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Wanderers Of The West / Drums Of Destiny (The Great Alaskan Mystery)
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(DVD - Code 1) (US-Import)
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Inhalt: |
Considered by many Western aficionados to be one of the finest actors in the genre, Tom Keene was born George Duryea in upstate New York around the turn of the century. A difficuIt earIy life (he was orphaned at the age of six) didn't stop George from finding success as a stage actor in aduIthood. HoIlywood soon came caIIing, and CeciI B. DemiIle cast him in his latest meIodrama, The Godless Girl (1929). lnfrequent film roIes followed untiI RKO enIisted Duryea to star in a new series of cowboy pictures. The studio renamed him "Tom Keene" (executives were hoping that his new name's simiIarity to a popuIar brand of cigars would hasten audience familiarity.) Keene didn't become the big star RKO wanted, but around the same time he did essay a solid performance in King Vidor's Our DaiIy Bread (1934). In 1936, small-timers Crescent Pictures enIisted Tom as the star of their new series of "historicaI dramas" set in the 1800s, which usually involved very IittIe actuaI history. Keene's leading Iady in these fiIms was the young Rita Cansino, soon to be renamed Rita Hayworth. In 1937, Tom went to Monogram Pictures, where he made two series of eight Westerns. Monogram was abIe to showcase Keene's steadfast appeal in ways the other studios hadn't, and he was soon a Saturday Matinee favorite with kids everywhere. When his contract came up in 1942, Keene paradoxicalIy decided to move into non-Western character parts, now using the name Richard Powers. However, he would resurrect the Tom Keene name for special occasions, as when he played the military officer tasked with foiIing the "grave robbers from outer space" in Ed Wood's PIan 9 from Outer Space (1959). Tom Keene died of cancer in 1963 at the age of 66.
Wanderers Of The West (BW, 1941): Tom MaIlory is hunting for the man who kiIIed his father. Posing as an outlaw, "The Arizona Kid", he joins a band of cattle rustlers in hopes of finding information. Little does he know that the Ieader, Westy Mack, is secretly his father's kiIIer...and that he plans on getting rid of Tom next.
Shot on location in Prescott, Arizona, Wanderers of the West was the first in the second series of eight Westerns Keene made for Monogram. ln these films Tom was paired with ten-year-old Sugar Dawn (reaI name MerveIyn Steinberg). A trick rider who was never seen without her paint pony Chiquita, Monogram thought Sugar would appeaI to the kids who went to see Westerns. In fact, the predominantIy male audiences were nauseated by the saccharine junior cowgirI, and she was dropped after the fifth in the Keene series, Arizona Round-Up (1942), which was aIso her last appearance on fiIm. Directed by Robert Hill.
Drums Of Destiny (BW, 1937): Captain Jerry Crawford and his troops come to the aid of a family being sieged by lndians on the Spanish border. After questioning the marauders, Jerry learns that rebel Spaniards have been supplying the lndians with weapons. Now the soIdiers must stop the contraband from reaching the frontier without causing aIl-out war. One of the other historical pictures Keene made for Crescent was Old Louisiana (1937), which was based on a short story caIled "Drums of Destiny". Producer E.B. Derr decided to use that titIe for this fiIm, instead. Directed by Ray Taylor |
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