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Twilight in the Sierras

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Wikipedia article




' Twilight in the Sierras ' is a 1950 American Trucolor Western film directed by William Witney and starring Roy Rogers and his horse Trigger (billed in the film's opening credits as the "Smartest Horse in the Movies"), along with Dale Evans, Estelita Rodriguez, and Pat Brady.Credits transcribed from a recorded broadcast of 'Twilight in the Sierras' presented on Grit TV on August 9, 2018; television network is a subsidiary of Katz Broadcasting, E. W. Scripps Company, Cincinnati, Ohio.

Plot



Ricardo Chavez is a convicted counterfeiter, who after serving time in a California prison, is released on parole to work on a ranch, as he begins his new law-abiding life. The reformed criminal, however, is soon abducted by a gang of outlaws and blackmailed to engrave printing plates to make counterfeit currency for Matt Brunner. Brunner is secretly the gang's leader, but presents himself in public as only the owner of a Morongo Valley hunting lodge. Although Ricardo now wants to pursue an honest life and forget his criminal past, Brunner threatens to harm or kill his sister Lola if he refuses to do the illegal work. Roy Rogers is Ricardo's parole officer, and with the help of Pat Callahan, a female deputy sheriff (Dale Evans), Roy uncovers the counterfeiting operation while clearing himself of a false murder charge, saves Ricardo and Lola, and defeats the gang.

Cast



* Roy Rogers as State Parole Officer Roy Rogers

* Trigger as Trigger, Roy's horse

* Dale Evans as Deputy Sheriff Pat Callahan

* Estelita Rodriguez as Lola Chavez

* Pat Brady as Dr. Sparrow Bliffle DVM

* Russ Vincent as Ricardo Chavez

* George Meeker as Matt Brunner

* Fred Kohler, Jr. as Mason, Brunner henchman

* Edward Keane as Judge Wiggins

* House Peters Jr. as Jim Williams

* Pierce Lyden as Blake, Brunner henchman

* Don Frost as bartender

* Joseph A. Garro as Brunner henchman

* William F. Leicester as Clifford (as William Lester)

* Foy Willing as Foy

* Harry Strang as Sheriff Callahan (uncredited)

Production notes



*'Twilight in the Sierras' was filmed in less than four weeks, between mid-September and early October 1949.[http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/20904/Twilight-in-the-Sierras/original-print-info.html "Original Print Information"], 'Twilight in the Sierras', Turner Classic Movies (TCM), Turner Broadcasting System, a subsidiary of Time Warner, Inc., New York, N.Y. Retrieved August 14, 2018.

*The exterior scenes for 'Twilight in the Sierras' were filmed at the 500-acre Iverson Movie Ranch in Chatsworth, Los Angeles, located in the northwestern part of California's San Fernando Valley.[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0041997/ "Twilight in the Sierras (1950)"], Internet Movie Database (IMDb), a subsidiary of Amazon, Seattle, Washington. Retrieved August 17, 2018.

*By 1950, Estelita Rodriguez had become a familiar face to theatergoers attending Roy Rogers' films. Republic Pictures between 1945 and 1951 cast her in nine productions with the "King of the Cowboys". 'Twilight in the Sierras' is the sixth film of those nine.[https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/PersonDetails/49111 "Filmography"] of Estelita Rodriguez, catalog of the American Film Institute (AFI), Los Angeles, California. Retrieved August 16, 2018.

*As in some of Rogers' earlier films and later on his weekly TV show, 'Twilight in the Sierras' is thematically and stylistically an anachronistic blend of Hollywood's portrayal of the American Wild West of the 1870s with contemporary America of the 1940s-1950s, complete with electric lights, telephones, radios, and other modern conveniences. Horses and wagons remain the principal means of conveyance in 'Twilight in the Sierras', though cars, trucks, and buses are periodically in scenes; the good guys and bad guys shoot it out with classic cowboy six-shot Colt revolvers and lever-action Winchesters instead of using far more effective, up-to-date weapons, such as semiautomatic pistols and submachine guns. In its 1950 review of 'Twilight in the Sierras', the popular trade paper 'Variety' noted this selective use of the old with the new, describing the films plot as "a curious mixture of modern gangsterism in wild west dress which the kids most likely won't mind or even notice.""Herm." (1950). [https://archive.org/stream/variety178-1950-04#page/n5 "Twilight in the Sierras"], film review, 'Variety' (New York, N.Y.), April 5, 1950, page 6; Internet Archive, San Francisco, California. Retrieved August 16, 2018.

Reception



Reviewers in 1950 generally found 'Twilight in the Sierras' predictable but entertaining, especially for Republic Picture's targeted younger or "juve" (juvenile) audiences. 'Variety' commented about such targeting as part of its own assessment of the production:

Another widely read trade paper in 1950, 'Motion Picture Daily', echoed 'Variety's comments regarding the standardized appeal of Rogers' films. The New York-based paper cites in its review the ingredients in 'Twilight in the Sierras' that made it yet another successful addition to the ongoing series of films by the King of the Cowboys. "Roy Rogers", reports 'Motion Picture Daily', "gives his fans just about everything in this Trucolor Western complete with perfect hero, dastardly villains, much suspense, a mountain lion, and singing cowboys."[https://archive.org/stream/motionpicturedai67unse_0#page/n9 "'Twilight in the Sierras]'", review, 'Motion Picture Daily' (New York, N.Y.), April 5, 1950, page 3. Internet Archive. Retrieved September 20, 2018.

References and notes




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