Somewhere in Sonora


59m 1933
Somewhere in Sonora

Brief Synopsis

A young cowhand gets roped into the outlaw's life when he's falsely accused of a crime.

Film Details

Genre
Western
Release Date
May 27, 1933
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Vitagraph, Inc.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Somewhere in Sonora by Will Levington Comfort (Boston, 1925).

Technical Specs

Duration
59m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
5,318ft (6 reels)

Synopsis

Cowhand John Bishop is wrongly accused of cheating during a rodeo in Arizona but is befriended by Bob Leadly, who manages to free him from jail. In gratitude, John goes to Sonora to find Leadly's son Bart, who is thought to be a member of Monte Black's gang of bandits. John is accompanied by Riley and Shorty, his two friends. On the way, John rescues Mary Burton from a runaway horse team, and after learning that she is on the way to visit her father, who operates a silver mine near Sonora, Mexico, he escorts her and her friend, Patsy Ellis, to the Burton ranch. During an attempt to find Bart, John is captured by the bandits, but pretends to be a bandit himself, joining the gang. While enduring a series of tests by the gang, he continually mentions the town of Twin Falls, thus letting Bart know that he is a friend. Black plans a raid on Burton's mining operation, but suspicious of John and Bart, the gang leaves them behind to guard the horses while they conduct the raid. Prevented from warning his friends, John sends his horse, Duke, to ring the warning bell. Meanwhile, he and Bart loosen the horses' saddles to hinder the bandits' getaway. John and Bart hide in the hills, sending Duke to bring help. The Mexican authorities, led by Mary, arrive just in time, and Mary greets John with a warm embrace.

Film Details

Genre
Western
Release Date
May 27, 1933
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Vitagraph, Inc.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Somewhere in Sonora by Will Levington Comfort (Boston, 1925).

Technical Specs

Duration
59m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
5,318ft (6 reels)

Articles

Somewhere In Sonora


Between The Big Trail (1930), an early widescreen effort that gave John Wayne his first big role, and Stagecoach (1939), Wayne cut his teeth in Hollywood by starring in more horse operas, as the low-budget western quickies were called, than most people have probably ever seen. Born in 1907 as Marion Morrison, in Winterset, Iowa, he quickly eschewed his Christian name in favor of "Duke," the name given the family dog, beating out Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade's revelation of the same for its hero by some seven-plus decades. Calling himself Duke Morrison, he even managed to get a credit under that name at least once, in 1929's Words and Music. When Raoul Walsh and Fox Studios boss Winfield Sheehan hashed out a new name for Morrison, finally deciding on the name now synonymous with the American western hero, Wayne couldn't have been more thrilled. He'd never have to worry about being called "Marion" again.

The reason Walsh and Sheehan were keen on giving him a new name was because Walsh wanted him to star in the aforementioned The Big Trail and "Marion Morrison" seemed dull and not very star-like. Unfortunately for all concerned, The Big Trail bombed. Fortunately for Wayne, everyone liked him and he began to get part after part, from small ones in bigger pictures to lead roles in those horse operas he spent the decade doing. One of those was Somewhere in Sonora (1930) and, though it took place in the present day of 1933, had all the earmarks of an exciting western.

The movie takes place out west, way out west, in California. A couple of ladies, Mary (Shirley Palmer) and Patsy (Ann Fay), are headed out to a ranch to trade in their car for a horse. Why? Well, let's just say that horse operas didn't spend a lot of time explaining things and Somewhere in Sonora is no exception. They're on their way to get that horse when Patsy sees a sign for a rodeo and proceeds to pronounce it ROE-dee-oh, just as most people were already pronouncing it by the thirties. Either the screenwriter or director had it in their mind that this was the movie that was going to remind everyone that the proper way to pronounce it was roe-DAY-oh because Mary quickly gives Patsy an abject lesson in proper pronunciation. From that point on, everyone, including old grizzled farmhands, says roe-DAY-oh, which, to modern ears and eyes, sounds and looks a little peculiar.

