The Lone Ranger (1938) Poster

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7/10
Hi-Yo Silver...awayyyy!
bsmith555212 February 2004
Warning: Spoilers
"The Lone Ranger" is one of Republic Pictures most famous serials partly due to the fact that it has largely been unavailable for many years. A more or less complete copy (at approximately 240 minutes) has surfaced recently complete with new title cards (for the chapter intros). The picture quality is not the best but it is nonetheless watchable, does not have any subtitles and includes the unmasking scene in Chapter 15.

The story starts out with Captain Smith (Stanley Andrews), the leader of a Quantrill's Raiders type of gang following the Civil War, assuming the identity of the murdered Colonel Jeffries (Forbes Murray), who has been sent by Washington as a financial administrator to collect taxes. Shortly thereafter "Jeffries" men ambush and wipe out a company of Texas Rangers (led by Edmund Cobb) who are returning from the war to restore order to Texas. All but one that is and you know who that is.

An indian named Tonto (Chief Thundercloud) finds the wounded ranger and nurses him back to health. The ranger vows to avenge his comrades and names himself The Lone Ranger. The Lone Ranger is joined by four other patriots and they form an alliance of five rangers (Hal Taliaferro, Herman Brix, Lee Powell, Lane Chandler, George Letz) against Jeffries and his gang which include among others, veteran bad guys John Merton, Tom London, Charles King and Bud Osborne. Blanchard (George Cleveland) along with his daughter Joan (Lynn Roberts) arrives from Washington to take over as governor but is imprisoned by Jeffries. Father McKim (William Farnum) works closely with The Lone Ranger and Blanchard.

Over the course of the 15 chapters the rangers die heroically one by one until only one remains. His identity is kept secret until the final chapter.

This serial benefited from having been directed by Republic's crack action team of William Witney and John English and the expert stunt work of Yakima Canutt (with his famous "falling off the team of horses under the wagon" stunt) and Bill and Joe Yrigoren among others. The action is non-stop and the stunts are breath taking. In the 30s, most action pictures had the luxury of large casts and this shows in the large number of bad guys and ranchers that appear. The Lone Ranger spends much of his time galloping back and forth across the same valley yelling Hi-Yo Silver!

Some trivia:

Stanley Andrews would go on to play ironically enough, "The Old Ranger" on the long running TV series "Death Valley Days".

Lynn Roberts also acted under the name of Mary Hart (no not THAT Mary Hart).

William Farnum's career dated back to the early days of silents. He starred in "The Spoilers" (1914) and was a major star in the 20s.

George Cleveland is probably best remembered for playing "Gramps" on the original "Lassie" TV series starring Tommy Rettig.

Hal Taliaferro had been a series western star under the name of Wally Wales.

Herman Brix became Bruce Bennett and enjoyed a lengthy career as a character actor (eg "The Treasure of Sierra Madre").

Lee Powell's career fizzled out after this film and he was killed in action in WWII in 1944.

George Letz changed his name to George Montgomery and starred in westerns and action films for many years. He was also an excellent craftsman and made furniture for the rich and famous after his career in movies ended.

Chief Thundercloud, whose real name was Victor Daniels was the only member of the cast to reprise his role in the sequel,"The Lone Ranger Rides Again" (1939).

John Merton, Republic's stock villain of the 30's and early 40s was the father of Lane Bradford who also had a career as a villain for many years.
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6/10
Top of the Line Serial - The Lone Ranger
arthur_tafero25 March 2022
Contrary to what my friend from Italy thinks, the Lone Ranger is not a bank official. He calls him the Loan Arranger. Sorry about that. This is a fairly good serial installment on the origin of the Lone Ranger. Although I prefer the TV version, this one is not too bad. I particularly liked the savage methodology of the antagonist, who mercilessly kills anyone who stands in his way. This type of behavior was not possible to be seen on the TV show, where everyone was "winged" (shot in the shoulder) I believe the Lone Ranger and Tonto must have been winged a dozen times or so. Fun to watch.
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10/10
My favorite serial.
jimandbarb5 September 2000
This is simply the best serial ever made and it's a crying shame that the original print has been lost (or destroyed as some claim). It was filmed at Lone Pine, Ca., the perfect location for the perfect serial. The 1940 condensation "Hi Yo Silver" is too short, leaving out many key elements, but for dyed in the wool fans of the original its better than nothing.

