Westward Bound (1944) Poster

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7/10
better than average
tomquick15 March 2009
By the 1940's the format for the 3 pals western was pretty well set, and here we have the Trailblazers. The budget values are pretty apparent, especially some stock footage of Steele at the beginning riding down a dirt road past telephone poles. The actors don't even bother with stage names.

The action is good. Battlin' Bob and Maynard each go more than a few rounds. Even Hoot Gibson does a little fighting. The shtick with him throwing lit dynamite at the villains reminds me a lot of Walter Brennan's turn in Rio Bravo. Both Hoot and Walter were getting up there in years, cackling away and neither very flexible anymore.

At 50 minutes in length, this was intended for Saturday afternoon matinée filler. It interests me how much these B westerns presage TV drama. The target audience has a short attention span, and are shocked into alertness every five minutes with some kind of a racket - shooting, galloping, fighting, whatever. These films create a mood. The plot and acting are incidental. While this one is a lot like all the rest, I think it's better than average as a mindless Saturday afternoon trip down memory lane.
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Only Mildly Interesting at Best
Snow Leopard12 December 2002
This Western is too slow-moving and routine to be more than mildly interesting. It did have some potential, but it doesn't deliver more than an occasional good moment, and it just doesn't give you a lot of reasons to pay close attention.

It is set in the Montana territory, where a gang of politicians and other lowlifes has been using intimidation and legal tricks in an attempt to force some ranchers off of their land. As the movie begins, the ranchers call in the Trailblazers (Ken Maynard, Hoot Gibson, and Bob Steele) to match wits and fists with the bad guys. Quite a bit actually happens after that, but it never really seems to hit high gear. All three Trailblazers are likable, but here they lack energy most of the time, and neither they nor the crooks ever make you believe that they care all that much about what is going on. As a result, it's at best only a mildly interesting movie.
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3/10
When Montana becomes a state.....................
bkoganbing17 July 2017
Perennial western villain Harry Woods intends to make a killing when Montana territory becomes a state which would date this film for 1889. He's got a grip on the territorial government and he's looking to force ranchers off their property one way or another.

But he doesn't reckon on the arrival of a trio of cowboy heroes, in this case The Trailblazers who are Bob Steele and a pair of silent screen heroes Hoot Gibson and Ken Maynard.

Whether it's Hopalong Cassidy and his two sidekicks or the Three Mesquiteers on down to the Range Busters, Rough Riders and now the Trailblazers for Monogram the formula is pretty well set.

Both Gibson and Maynard had seen better days in the saddle and didn't look to involved. As for Steele he was counting the days between some appearances in items like The Big Sleep where he really scored well.

For hard core B western fans only.
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4/10
A state of taxation.
mark.waltz11 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
In the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "Oklahoma!", all of the characters were singing at the end about their enthusiasm of their territory finally becoming a stage, and after seeing this movie, which came out the year after that hit show opened on Broadway, you wonder if those people would be singing so enthusiastically if they went through what the people of Montana here go through. All of the local ranchers are considering moving back east when they discover that their taxes have risen, and even using a free water way to graze their cattle will cost them money.

To keep these people in line, the local politician, Harry Woods, hires law enforcement officer Ken Maynard but when it's obvious that he's going to side with the ranchers, Woods decides to set him up for murder, having conveniently forgotten to swear him in. But Maynard has a secret he's keeping from Woods and the ranchers which includes Hoot Gibson, Bob Steele and Betty Miles, just as tough as any of the male ranchers. Pretty decent for the most part, this has the usual amount of cases, gunfights and the ultimate showdown between good and evil where are you know that everything's going to turn out just fine, but it's the wondering how that keeps the viewer intrigued. A standard B Western that follows patterns of many others that have come before and would come after, no better or worse, most importantly the later.
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