When Mary and Patsy arrive they're quickly greeted by Mr. Leadly (Henry B. Walthall) who introduces them to his star ranch hand, John Bishop (John Wayne), who's busy doing lasso tricks next to his horse, Duke (yes, the horse's name is "Duke" and he's billed on the opening title screen with Wayne). John introduces himself and Mary already seems a little taken. When prodded to stay on for the rodeo, she and Patsy quickly agree. John will be doing a stagecoach race and before the race starts, someone removes a bolt from his opponent's wheel, which eventually leads to the wheel falling off and the stagecoach crashing. At this point, in keeping with the horse opera tradition of "keep things moving and explain nothing," the sheriff arrests John Bishop because, well, why not? After all, he was in the race with him, right? And he wanted to win, right? So why wouldn't he sabotage his opponent's stagecoach? And what's the law against sabotaging a stagecoach to win a race? Well, the movie's not really sure either so when John gets arrested, the sheriff is asked this very question and answers, "We'll draw up charges later."

This leads to Leadly wanting to break Bishop out with the help of his inept ranch hands Riley and Shorty, played by old hand comedic sidekicks Frank Rice and Billy Franey, respectively. And all of this happens very early in the story because when a movie runs less than sixty minutes, as many of Wayne's early movies did, it's important to get things such as exposition and character development settled and out of the way as early as possible. The benefit of this, and having plot lines that make little to no sense, is that entertainment is at a high premium and the pacing is ferocious.

Low budget quickies like this don't have the reputation they deserve. They were often a lot more entertaining and adventurous than the big studio offerings of the day. Things that signify realism today, like filming on location instead of a studio set, happened routinely and just watching Mary and Patsy drive in a real car on a real road instead of in front of a rear-projection screen, gives the movie a more modern-day feel. The short running time also enables a movie that operates almost exclusively on action instead of backstory. These movies were meant to entertain the masses and entertain they did.

More importantly, they were filled with talent. John Wayne, of course, became a huge star, one of the biggest in history, and here, in his early career, the charisma that would serve him well for decades is already apparent. Other actors, like Henry Walthall, were old pros, making hundreds of movies in their careers. Walthall became most famous, early in his acting career, as Ben Cameron in D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation (1915).

Somewhere in Sonora isn't the kind of movie that's meant to move or enlighten the viewer. Its existence isn't hinged upon charming the critics or wooing the festival crowds (which didn't exist at that time anyway). No, Somewhere in Sonora is about action, adventure, and good old-fashioned horse opera entertainment. And giving horses second billing. And, of course, how to properly say "Rodeo."

Director: Mack V. Wright
Producer: Leon Schlesinger, Sid Rogell
Screenplay: Joseph Anthony Roach (based on a story by Will Levington Comfort)
Cinematography: Ted D. McCord
Music: Leo F. Forbstein
Film Editor: William Clemens
Stunts: Jack Hendricks
Cast: John Wayne (John Bishop), Duke (Duke - John's Horse), Henry B. Walthall (Bob Leadly), Shirley Palmer (Mary Burton), Ann Faye (Patsy Ellis), J.P. McGowan (Monte Black), Paul Fix (Bart Leadly), Ralph Lewis (Mr. Kelly Burton), Frank Rice (Riley), Billy Franey (Shorty)

By Greg Ferrara

SOURCES:

