Men with Steel Faces (1940) Poster

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4/10
One Take Malarky
Hitchcoc10 April 2007
I never really got into westerns (at least these low budget ones) but I did cut my teeth on the Lone Ranger and the Cisco Kid. There always seemed to be such a sameness about them. As I watched this film, I was lulled into indifference. I never realized how odd these things could look. For some reason, there are a bunch of kids who ride around with flower pots on their heads. There are aliens trying to take over the earth. Gene has only one concern and that is that he get to sing on his radio show or he will lose his contract. Everything is thrown together. The aliens prove ineffectual as do the bad guys. The thing I noticed is that everything is done in a single take. If a character has trouble getting on his horse, they go on with him flopped over the saddle. If someone trips on a rock, he just keeps on going, though he looks silly. This is just a disjointed mess, but must have been made for about ten bucks. I always found these singing cowboys a little hard to take. Roy Rogers was a lot smoother, but it was more of the same. Anyway, a Western with aliens. I guess we could expect about anything.
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3/10
Best to just watch "The Phantom Empire"!
planktonrules18 March 2020
"Men with Steel Faces" ("Radio Ranch") is a sort of picture I've seen before...and don't like them. This film, as well as several Buster Crabbe flicks, were actually originally movie serials and the studio later decided to splice the 4 plus hours of story down to about an hour...and then re-release it! Not surprisingly, taking out 3/4 of the story generally results in a confusing mess of a movie...and this one is no exception.

The story is about some unscrupulous baddies AND some folks who live about five miles under the Earth working to try to hurt Gene Autry and get his radio show off the air. But Gene and a group of kids called 'The Thunder Riders' work to stop these baddies and make the west fit for everyone...not just troglodytes.

Until well into the story, Gene seems to only be on hand to sing a few nice songs. The main stars were Frankie Darro and the other kids...as well as the underground folks. Confusing, silly and tough to enjoy with so much of it gone. See the original!
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5/10
The Feature Version
film_poster_fan30 April 2022
This is the feature version of "The Phantom Empire" to put it quite simply. "The Phantom Empire" was a twelve chapter serial from 1935 for both children and adults. It was common practice for Mascot Pictures to release its serials in feature versions. This particular one has generated quite a bit of animosity on this database, including one review which has stooped to profanity. This little film does not deserve such hatred. Gene Autry was a highly successful successful singer and wrote "Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer."
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5/10
Weird but interesting
jewelch30 December 2021
This one is weird and a little silly but it did have a wireless phone in it. Love a good western but it is kinda hard to call this one a western lol. Yes I recommend it. James Welch Henderson Arkansas 12/29/2021.
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2/10
Strange, yet decidedly rubbish
Red-Barracuda19 May 2015
Sometimes when you look back on an old movie, its central idea appears so strange to modern sensibilities as to make it appear almost surreal. Radio Ranch is one such film. On the one hand it is about a singing cowboy who operates a radio station from his ranch. Now if that idea wasn't bizarre enough in itself, there is a second plot-line about an underground city called Murania which is ruled over by an evil queen and her steel helmeted minions. The above synopsis makes this an early example of that most specific of sub-genres, the western/sci-fi hybrid. Perhaps its random weirdness is a result of it having been cobbled together from various episodes of a serial called 'The Phantom Empire'. I've found that any films edited together from episodes of series always seem to be terrible though and Radio ranch quite frankly is no exception. Its strangeness only takes it so far really and tedium eventually sets in. Certainly an oddity but one with limited interest or entertainment value ultimately, if I am being absolutely honest.
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5/10
Pretty neat
BandSAboutMovies1 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Men with Steel Faces is an edited movie version of the serial Phantom Empire, which stars Gene Autry as - who else? - Gene Autry, a singing cowboy who also has a Radio Ranch where he broadcasts a show every day and also has a dude ranch for kids where Frankie (Frankie Darro) and Betsy Baxter (Betsy King Ross lead the Junior Thunder Riders.

All three of them are kidnapped by soldiers from the advanced underground empire of Murania - justified and ancient - who have laser guns, robots and an evil queen named Queen Tika. Meanwhile, Professor Beetson and his gang are trying to steal all of the riches of Murania and double meanwhile, there's a rebellion looking to overthrow the evil empire.

This serial went on to inspire the NBC series Cliffhangers!, which had a sequence called The Secret Empire. There's also the Fred Olen Ray movie The Phantom Empire which is directly inspired by this, as are the legends of the Shavers*, which you can learn more about in the movie Beyond Lemuria. Other movies that have an under the world army include The Lost City, which pretty much outright steals from this serial and The Mole People.