My copy of the serial is pretty ragged, with Spanish subtitles, but I understand is the only copy available. Too bad. This serial is what all serials should be and seldom are.
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A Film That Cries Out for Restoration
Shield-320 March 2001
"The Lone Ranger" is yet another classic from the Republic thrill factory, one of the best serials ever. It has fine acting (for a serial, anyway), exciting action, thrilling music, and a clever and intelligent plot. Part of the fun is that, unlike most films of this genre, the villain is well-known; the characters (and audience) have to figure out which of the five male leads is the masked Lone Ranger.

I wish I could say "The Lone Ranger" was as exciting to watch as other classic serials as "Spy Smasher" or "Adventures of Captain Marvel," but... unfortunately, due to the serial's divergence from the official Lone Ranger image, most copies were apparently destroyed. My public-domain copy is pieced together from Mexican and French copies, and rendered almost unwatchable by poor picture quality, Spanish subtitles from the Mexican prints, and horrible dubbing in the French prints. The overall effect of the film's state makes it almost unwatchable, but the sheer quality of the movie itself somehow manages to shine through.

If ever there were a film that richly deserves all the benefits of a full restoration, this is it: digital remastering, a new audio track, this serial needs it all!

Somebody needs to come to the Lone Ranger's rescue!
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4/10
The Lone Ranger Shell Game
bkoganbing13 August 2008
It never ceases to amaze me the historical variations that our movies, but especially those old time serials would have us believe. This one has Texas out of the Civil War when in fact General Richard Taylor's army there was the last to surrender. In any event Reconstruction has come to Texas and Abraham Lincoln has started it.

Frank McGlyn is once again Abraham Lincoln has appointed a tax collector for the reconquered Texas. But bandit Stanley Andrews has hit upon a real moneymaker of a scheme. He captures and kills the real tax collector and assumes his identity. Then the bandits start collecting in earnest.

When Andrews massacres a group of reconstituted Texas Rangers the story of how Tonto played by Chief Thundercloud rescues the lone survivor comes into play. The gimmick here though is that there are five guys any one of them could be the real Lone Ranger.

In the television series the Ranger often dropped the white outfit and the mask and used disguises as an undercover method of law enforcement. He was primarily masked though. Here he walks around like Don Diego de la Vega, but when trouble comes he dons the mask more like in the Zorro tradition. And we never see Tonto in the serial except when he's riding with the Ranger.

Not till the last chapter do we learn who the Lone Ranger is. The others keep getting themselves killed and they are eliminated one by one. Like overturning the shells at a carnival sideshow to find the elusive pea.

The assassination of Lincoln is worked in as George Cleveland is sent to investigate the Texas situation as to why there still is so much unrest in Texas. His mission gets good and compromised by John Wilkes Booth.

I saw an abbreviated version of the serial and it's as silly as most of those serials back in the day were. I'll take my Lone Ranger straightforward thank you.
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One of the Best Serials made...
JRobert23 October 1998
."The Lone Ranger"....with Lee Powell starring along with other "Rangers"& ,you do not know who really is the masked man, until the final chapter...! But there are great production sequences of action and suspense...throughout each episode. Republic Pictures Studio knew how to make the Serials that moved fast and offered realistic action. This 15-minute super-serial has been "lost" until now, and hard-core fan-collectors could only hope that a good original print could be found and offered to the public on Video.. now if only it could be colorized...and done correctly! But... It's a winner the way it still is today!
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HI Ho Silver.... Away
vipor-1891623 January 2021
This was a good serial about a sheriff of the old west getting shot and becoming The Lone Ranger, a fighter of evil.

The picture quality wasnt that great but it was watchable, and there was even some WWE movies in there before WWE. There was a John Cena Attitude Adjustment and a Randy Orton RKO.

The story wasnt as exciting as it would have been in the 30's but it was pretty decent.
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