Rustlers' Hideout

1945 "BLAZING GUNS ROUT RUSTLERS!"
6| 0h59m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 02 September 1945 Released
Producted By: Sigmund Neufeld Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A cowboy and his sidekick fight evil guys who want to rustle cattle in order to get hold of land.

Genre

Western

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Director

Sam Newfield

Production Companies

Sigmund Neufeld Productions

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Rustlers' Hideout Audience Reviews

Iseerphia All that we are seeing on the screen is happening with real people, real action sequences in the background, forcing the eye to watch as if we were there.
Catangro After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.
pointyfilippa The movie runs out of plot and jokes well before the end of a two-hour running time, long for a light comedy.
Neive Bellamy Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
weezeralfalfa One of the Billy the Kid/Billy Carson series of PRC B westerns, starring Buster Crabbe and his comical sidekick Al St. John, as Fuzzy. Fuzzy really does little in this episode other than follow Billy around. The plot centers around the scheme of banker Harry Stanton(John Merton) and saloon owner Buck Shaw(Charles King) to acquire the Crockett ranch and meat packing plant by a combination of rustling their cattle being driven from Montana to Wyoming, and making young Jack Crockett incur a sizable debt from losing at the gambling table. Billy took care of the gambling debt potential problem by taking over Jack's place at the gambling table, winning and exposing the cheating of professional gambler Hammond. Instead of rustling, Shaw and Stanton arrange for Green's men to stampede the herd, scattering them all over. Apparently, this didn't go as planned, but I'm not sure why. So, Shaw and Stanton dump some poison in the only watering hole for many miles around. Very fortunately, Dave Crockett and daughter Barbara happened to see this, and warned Billy and Fuzzy when they came to get a drink.......I'd like to point out some peculiarities or questions: 1)Charles King(Shaw) and John Merton(Stanton) looked so much alike, as stereotypical villains, that I couldn't tell them apart....2)Shaw? or Stanton? made a huge mistake when he failed to make sure wounded Dave Crockett was dead after he shot him near the water hole. Dave played opossum well enough that he was able to warn Billy and Fuzzy of the poisoned water, thus saving the cattle herd as well as themselves.....3)Dave may have saved Billy and the cattle from poisoned water, but how did the cattle then avoid dying of thirst?..... 4)Who killed crooked gambler Hammond? Billy is wrongly blamed. Jack Crockett tells Billy that he killed him. But the sheriff told Billy that a derringer bullet was found in Hammond's body, and Jack doesn't have a derringer. Besides, we saw this shooting, and it looked like Hammond was only wounded. So, who has a derringer? We don't find out until the climax, when Shaw pulls out a derringer and shoots at Billy. Very amazingly, he totally misses Billy, who then plays opossum, and trips Shaw up.....5) When the sheriff arrives, Shaw claims that Billy killed Stanton, then was robbing the bank safe. The sheriff immediately rejects this scenario. Why? How could this be proved wrong? If only a derringer bullet was found in Hammond's body, that would show that Shaw killed Stanton.
bkoganbing By this time Billy The Kid was no longer William Bonney, but a kinder and gentler Billy played by Buster Crabbe with the lovable Fuzzy St. John as his usual sidekick. It was not having to deal with the notorious reputation of the real Billy The Kid that probably allowed greater creativity for the folks and PRC pictures.In this episode the villains are working all fronts, banking, gambling, and rustling all trying to get a hold of a ranch and a packing plant. One way is rustle the cattle, another way is the bad guys to cheat at poker and buy up IOUs. Finally to just call a note due. But Crabbe and St. John are on to all the tricks of villainy.Nothing special, but nice afternoon entertainment for the front row matinée kids.
FightingWesterner Working as cowboys, Billy Carson and Fuzzy Jones take on a crooked gaming house/ bank and it's owner who schemes to rustle a herd of cattle belonging to an indebted rancher in order to seize his spread and who has also framed Billy for the murder of a cheating gambler.Another above average entry in Producers Releasing Corporation's Billy Carson series, this has a tougher than usual script with good dialog and some really good scenes, particularly the one where Carson busts up a crooked card game and takes the house for all it has.Pay attention to the title cards where Billy Carson is incorrectly printed as Billy Gibson, a mistake that the famously cheap P.R.C. deemed to costly to correct!
revdrcac In this one, Buster Crabbe rides to the rescue of the victims of some greedy rustlers who are plaguing the locals. In true cowboy hero fashion, he proceeds to clean up the range in no time at all. Lovable sidekick Fuzzy is up to his usual share of hilarious hi-jinks.Crabbe is best remembered today as Flash Gordon, but in this western series he does a pretty good job ---- This one particular is fun and a good example of how entertaining some of the programmers can be. When compared to the later series with Lash LaRue, theses films are slightly better overall. This film is a little routine, but when viewed in context it is well worth a look.