I love the idea of cowboys interacting with futuristic science fiction and celebrate any movie that makes it happen again, even poor ones like Cowboys vs. Aliens.

*The Shaver Mystery was created - or discovered - by factory worker Richard Shaver who was able to hear within the center of the Earth and wrote to the magazine Amazing Stories and suddenly, that entire pulp was all about creatures and civilizations that existed within the Earth that are quite a bit like Phantom Empire. Then again, this movie's writer Wallace MacDonald got the idea for this story when he was getting gas at the dentist.
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6/10
Silly, weird fun
yardbird-924-30770417 December 2010
This is an oddly entertaining film. Odd, because I had never seen one of these old westerns with Gene Autry or any of his contemporaries like Roy Rogers before and I was expecting a straightforward western. Instead, I got to see a crazy blend of sci-fi and western.

The film has Autry, and the two juvenile characters of Betsy and Frankie, discovering the underground empire of 'Murania' far beneath Autry's ranch. This empire is ruled by an evil queen, who along with an altogether creepy contingent known as the 'Thunder Riders', threaten civilization as we know it.

Autry sings a lot and his acting is pretty cornball but he's extremely likable and, hence, manages to entertain. The two juvenile actors are very likable too and the film is generally enjoyable. It's also strangely fascinating as the Thunder Riders I mentioned previously bear an eerie resemblance to the KKK and every time I saw them appear I wondered whether this was intentional or accidental.

Anyway, the film was fun, mainly due to the unexpected weirdness of it all. Well worth a viewing.
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7/10
Unusually Entertaining
tom_bombadillo-117 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
While it may be ridiculous to compare Gene Autry to Michael Jackson in any way, shape, or form. Autry sold himself in the same style, his films were self indulged just as Jacksons music videos were. However, this film was bizarre. So bizarre it came right back around again and became entertaining. While his music wasn't quite blue grass as it was...something else, I even saw some "O Brother Where Art Thou?" in this movie. Where "O Brother Where Art Thou?" was a blend of Greek myth and blue grass, this was an interesting mix of music from that time period and Sci-Fi. To blend the western and science-fiction themes was both over the top and creative on Autry's part.
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6/10
The long sobs Of the violins Of Autumn Wound my heart With a monotonous Langour
Bezenby10 October 2014
In this film Gene Autrey stirs the loins as Gene Uterus, half brain damaged (I think) cowboy singer who plays as part of Radio Ranch, a radio programme/subliminal mind control experiment. Gene's all about the community, so he allows bizarre kid/adults to go onto his show and gibber on about the thunder riders, who happen to be underground alien types with their own kingdom who turn up far to often in these thirties serials for me to give an absolute sh*t about.

Gene's also got other grief from some guys trying to Scooby Doo the surrounding land so they can get to some radium and all that crap. Basically, Gene gets into a scrape with some folks, has to get to his regular radio show unless he 'loses the contract', and has to kind of...well not save the world, but save his scrotum.

This is the kind of film where people survive plane crashes, there's loads of bluegrass music, and basically blah blah don't care why do i do this.

Kill me. Seriously. What kind of life leads to watching this kind of stuff.

I loved this film. Kill me. Loved it. I give it a ten.
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Charming nostalgia and unsophisticated for Saturday matinee kiddie crowd.
oscar-3511 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
*Spoiler/plot- Men with Steel faces ('Radio Ranch'), 1940, Gene Autry and his cowboy pals are amazed to discover a secret under ground civilization located under his ranch property. Periodically, secret city riders are seen and heard by local children which call their kiddie local horse riding club, The 'Thunder Riders'. Gene has a kiddie radio show promoting the growth of these clubs across the country. But the underground dwellers have advanced tech and intend to use it to conquer the surface world with radium use. Gene and his cowboy crew go to work to stop the take over of Earth.

*Special Stars- Gene Autry.

*Theme- Clean ranch living in the outdoors and singing can win the day.

*Trivia/location/goofs- Black & white, re-edited feature version of serial 'The Phantom Empire'. Now public domain intellectual property. Shot at the ole Iverson movie ranch Chatsworth Ca and Bronson Caves, Hollywood Ca.

*Emotion- Just more of the unbelievable and compromised production values of most theatrical serials of that era. The western cowboy music is charming and unsophisticated for Saturday matinee kiddie crowd.

*Based On- 1940's theatrical Flash Gordon serials.
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