Thunder Over Texas
Thunder Over Texaa | |
---|---|
Directed by | Edgar G. Ulmer |
Produced by |
Arthur Alexander Max Alexander |
Written by |
Shirley Ulmer (story) Eddie Granemann (screenplay) |
Starring | See below |
Cinematography | Harry Forbes |
Edited by | George M. Merrick |
Production company |
M & A Alexander Productions Inc. |
Release dates | October 1934 |
Running time | 61 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Thunder Over Texas is a 1934 American populist contemporary western film directed by Edgar G. Ulmer under the alias Joen Warner (the name of Ulmer's previous wife)[1] and produced by two nephews of Universal Pictures head Carl Laemmle, Arthur and Max Alexander's Poverty Row Beacon Productions. The film's story was written by Shirley Ulmer under the name of Sherle Castle. Shirley was then married to Max Alexander but would soon leave Max to marry Edgar with the result that Lammele blacklisted Ulmer from Hollywood.[2] The film was shot in Kernville, California.
Thunder Over Texas was the first of several Westerns produced by the Alexanders starring Guinn "Big Boy" Williams [3]
Plot
The film opens with an apparent bank robbery terminated when the driver of the alleged getaway car is fatally shot by a sniper. Inside the car is the late driver's daughter, Tiny Norton who is adopted by rancher Ted Wright and his Three Stooges type ranch hands, Tom, Dick and Harry, the "Three Radio Nuts" who spend their time impersonating radio stars. The robbery and assassination of Tiny's father was orchestrated by a cruel and corrupt banker in cahoots with a crooked sheriff.
Cast
- Guinn "Big Boy" Williams ... Ted Wright
- Marion Shilling ... Helen Mason
- Helen Westcott ... Betty "Tiny" Norton
- Philo McCullough ... Sheriff Tom Collier
- Victor Potel ... Dick
- Ben Corbett ... Tom
- Tiny Skelton ... Harry
- Claude Payton ... Bruce Laird
- Robert McKenzie ... Judge Blake
- Dick Botiller ... Gonzalez
Quotes
"I'll get you for this!" - Sheriff Collier
"Don't let anything stop you but fear" - Ted Wright
Notes
- ↑ p, 231 Weaver, Tom Shirley Ulmer Interview in I Was a Monster Movie Maker: Conversations with 22 SF and Horror Filmmakers McFarland, 16 Jun 2001
- ↑ pp. 77-78 Isenberg, Noah Edgar G. Ulmer: A Filmmaker at the Margins Univ of California Press, 9 Jan. 2014
- ↑ p. 55 Pitts, Michael R. Poverty Row Studios, 1929-1940: An Illustrated History of 55 Independent Film Companies, with a Filmography for Each McFarland, 1 Jan. 2005
External links
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