Rimfire (1949) Puts Spooky Spin On Frontier Formula
A keen concept that needed subtler handling than
it gets here. Has the ghost of a hanged gambler come back to avenge his
framing? I'd have liked Rimfire better had that indeed been the case, but knew
a "rational" explain would spoil novelty of this 64 minute Lippert
western. Basic premise was used in Hal Wallis'following-year DarkCity; had his writers
snuck a peek at Rimfire? There's dream casting of every player that ever wore
spurs. Did guys like Glenn Strange ever sleep? I swear, he's been in all of a hundred
westerns Greenbriar has seen over the past year. "Good try" on
writer-producer Ron Ormond's part, said Variety, but no cigar "for mood
effects which do not quite come off." Nice (and again novelty) to see customary heavy
James Millican as good guy andfemme magnet. Robert Lippert did these saddlers to
program his and friend venues across landscape of exhibition that majors
ignored, or overcharged. Less slick than Republic's stuff, but also less
predictable. In fact, Bob rented Republic facilities to finish Rimfire and three
others under his Screen Guild banner, announcing to trades that there'd be
twenty-four more "if the present arrangement works out
satisfactorily." Rimfire is available in a nice quality DVD from VCI.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home