Sons of the Pioneers


1h 1m 1942

Brief Synopsis

An aging sheriff enlists an old friend's son to help stop a series of deadly nighttime raids.

Film Details

Genre
Western
Release Date
Jul 2, 1942
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Republic Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Republic Pictures Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 1m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
5,490ft (6 reels)

Synopsis

Ranchers Jim and Ellie Bixby throw a party for former Eastern socialite Louise Harper, to celebrate her one-year anniversary as a cattle rancher. Louise, who has grown to love the West, enjoys the party with chemical factory owner Frank Bennett. Unknown to the others, Bennett is the secret leader of a gang that has been terrorizing the ranchers with fires and poisoning their cattle in order to force them from their land, which is rich with minerals. When the party is interrupted by yet another fire, Louise demands that Bennett run for sheriff to replace Gabby Whittaker, who she believes is ineffective. Furious that an Easterner might take over the job, Gabby decides to petition Roy Rogers for help. Roy is the grandson of the town's founder and the son of their greatest sheriff, and even though he has lived in New York since he was ten years old, Gabby believes that he will prove to be a true Rogers and a good sheriff. Along with his deputy Pat, Gabby travels to New York, where he discovers that Roy is an entomologist dedicated to research. Shocked at Roy's unassertive demeanor, Gabby tries to dissuade him from accompanying him home, but because his own ranch was one of those burned, Roy is determined to accept the sheriff job. Roy sends Gabby and Pat ahead of him, and on the day he is to arrive, he is ambushed by Briggs, Pete and Joe, three of Bennett's thugs. Roy easily outwits them but allows the townspeople to think that he is meek and easily bullied. Roy's charade works, for Bennett engineers his election as sheriff in the belief that he can be controlled, and Roy begins his secret investigation. Using his microscope, Roy learns that cattle thought to have hoof and mouth disease have actually been poisoned, but is forced to reveal his findings to Gabby and Pat when they discover his laboratory hideout. When Gabby returns to town, Bennett's bad-mouthing of Roy prompts him to brag about Roy's true nature and reveal his laboratory's location. Bennett sends his men after Roy, and later that night, they set fire to his bunkhouse and Roy lets everyone believe that he has been killed. Louise and her ranch hand Bob see Roy, however, when he finds Gabby and Pat and informs them that the poisoning ingredients must be in Bennett's factory. Some of the gang trap Bob and Louise in the hills while the others trail Roy, Gabby and Pat to the factory, where Roy finds the poison. Roy and his friends once again escape from Bennett and his men, then rescue Louise and Bob as they are about to be overwhelmed in a shootout. Roy arrests Bennett, and soon after, sings with his friends at another celebratory party.

Film Details

Genre
Western
Release Date
Jul 2, 1942
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Republic Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Republic Pictures Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 1m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
5,490ft (6 reels)

Articles

Sons of the Pioneers


Sons of the Pioneers (1942) will likely never reach the classic heights of High Noon (1952) or Destry Rides Again (1939), but there is a touch of both those plots in this story of a mild-mannered young scientist pressed into following in the footsteps of his lawmen father and grandfather to stop a gang of cattle poisoners and arsonists. It's a bit of a switch for Western hero Roy Rogers, playing a man reluctant to strap on guns, but once he does so, he delivers the kind of exciting programmer audiences had come to expect from him. Rogers had been making films since 1935, portraying such Western heroes as Wild Bill Hickok, Buffalo Bill Cody and cowboys who masqueraded as Jesse James and Billy the Kid to foil some dastardly plots. Starting with Red River Valley (1941), however, the star never again played any character other than "Roy Rogers" in modern-day stories that gave juvenile fans the impression they could still travel West and get caught up in two-fisted adventures.

The plot's focus on a hero descended from early tamers of the old Wild West provided the perfect opportunity to title the picture after Rogers' musical group and frequent co-stars. From the 1930s through the early 1970s, The Sons of the Pioneers were one of the longest-running vocal acts in country music and the group that set the standard for Western/cowboy songs in popular entertainment with such hits as "My Adobe Hacienda," "Red River Valley," "Cool Water," and "Tumblin' Tumbleweeds."

The group was formed by a young Ohio singer named Leonard Slye, who had come to California at the age of 18 and hooked up with several Western music groups before joining with Bob Nolan and others to create The Sons of the Pioneers. They recorded their first album in 1934 and the following year made their film debut in a Patsy Kelly-Thelma Todd comedy short. Their first big break came with the Bing Crosby Western musical Rhythm on the Range (1936). By 1938, Leonard Slye had adopted the name Roy Rogers to take on his first acting lead in Under Western Stars (1938). Although he quickly established himself as an immensely popular solo star in the genre, on film and later TV, Rogers continued to appear and record with his group. In Sons of the Pioneers, they play -- what else? -- singing ranch hands and, along with Roy, perform a handful of tunes including "He's Gone Up the Trail," "Things Are Never What They Seem," and "Trail Herdin' Cowboy."

