina, but he is forced to send her ahead in order to slow down Black and his gang. The place of safety he sends her to ends up putting her in even more danger, and Morrell's troubles only increase when another bad guy tries to frame him for robbery. There is a decent amount of action, but it is your basic shoot-out, fisticuffs, and horse chase scenario that plays out. There is nothing really wrong with 'Neath Arizona Skies, but it just fails to excite me the way some of The Duke's other early westerns do.
Best movie of Wayne in his young ages
This Wayne movie was outstanding. John Wayne tries to save his half-adopted Indian daughter from dangerous outlaws, but his daughter gets captured by a man who she thinks is a friend. Then John Wayne goes to find her, and it ends up in an action-packed gunfight. Don't miss this movie, or you won't ever know why John Wayne loves to be an actor, and you'll be missing a true western. Recommended for anyone who likes John Wayne.