Softwing
Most undeservingly overhyped movie of all time??
Zlatica
One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
Darin
One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.
Delight
Yes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.
MartinHafer
In the 1930s and 40s, Johnny Mack Brown made a ton of B-westerns. Today, he's mostly forgotten—though he was a pretty good leading man. Why do I like him? Well, he was no pretty-boy and his performances seemed pretty natural. Unfortunately, he did not work for big studios and it's not surprising his films are neglected because they were often rather sloppily made by tiny so-called 'Poverty Row' studios. In this case, Supreme Pictures made this Brown western.The plot is very similar to many other B-westerns. Brown is an investigator sent in to look into some robberies of gold shipments. None of this is particularly new or novel. However, HOW the baddies pass on this information was kind of wacky—they use carrier pigeons to pass on the information!! Eventually, Brown gets to the bottom of it—and frees a bunch of slaves who were forced to work for the baddies (that's also pretty wacky). The bottom line is that apart from a few novel twists, this is pretty much like most of Brown's films—or the films of many other cowboy stars of the era. And, nothing to distinguish it either—especially with its rather limp ending.
classicsoncall
It's only because I just watched "Branded a Coward" and "Courageous Avenger" back to back that I'm able to pick out a boatload of similarities between the two. Both pictures have a character named Carson, hero Johnny Mack Brown gets to kiss his sweetheart in the middle of the picture (twice in this one!), and even though he does't appear anywhere in the credits for 'CA', there's no one else I know who could have pulled off the 'under the buckboard' drag in the chase scene other than Yakima Canutt. Turns out he's listed as part of the stunt team used in some archive footage appearing in the picture.I can't tell you how many hundreds of TV and movie Westerns I've seen, but I'm at a loss to recall if there was ever a flick that foretold the use of the Lone Ranger's silver bullets like you see here. The puzzler though is why the outlaws would have used the metal to forge into bullets instead of cashing in it's value along with the gold they were stealing from the Giant Strike Mine operation. Granted, even today silver doesn't compare anywhere near the price of gold, but it's still something to think about.Along with my other observations, how many times have you seen this? In the early buckboard chase scene, the outlaws shoot the driver from behind and he goes down clutching his chest. How does that work? Also, when hero Kirk Baxter (JMB) fights villain Gorman (Warner Richmond) in the cabin, he punches Gorman on the left side of his face, but as the outlaw gets up, he's holding his right side. This stuff happens all the time and I scratch my head each and every.Well besides all the standard stuff, you also have a flurry of notes being passed back and forth by the bad guys, and a homing pigeon gimmick that must have replaced the comedic sidekick. Director Robert North Bradbury moves things along at a brisk pace, even using that 'flash forward' technique that's a staple of his Lone Star Westerns featuring John Wayne during the same era. Brown might not have been as handsome as that other young John, but he still manages to get the girl (Helen Ericson) at the end of the picture. He got to kiss her again for the third time!
bkoganbing
The Courageous Avenger casts Johnny Mack Brown as an express agent investigating a series of gold shipment robberies that occur in the desert. Shipments take the desert trail, but they never return and often drivers and guards are found dead. Brown has a personal interest because the last driver killed was the brother of his girl friend Helen Erickson.There's an inside man who is getting word to his confederates on the desert by an old tried and true method which I will not reveal, it's half of the story. In addition though these guys have another racket going. Out there on the desert these outlaws have found a silver mine and they waylay travelers on the desert to work as slave labor in said mine. They make silver bullets to use which sure does mark their victims, but also gives them away. Not like they're the Lone Ranger who's a good guy or they're hunting werewolves and really need those bullets. Why not just go into town and get the regular lead kind? Interesting gimmick, but kind of dumb when you analyze it.The Courageous Avenger has however got an exciting climax where Brown rounds up the whole gang with a nice chase scene through the desert where some good stunt work is featured. It's not a great film, but passable enough entertainment.
FightingWesterner
Lawman Johnny Mack Brown is called in to hunt down a gang of cutthroats who rob gold shipments as they pass through the desert, murdering the escorts with silver bullets. In a bizarre twist, the baddies own a silver mine in which they force a handful of scrawny men to work as slaves!A standard-issue Saturday matinée B-western, this is straight-forward and pleasant enough entertainment for fans of the genre. Brown's always a good hero, the heavies extremely nasty, and leading lady Helen Erickson extremely good-looking!Filled with great cinematography, Courageous Avenger features some breathtaking rocky desert scenery that add to the film's atmosphere, as do the scenes of the creepy, half-crazed old men chained to a spinning wheel. They look as if they belong in a 1930's zombie movie!