Gold Raiders
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Edward Bernds
George O'brien
Moe Howard
Shemp Howard
Larry Fine
Sheila Ryan
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Traveling peddlers Moe and Shemp Howard and Larry Fine witness ex-marshal George O'Brien being shot at by bandits. Fearing that the peddlers will identify them, the bandits flee. The peddlers approach George, who has only fallen from his horse and is uninjured, and the group decides to ride together to the next town, Red Mesa. There, George reports the ambush to the sheriff and then introduces himself as an insurance agent selling policies to guarantee gold shipment deliveries. The nervous sheriff, having failed to deter the bandits himself, encourages local miner John Sawyer to take out a policy on his next shipment. At Sawyer's suggestion, George hires Laura Mason as his clerk and Sandy Evans, Sawyer's nephew and the foreman of his mine, to assist with protection. Meanwhile, the peddlers attempt to sell their faulty wares to an unsuspecting crowd at the local saloon. When they try to prove the miraculous powers of a $1 pair of glasses by reading off an eye chart they have memorized, the crowd discovers the hoax and a fight ensues. George, hearing the ruckus, rushes to the saloon and subdues their detractors and then hires Moe, Shemp and Larry to assist him with the next shipment. After drawing a map, George explains that the peddlers will conceal the gold in their wagon and take the main road to Red Mesa while he tricks the outlaws into believing that the gold is being transported by the back road. George, suspicious of crooked saloon owner Taggart, tells the peddlers to go to the saloon and broadcast that George will be escorting the gold the following day. Back at the insurance office, Laura accepts her alcoholic grandfather Doc Mason's promise to stop drinking, a condition of his new job as George's medical examiner. She then makes a list of things he needs to purchase for the job, accidentally using the back of the map. With the allowance Laura has given him, Doc visits the saloon to pay his past debt, but is unable to resist the offer of a drink from Utah, the bartender. Utah then demands Doc pay his past bill and Doc, now drunk, empties the contents of his pockets, including the map, onto the saloon counter. Taggart spots the map and deduces George's ruse. On the day of the shipment, George and a posse ride the back trail as planned, while Moe, Shemp, Larry and Sandy take the main road to Red Mesa. When only four bandits attack George's posse, George, suspecting a fake ruse, orders his men to hurry to the main road. Meanwhile, Taggart's men ambush Sandy and the peddlers, wounding Sandy in the attack. Fearing for their lives, Moe, Shemp and Larry pull off the road and hide behind some nearby boulders. When the bandits approach, the trio throws exploding trick cigars at them, making the bandits think armed men surround them. Soon after, George and his men arrive and drive away the outlaws. The town's mine operators, impressed by George's skill, line up at his office to take out insurance policies. After Sawyer and the peddlers assure George they did not alert Taggart to their plan, Laura realizes that Doc might be to blame. Under questioning, Doc admits to Laura that he was drinking and, when he cannot find the list, Laura deduces the map was on the same piece of paper. She immediately goes to the saloon and rifles through Taggart's office desk, but Taggart interrupts. When Laura holds him at gunpoint and demands the map be returned, Taggart wrestles her for the weapon. Alerted by Laura's screams, George runs into the office, overpowers Taggart and escapes with Laura. In the months that follow, George and his men squelch the bandits' attacks and hide the gold in the local jail to protect it from the bandits. One day, however, Taggart coerces Doc into revealing the gold's location by threatening to hurt Laura. Later Doc, wracked with guilt because of his betrayal, hides out at home. Worried about his health, George visits Doc, unaware that three of Taggart's men are spying on the house. When the bandits break into the house to capture George, they find that he is already out cold, seemingly dealt a blow by Doc. Doc then goes to the jail and holds Sandy and several other men guarding the gold at gun point, while the bandits take the gold to the saloon. Unknown to the outlaws, Doc is in league with George, who is waiting at the saloon to capture them. A shootout ensues at the saloon and after Taggart runs out of ammunition, George subdues him with his fists. Stupefied by George's fighting skill, the peddlers attempt a variety of punches on each other. Later, George leaves town, promising Laura, Doc and the sheriff to return soon, while the peddlers jump in the back of their moving wagon and wave goodbye, suddenly realizing that the wagon has no driver.