Wikipedia
IMDB
Somewhere In Sonora

Somewhere In Sonora

Between The Big Trail (1930), an early widescreen effort that gave John Wayne his first big role, and Stagecoach (1939), Wayne cut his teeth in Hollywood by starring in more horse operas, as the low-budget western quickies were called, than most people have probably ever seen. Born in 1907 as Marion Morrison, in Winterset, Iowa, he quickly eschewed his Christian name in favor of "Duke," the name given the family dog, beating out Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade's revelation of the same for its hero by some seven-plus decades. Calling himself Duke Morrison, he even managed to get a credit under that name at least once, in 1929's Words and Music. When Raoul Walsh and Fox Studios boss Winfield Sheehan hashed out a new name for Morrison, finally deciding on the name now synonymous with the American western hero, Wayne couldn't have been more thrilled. He'd never have to worry about being called "Marion" again. The reason Walsh and Sheehan were keen on giving him a new name was because Walsh wanted him to star in the aforementioned The Big Trail and "Marion Morrison" seemed dull and not very star-like. Unfortunately for all concerned, The Big Trail bombed. Fortunately for Wayne, everyone liked him and he began to get part after part, from small ones in bigger pictures to lead roles in those horse operas he spent the decade doing. One of those was Somewhere in Sonora (1930) and, though it took place in the present day of 1933, had all the earmarks of an exciting western. The movie takes place out west, way out west, in California. A couple of ladies, Mary (Shirley Palmer) and Patsy (Ann Fay), are headed out to a ranch to trade in their car for a horse. Why? Well, let's just say that horse operas didn't spend a lot of time explaining things and Somewhere in Sonora is no exception. They're on their way to get that horse when Patsy sees a sign for a rodeo and proceeds to pronounce it ROE-dee-oh, just as most people were already pronouncing it by the thirties. Either the screenwriter or director had it in their mind that this was the movie that was going to remind everyone that the proper way to pronounce it was roe-DAY-oh because Mary quickly gives Patsy an abject lesson in proper pronunciation. From that point on, everyone, including old grizzled farmhands, says roe-DAY-oh, which, to modern ears and eyes, sounds and looks a little peculiar. When Mary and Patsy arrive they're quickly greeted by Mr. Leadly (Henry B. Walthall) who introduces them to his star ranch hand, John Bishop (John Wayne), who's busy doing lasso tricks next to his horse, Duke (yes, the horse's name is "Duke" and he's billed on the opening title screen with Wayne). John introduces himself and Mary already seems a little taken. When prodded to stay on for the rodeo, she and Patsy quickly agree. John will be doing a stagecoach race and before the race starts, someone removes a bolt from his opponent's wheel, which eventually leads to the wheel falling off and the stagecoach crashing. At this point, in keeping with the horse opera tradition of "keep things moving and explain nothing," the sheriff arrests John Bishop because, well, why not? After all, he was in the race with him, right? And he wanted to win, right? So why wouldn't he sabotage his opponent's stagecoach? And what's the law against sabotaging a stagecoach to win a race? Well, the movie's not really sure either so when John gets arrested, the sheriff is asked this very question and answers, "We'll draw up charges later." This leads to Leadly wanting to break Bishop out with the help of his inept ranch hands Riley and Shorty, played by old hand comedic sidekicks Frank Rice and Billy Franey, respectively. And all of this happens very early in the story because when a movie runs less than sixty minutes, as many of Wayne's early movies did, it's important to get things such as exposition and character development settled and out of the way as early as possible. The benefit of this, and having plot lines that make little to no sense, is that entertainment is at a high premium and the pacing is ferocious. Low budget quickies like this don't have the reputation they deserve. They were often a lot more entertaining and adventurous than the big studio offerings of the day. Things that signify realism today, like filming on location instead of a studio set, happened routinely and just watching Mary and Patsy drive in a real car on a real road instead of in front of a rear-projection screen, gives the movie a more modern-day feel. The short running time also enables a movie that operates almost exclusively on action instead of backstory. These movies were meant to entertain the masses and entertain they did. More importantly, they were filled with talent. John Wayne, of course, became a huge star, one of the biggest in history, and here, in his early career, the charisma that would serve him well for decades is already apparent. Other actors, like Henry Walthall, were old pros, making hundreds of movies in their careers. Walthall became most famous, early in his acting career, as Ben Cameron in D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation (1915). Somewhere in Sonora isn't the kind of movie that's meant to move or enlighten the viewer. Its existence isn't hinged upon charming the critics or wooing the festival crowds (which didn't exist at that time anyway). No, Somewhere in Sonora is about action, adventure, and good old-fashioned horse opera entertainment. And giving horses second billing. And, of course, how to properly say "Rodeo." Director: Mack V. Wright Producer: Leon Schlesinger, Sid Rogell Screenplay: Joseph Anthony Roach (based on a story by Will Levington Comfort) Cinematography: Ted D. McCord Music: Leo F. Forbstein Film Editor: William Clemens Stunts: Jack Hendricks Cast: John Wayne (John Bishop), Duke (Duke - John's Horse), Henry B. Walthall (Bob Leadly), Shirley Palmer (Mary Burton), Ann Faye (Patsy Ellis), J.P. McGowan (Monte Black), Paul Fix (Bart Leadly), Ralph Lewis (Mr. Kelly Burton), Frank Rice (Riley), Billy Franey (Shorty) By Greg Ferrara SOURCES: Wikipedia IMDB

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Will Levington Comfort's novel was serialized in The Saturday Evening Post 22 November-November 29, 1924, when it was entitled Somewhere South in Sonora. Publicity material indicates that some of the scenes were shot on location in Sonora, CA. The story was previously filmed by First National in 1927, starring Ken Maynard (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1921-30; F2.5233).

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1933

Released in United States 1933