Rangers of Fortune (1940) Poster

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6/10
Trio western on a bigger budget.
bkoganbing20 April 2015
Around the time Rangers Of Fortune was made by Paramount hero trio westerns were a big deal with such folks as the Three Mesquiteers, the Rangebusters, the Roughriders all competing for those Saturday afternoon dimes. Not to mention the most famous of all Hopalong Cassidy which was being produced at the Paramount studios at the time this film came out. Somebody made a decision to do one for a slightly bigger budget with one of their top male stars in the lead.

Fred MacMurray who was most famously quoted as saying that he never felt comfortable in westerns because 'the horse and I were never one' stars with Gilbert Roland and Albert Dekker as a trio not much for law and order and freshly fleeing from some Mexican Rurales over the border, become three gallant knights ridding a Texas border town of some outlaws terrorizing new settlers. No one knows who is doing this or why.

MacMurray and Roland are their usual selves. Dekker was quite a revelation in a part that first call would have gone to Warren Hymer. Patricia Morison who recently turned a 100 years young has all the men in town trying to win her except Albert Dekker. Dick Foran is over from Warner Brothers as an eager young settler. Joseph Schildkraut is the elegant owner of the local saloon.

The copy of Rangers Of Fortune I saw on YouTube shows this film is in sore need of restoration. It's worthy enough to be saved if for nothing else than one unusual Albert Dekker.
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Agreeable minor western with classy personnel.
Mozjoukine11 August 2004
At the end of the long run as an MGM contract director, Sam Wood with GOODBYE MR. CHIPS and NIGHT AT THE OPERA on his C.V., found himself doing a B western. That must have been a shock but he had a first rate cast, Dietrich's musician and Ernst Lubitsch's camera man along, so he got stuck into what proved to be an entertaining minor production moved away from the expected cowboy action - note the shift from dramatic to comedy at the end of the big shoot out.

Drifters McMurray, Dekker (doing dumb comic) and Roland battle villain Schildkraut, with Patricia Morrison for female interest. We could have done without the moppet but the mounting is expert and the cast comfortably superior to their material.
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4/10
Clichés, above and beyond the western, make this more famine than fortune.
mark.waltz1 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
When it is the romantic storyline in a western film that ends up being the most memorable part of the plot, that's a major issue. That's not to say that westerns shouldn't have romance, but they should not advertise the adventure aspect over the romantic aspect. There is intrigue as far as ruthless lawmakers running the show and three strangers in town trying to expose the villains, but the three men (Fred MacMurray, Gilbert Roland and Albert Dekker) aren't exacting law-abiding citizens either, being caught stealing from innocent settlers. They turn out to be fairly decent, however, with MacMurray romancing the pretty Patricia Morison whose younger sister (Betty Brewer) has an obvious crush on him even though she's only 13. The confrontation with the villains leaves one of the major characters dead which in the shadow of World War II travesties must have been pretty horrifying to audiences.

The major issue is the fact that the available print seems to be more of a negative copy than a positive print, giving the impression that everything is set at night. The darkness of it makes it very difficult to watch. Even in the dullest of poverty row westerns, the outdoor scenery is always one of the highlights. Where the romance takes over the political intrigue of Schildkraut's domination is a tender scene where MacMurray shows Morison how to play the piano. Brewer tends to talk a bit too much and too fast, making her sometimes a little hard to tolerate. MacMurray's confrontation with Joseph Schildkraut is chilling, however, with Schildkraut giving an outstanding performance, delivering a monologue of his motives that reveals a lot of layers. If only the rest of the story was as real.
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8/10
Good classical western
searchanddestroy-130 October 2022
Well, nothing special to say about this western from director Sam Wood, where a trio of leads are in charge of the entertaining job. This not Sam Wood's best picture, not his most famous, maybe because the topic is so predictable, with good guys vs villains whom they want to get a small town rid off. If you search something unusual, some surprise, forget this film, despite its obvious quality in directing and acting. Very forties in its film making and acting, I mean you did not find such schemes in the fifties. In the forties, there were many westerns involving a group of "good" guys, and rarely lonesome heroes. And among those pals, there was usually one of them "worst" than the others. So, to summarize, that's a good western for die hard fans of the genre, that's all.
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