Director
Edward Bernds
Cast
George O'brien
Moe Howard
Shemp Howard
Larry Fine
Sheila Ryan
Clem Bevans
Lyle Talbot
Monte Blue
Fuzzy Knight
Hugh Hooker
John Merton
Remy Paquet
Andre Adoree
Roy Canada
Bill Ward
Al Baffert
Crew
Alex Alexander
Fred Allen
Harry Franklin
Bernard Glasser
Paul Ivano
Monroe Liebgold
William Lively
Fred Preble
Harry Reif
Earl Snyder
June Starr
Michael Terr
Harry Thomas
Elwood Ullman
Gus Womack
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Classic Comedy Teams Collection - Abbott & Costello, Laurel and Hardy and The Three Stooges Are Featured in CLASSIC COMEDY TEAMS COLLECTION
The Abbott and Costello disc is easily the strongest. The duo was allowed to make one film a year away from their home studio of Universal so during the peak of their popularity they went three times to MGM. Two of those films are in this set and can't be found in the otherwise comprehensive four volume Best of Abbott & Costello (the third film, 1941's Rio Rita, has yet to appear on DVD). Lost in a Harem (1944) shows more of the MGM gloss than Abbott & Costello's usual films even if the story about the two rescuing a blonde singer (B-movie perennial Marilyn Maxwell) and overthrowing an evil ruler is a bit thin. The film makes good use of sets left over from Kismet and there's a song and a half from the Jimmy Dorsey band. Abbott and Costello are generally quite lively with a mix of slapstick and verbal routines, even at one point recreating the classic vaudeville bit "Slowly I Turned." Slightly more predictable is Abbott and Costello in Hollywood (1945), the first film to feature their name in the title. This time the two are show biz barbers who decide that being a talent agent is the ticket to easy money so they promote an Iowa-fresh singer over an established star. The film tends more towards a string of routines though there are some good ones including the two trying to cure Costello's insomnia, him pretending to be a stunt dummy and even a frantic chase at the end. The big missed opportunity was to exploit the Hollywood setting more; there are cameos from Lucille Ball, Rags Ragland and Preston Foster but that's about it.
Like Abbott and Costello, the Laurel and Hardy disc collects two MGM wartime films but in this case that's a bit past their prime period. Still, Laurel and Hardy bring unflappable good cheer and years of experience that give these films a charm that would certainly have been lacking if anybody else had starred. Air Raid Wardens (1943) opens with a voice-over straight out of Our Town, describing the small community that's about to participate in the war. Laurel and Hardy ran a string of failed businesses and now have been rejected by the military as well they end up as, you guessed it, air raid wardens. Not much to the warden angle so we also get Nazi spies, a stuffy bank president, a short-tempered teamster and even a rambunctious stray dog. There's a nice bit with the two trying to enter a town meeting quietly and an inventive gag with a carrier pigeon. Nothing But Trouble (1944) stretches everything a bit more thin. Seems that there's an exiled teenage king from some operetta country who just want to be a regular boy and play football. Laurel and Hardy befriend him, thinking he's just a wayward kid but not much happens. The film had been pitched a couple of years earlier and at one point involved helicopters and gags by Buster Keaton. None of that is in the final film; the studio must have decided that "Imagine Laurel and Hardy as a chef and a butler" was good enough and less expensive. Though the king's story is mostly padding, you're not likely to forget Stan trying to serve at a high-class dinner party and may even have fond memories of the two trying to grab a steak (actually horsemeat) from the lion's cage at the zoo.
The Three Stooges disc is something of an oddity since the team plays only supporting roles in both films. Meet the Baron (1933) is the more interesting since it's an example of the goofy, anything-goes comedies of the early 30s though admittedly not one of the better ones. The film was designed to put onto screen Jack Pearl, whose recreation of eternal tall tale teller Baron Munchausen had been a radio and stage smash in preceeding years (and would quickly vanish: he appeared in only one other film while his radio career trickled out). With Jimmy Durante as his buddy, the Baron crashes an all-girls college where the janitors are Ted Healey and His Stooges (that's right, not yet the Three Stooges). So you get a lot of running around, recreations of Pearl's radio skits, the Stooges pummelling each other and for good measure about thirty co-eds bathing and singing in an enormous Art Deco shower. Completing the disc is 1951's Gold Raiders, a creaky B-Western that looks like it should have appeared 15 years earlier. It's also an independent production and the only non-MGM film in this set. Gold Raiders shows that with merely a few days on the back lot and minimal editing you can keep an entire film under an hour. An aging, paunchy George O'Brien is the hero (an insurance agent!) trying to keep the local mine from being taken over by an evil landowner. The Stooges are travelling salesmen who help O'Brien but since they're incidental to the story any comedy is fleeting.
Overall the transfers in the Classic Comedy Teams Collection are sharp but the sources aren't always the best quality. Gold Raiders has some abrupt splices, including one that clips off a bit of dialogue. Lost in a Harem has a lot of speckling and in one part noticable print damage (which fortunately lasts barely a second or so). The only extras are a few trailers and subtitle options (English, French and Spanish). Still, the set is inexpensively priced and anybody interested in the films will be glad to have them.
For more information about Classic Comedy Teams Collection, visit Warner Video. To order Classic Comedy Teams Collection, go to TCM Shopping.
by Lang Thompson
Classic Comedy Teams Collection - Abbott & Costello, Laurel and Hardy and The Three Stooges Are Featured in CLASSIC COMEDY TEAMS COLLECTION
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The working title for this film was Tucson Joe. A August 22, 1951 Hollywood Reporter news item states that Gold Raiders was to be released under the title Stooges Go West, however, the opening title card reads "Jack Schwarz Productions, Inc. presents Bernard Glasser Productions, Inc. presents George O'Brien and the Three Stooges in Gold Raiders." The Stooges are listed in the film's end credits as Moe Howard, Shemp Howard and Larry Fine. According to June 1952 Daily Variety articles, the production was made in four and one-half days and was conceived of by the star, George O'Brien, and producer Bernard Glasser, while they both served in the U. S. Navy during World War II. Modern sources add Dick Crockett to the cast.