After Rogers' move into starring roles, the group brought in singer/comic Pat Brady as the leader; he is in Sons of the Pioneers and also co-starred in Rogers' and wife Dale Evans' long-running TV series, as a cowboy who drove a Jeep named Nellybelle. In later years, the Sons of the Pioneers included Ken Curtis, a former singer with the Tommy Dorsey orchestra who became famous in the 1950s as the comic character Festus on the long-running Western series Gunsmoke.

Roy's romantic interest in Sons of the Pioneers is played by Maris Wrixon. He and future wife Dale Evans didn't team up on screen for the first time until Cowboy and the Senorita (1944). That film was directed by Joseph Kane, who also helmed Sons of the Pioneers and more than 40 other Roy Rogers movies produced between 1938 and 1944.

Director: Joseph Kane
Screenplay: M. Coates Webster
Cinematography: Bud Thackery
Editing: Edward Schroeder
Art Direction: Russell Kimball
Cast: Roy Rogers (Roy Rogers), George "Gabby" Hayes (Gabby Whittaker), Bob Nolan, Pat Brady, Hugh Farr, Karl Farr, Tim Spencer, Lloyd Perryman aka Sons of the Pioneers (Ranch hands/Musicians)
BW&C-62m.

by Rob Nixon
Sons Of The Pioneers

Sons of the Pioneers

Sons of the Pioneers (1942) will likely never reach the classic heights of High Noon (1952) or Destry Rides Again (1939), but there is a touch of both those plots in this story of a mild-mannered young scientist pressed into following in the footsteps of his lawmen father and grandfather to stop a gang of cattle poisoners and arsonists. It's a bit of a switch for Western hero Roy Rogers, playing a man reluctant to strap on guns, but once he does so, he delivers the kind of exciting programmer audiences had come to expect from him. Rogers had been making films since 1935, portraying such Western heroes as Wild Bill Hickok, Buffalo Bill Cody and cowboys who masqueraded as Jesse James and Billy the Kid to foil some dastardly plots. Starting with Red River Valley (1941), however, the star never again played any character other than "Roy Rogers" in modern-day stories that gave juvenile fans the impression they could still travel West and get caught up in two-fisted adventures. The plot's focus on a hero descended from early tamers of the old Wild West provided the perfect opportunity to title the picture after Rogers' musical group and frequent co-stars. From the 1930s through the early 1970s, The Sons of the Pioneers were one of the longest-running vocal acts in country music and the group that set the standard for Western/cowboy songs in popular entertainment with such hits as "My Adobe Hacienda," "Red River Valley," "Cool Water," and "Tumblin' Tumbleweeds." The group was formed by a young Ohio singer named Leonard Slye, who had come to California at the age of 18 and hooked up with several Western music groups before joining with Bob Nolan and others to create The Sons of the Pioneers. They recorded their first album in 1934 and the following year made their film debut in a Patsy Kelly-Thelma Todd comedy short. Their first big break came with the Bing Crosby Western musical Rhythm on the Range (1936). By 1938, Leonard Slye had adopted the name Roy Rogers to take on his first acting lead in Under Western Stars (1938). Although he quickly established himself as an immensely popular solo star in the genre, on film and later TV, Rogers continued to appear and record with his group. In Sons of the Pioneers, they play -- what else? -- singing ranch hands and, along with Roy, perform a handful of tunes including "He's Gone Up the Trail," "Things Are Never What They Seem," and "Trail Herdin' Cowboy." After Rogers' move into starring roles, the group brought in singer/comic Pat Brady as the leader; he is in Sons of the Pioneers and also co-starred in Rogers' and wife Dale Evans' long-running TV series, as a cowboy who drove a Jeep named Nellybelle. In later years, the Sons of the Pioneers included Ken Curtis, a former singer with the Tommy Dorsey orchestra who became famous in the 1950s as the comic character Festus on the long-running Western series Gunsmoke. Roy's romantic interest in Sons of the Pioneers is played by Maris Wrixon. He and future wife Dale Evans didn't team up on screen for the first time until Cowboy and the Senorita (1944). That film was directed by Joseph Kane, who also helmed Sons of the Pioneers and more than 40 other Roy Rogers movies produced between 1938 and 1944. Director: Joseph Kane Screenplay: M. Coates Webster Cinematography: Bud Thackery Editing: Edward Schroeder Art Direction: Russell Kimball Cast: Roy Rogers (Roy Rogers), George "Gabby" Hayes (Gabby Whittaker), Bob Nolan, Pat Brady, Hugh Farr, Karl Farr, Tim Spencer, Lloyd Perryman aka Sons of the Pioneers (Ranch hands/Musicians) BW&C-62m. by Rob Nixon

Quotes

Women. There oughta be a law agin' 'em.
- Gabby Whitaker

Trivia

Notes

Modern sources include the following actors in the cast: Frank Ellis, Bob Woodward, Fern Emmett, George Kesterson, Pascale Perry, Neal Hart, Horace B. Carpenter and Bud Osborne.