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| ACTORS: | John Wayne |
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| DIRECTOR: | Robert N. Bradbury |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 15 May, 1934 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Madacy Entertainment |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Color, Black & White |
| TYPE: | Western |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 056775070298 |
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Customer Reviews of The Man From Utah
A Great John Wayne Double Feature !!!! John Wayne has been one of Hollywood's greatest american icons for the past nine decades and even after his death in 1979,his legacy of films and memorable characters live on !!! Madacy's "Hollywood Classics" DVD showcases two of his early shoot-em ups.First,the Duke's 1934 B-Western THE MAN FROM UTAH,which is the main spotlight feature of the DVD,features Wayne as a sheriff who ends up with some vicious cowboys who kills some of his rodeo competors and to track them down,justice style.OK early effort by Wayne,but not one of the Duke's best works until his later years.The second film featured on this disc is considered by many fans and critics as one of Wayne's best films of the '40's,the 1947 film ANGEL & THE BADMAN in which he rescues a quaker girl from tough hoodlums.These two films are well-worth checking out,however,like many of Madacy's DVD's,there are a few complications.First off,THE MAN FROM UTAH's print quality is average 1930's,but the source used here on the DVD looks as if it was copied from VHS,but there are no video artifacts throughout the entire 55-minute film AND be aware that this version contains some modern stock music placed in certain scenes which at times can be a bit annoying,but it's only for a couple of seconds.ANGEL AND THE BADMAN's print quality,compared to some of the versions that I've seen,looks terrific with no sound drop-outs and video artifacts whatsoever.The only problem is that even though the box states that it's a full-length film,there is about ten minutes worth of footage cut from this DVD in order to fit two movies on one disc,but who cares! Ten minutes of scenes cut isn't going to kill you !!! All in all,this is a good DVD which also contains bloopers,newsreels,and trivia which I thought was kind of cool and all those can be found in many of the "Hollywood Classics" titles from Madacy.If you wish to see ANGEL AND THE BADMAN without ten minutes of footage cut,then don't buy this.But if you want to see early John Wayne at his best,then this is the DVD for you !!! You be the judge !!!
An early B Western where John Wayne joins the rodeo
In several of the B westerns that John Wayne made for Lone Star/Monogram between 1933-35 he played an undercover agent. That is again the situation in "The Man from Utah," a 1934 effort that was Wayne's sixth film for the poverty row studio. But this time around there is a rather interesting twist when Marshall George Higgins (George "Gabby" Hayes) sends John Weston (Wayne) undercover to a rodeo to investigate who has been murdering the riders. The thought of the Duke at the rodeo is certainly enough to catch your interest, even if he is going to be doubled by the legendary stuntman, Yakima Canutt, who also plays Cheyenne Kent. However, do not be startled with Wayne first appears, strumming a guitar and trying to lip-synch singing a song, because that has nothing to do with the rest of the movie and just a unpleasant reminder that in the first of these films Wayne played a singing cowboy named Singin' Sandy Sanderson.
The romance side of this Western is a bit more than usual, with Wayne being interested in good girl Marjorie Carter (Polly Ann Young, sister of Loretta and Sally Blane) and bad girl Dolores (Anita Campillo). Most of the rodeo scenes are stock footage taken at some real rodeo, and the inserts are rather blatant, but what else did you expect from a poverty row studio. The story by Lindsley Parsons, who did several of Wayne's Lone Star Westerns, was apparently popular enough that Monogram used it again in 1937's "Trouble in Texas" with Tex Ritter, in 1944's "The Utah Kid" with Bob Steele and Hoot Gibson, and in 1952's "Lawless Cowboys" with Whip Wilson. The director was Robert B. Bradbury, who did most of these early films with Wayne. "The Man From Utah" is at least different from these Wayne's other Lone Star films that it is at least an average example of what he was doing at that time.
An early B-Western with John Wayne trying out the rodeo
In several of the B westerns that John Wayne made for Lone Star/Monogram between 1933-35 he played an undercover agent. That is again the situation in "The Man from Utah," a 1934 effort that was Wayne's sixth film for the poverty row studio. But this time around there is a rather interesting twist when Marshall George Higgins (George "Gabby" Hayes) sends John Weston (Wayne) undercover to a rodeo to investigate who has been murdering the riders. The thought of the Duke at the rodeo is certainly enough to catch your interest, even if he is going to be doubled by the legendary stuntman, Yakima Canutt, who also plays Cheyenne Kent. However, do not be startled with Wayne first appears, strumming a guitar and trying to lip-synch singing a song, because that has nothing to do with the rest of the movie and just a unpleasant reminder that in the first of these films Wayne played a singing cowboy named Singin' Sandy Sanderson.
The romance side of this Western is a bit more than usual, with Wayne being interested in good girl Marjorie Carter (Polly Ann Young, sister of Loretta and Sally Blane) and bad girl Dolores (Anita Campillo). Most of the rodeo scenes are stock footage taken at some real rodeo, and the inserts are rather blatant, but what else did you expect from a poverty row studio. The story by Lindsley Parsons, who did several of Wayne's Lone Star Westerns, was apparently popular enough that Monogram used it again in 1937's "Trouble in Texas" with Tex Ritter, in 1944's "The Utah Kid" with Bob Steele and Hoot Gibson, and in 1952's "Lawless Cowboys" with Whip Wilson. The director was Robert B. Bradbury, who did most of these early films with Wayne. "The Man From Utah" is at least different from these Wayne's other Lone Star films that it is at least an average example of what he was doing at that time.