Arizona Days

1937
4.4| 0h56m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 30 January 1937 Released
Producted By: Grand National
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Tex and sidekick Grass join McGill's traveling show. When Price has McGill's wagons burned, Tex becomes the county tax collector to earn money. This leads to trouble as one of those owing money is Price who says he will not pay. Business doesn´t go as plan.

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Reviews

SpecialsTarget Disturbing yet enthralling
Roy Hart If you're interested in the topic at hand, you should just watch it and judge yourself because the reviews have gone very biased by people that didn't even watch it and just hate (or love) the creator. I liked it, it was well written, narrated, and directed and it was about a topic that interests me.
Nayan Gough A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
Francene Odetta It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.
Leslie Howard Adams Per his M.O., one of the reviewers of this film fills the site with yet more of his incorrect, at best, assumptions and mis-statements. This one starts with his usual assertions that Grand National Pictures signed Tex Ritter to a contract to make a series of films produced by Grand National. Other than about four films (including two James Cagney films), Grand National was primarily a distribution company for the films of about a half-dozen independent producers. He also incorrectly states that...."they (Grand National) signed Tex Ritter from The Grand Old Opry (sic) as their singing cowboy. No, Bucky, Tex Ritter had never appeared on The Grand Ole Opry until after his singing-cowboy career was over. Tex Ritter, then working, on a radio station in New York City, was SIGNED to a film contract by producer Edward Finney, who, in turn, then signed a contract, with Grand National Pictures, to produce a series of westerns for Grand National distribution---GN did not produce any of the westerns that were distributed under the GN logo. And, by the way, quoting Booda-do---"As a studio Grand National Pictures only lasted for a couple of years..."; the last time I looked, a couple meant two...and the last time I looked, Grand National distributed films made by independent producers (in addition to actually producing two Cagney films)for over five years...which is a couple doubled plus one.The reviewer who included the clap-trap misinformation in his review has been contacted by private message(s), over the past couple of years, regarding his error-statements,(on six of the ten reviews this contributor has read by this reviewing assumer) in which it was suggested that he might care to edit his review(s) and delete the highly-fabricated statements he made, but he seems to resent, rather than appreciate someone trying to help him not look foolish. Other than his opinion of the film(s) he writes about, his knowledge of vintage films seems to be somewhat, at best, lacking.
John W Chance A second disappointing follow up to Tex's first film, 'Song of the Gringo' (1936). Tex and his side kick, 'Hopper' (Syd Saylor, as a not so annoying comic relief) join a minstrel show in Arizona. This is the best part of the film, as it shows Tex on stage singing and then dealing with the villain Harry Price (the great badman Forrest Taylor) and his henchmen who enter the theater without paying.Unfortunately, the only prints I've seen then cut out about the next ten minutes of the film, and suddenly Tex is a tax collector in a showdown with Price to get him to pay his taxes! There isn't much on display here. The prairie flower love interest is a cypher; we are also subjected to a too long ambush shoot out behind rocks. The only other 'high point' is a tense little bit of editing as the evil looking Price waits in the cantina to shoot Tex.Tex does sing three co-written songs, one of which 'Tombstone, Arizona' has a four bar melody section taken directly from his version of 'The Big Rock Candy Mountain.' But that's okay! He also admitted in later years to how he 'stole' Leadbelly's melody for 'Goodnight Irene' and wrote new words recording it as 'I've Done the Best I Could.' He also borrowed 'Ta Ra Ra Boom De Ay' for another of his hits. But all is forgiven Tex, because you did so many great songs, sang 'High Noon,' gave us John Ritter, and made some fairly decent westerns! But 'Arizona Days' is not one of them. I give it a 3.
bkoganbing As a studio Grand National Pictures only lasted for a couple of years, it's best known films were two from James Cagney who worked there while quarreling with Warner Brothers. Seeing what success Republic had with Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, they signed Tex Ritter from The Grand Old Opry as their singing cowboy.One thing that was original with Arizona Days, Tex took on the job of tax collector for the Tombstone Arizona area. That has to be unique in the annals of western films. Imagine outlaws who not only rob, and pillage and kill, but don't file their 1040s. It's the most unheard of thing I've ever heard of.Another thing unheard of in western films is the up front killing of a child, the kid brother of Eleanor Stewart who Tex is paying court to. Tommy Bupp is killed when the outlaws ambush Tex and Eleanor and miss Tex, but kill young Tommy. I'm not sure how that one got through the censors of 1937.The production values aren't good at all so I can't say this was a decent film for all its originality. Ritter sings a couple of nice songs and the taxes do get collected, after a western fashion for which you'll have to see the film if you care to.
classicsoncall "Arizona Days" opens with a snappy song on horseback by cowboy star Tex Ritter, but truthfully, that's about as entertaining as this film gets in it's fifty seven minute run. However the DVD print I viewed had a rather disjointed cut following a scene where Tex offers to help a minstrel show owner by paying off a thirty one dollar debt in exchange for a singing gig in the show. It quickly jumps to a ten pace gunfight between Tex and villain Harry Price (Forrest Taylor). Another review of the film states that Price was behind the burning of the minstrel show wagons, so with this scene missing, the movie's continuity suffers in the print I saw.Syd Saylor is Tex's sidekick, and provides a bit of comic relief with a running gag where he attempts to play a trombone to poor effect. Saylor's film history includes an astounding 360 movies in which he appeared, though uncredited in many of them. My first intro to Saylor's work was as John Wayne's sidekick Dink Hooley in "Born to the West", also known as "Helltown", where he gets a few laughs trying to sell lightning rods to unsuspecting victims.When you come right down to it, there's not much of a story here, as Tex manages to get the drop on Price's gang in an attempt to secure back taxes that they owe. Tex won the right to collect when he beat bad guy Price to the draw in the aforementioned gunfight.Poor production values and a consistently dark picture often interfered with this viewer's enjoyment of the film. On the plus side were three tunes by Ritter, including "High, Wide and Handsome", "Arizona Days", and opening and closing renditions of "Tombstone, Arizona". Pretty Eleanor Stewart winds up as Ritter's new bride in the closing scene, even though there was no romance to speak of during the movie, but the image you'll remember is Syd Saylor's character "Grass" Hopper wearing a "Just Married" sign around his neck as he rides the back of the buckboard heading out of town.

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