Black Horse Canyon (1954) Poster

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6/10
Outlaw the Wonder Horse!
hitchcockthelegend20 April 2012
Black Horse Canyon is directed by Jesse Hibbs and adapted to screenplay by Geoffrey Homes and David Lang from the novel The Wild Horse written by Les Savage Junior. It stars Joel McCrea, Mari Blanchard, Race Gentry and Murvyn Vye. Music is by Joseph Gershenson and cinematography by George Robinson.

Although the print of the film I saw was sadly old and scratchy, this is a lovely photographed Western out of Bloomquist Ranch, Douglas, Arizona. A place, it seems, that bizarrely wasn't used in any other Oaters. This along with the magnificent horse at the centre of the plot, makes this a comfortable recommendation for the B Western fan. Story is pretty mundane stuff, a group of people with different motives attempt to capture the wild black stallion for stud purposes. This ensures that we are exclusively out in the open landscapes and privy to much chasing, lassoing, bucking and snorting. There's a bubbling under the surface love triangle, which we know how it's going to end up, and a good fist-fight crowns the proceedings. Gentry and Blanchard are weak, while Vye's villain is barely realised, but McCrea turns in yet another solid and knowing performance. All the cast, you sense, understand that Outlaw the horse is the star of the show. And rightly so. 6.5/10
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7/10
A family Western in which Joel McCrea joins a beautiful rancher in her quest to capture a wild black stallion
ma-cortes7 May 2020
A mundane and simple Western with gorgeous outdoors and paying tribute to Joel McCrea . The story of a wild black stallion and various people attempting to capture the excellent horse . As two cowboys and a wonderful woman set out to capture him . Concerning a veteran cowboy "Rock" Rockwell : the always laconic and top-notch Joel McCrea, aided of his adopted-son , the 20-year-old Til , Race Gentry, who help hot-headed neighboring ranch girl , the fiery Mari Blanchard . Dealing with their relationships and the hunt for a valuable horse and ending up in a triangular romance . Along the way they confront a pair of gunfighters bringing some conflict to the proceedings and causing wreak havoc.

Enjoyable , agreeable minor Western with only a couple of shots , emotion , thrills and no blood-letting . Nice film regarding a family story with Joel McCrea as a world-wise drifter and wannabe rancher comes out of drifting and teams up with a rancher , and then both of whom attemping to tame a brave mustang. Here is shown Wilderness with a magnificent stallion that runs and runs along the gleaming landscapes . Plenty of splendor and animal fury , but not so much Western , this is a kind of alfresco attractive tale , a refreshingly different movie . Here appears a lot of wildlife , as Universal later reused footage of the horse Highland Dale in Black Horse Canyon 1954 , Cattle Drive 1951 and Fury series . A few years before Sam Peckinpah's Ride in High Sierra, aging Joel McCrea stars one of his later roles , as he came out of a partial retirement to play a likeable and upright starring as a two-fisted West hero . Pleasant to watch the old cowboy up and about , here he is a man wise to the nature of women and horses , attempting to establish a homestead. MacCrea was a B-actor , though ocassionally he played A films as Sullivan's travels and The Dangerous game . Joel perfomed a lot of Westerns, as his interpretations are ideally suited for the take-it-easy and laid-back nature attitude , such as : Union Pacific , Buffalo Bill, The Virginian , Ramrod , South of Saint Luis , Four Faces West , The Oklahoman . MacCrea is well accompanied by a sympathetic and young pal , Race Gentry . And of course , the laughing and likeable Mari Blanchard who was never better . And other secondaries as Irving Bacon , John Pickard ; furthermore , Murvyn Vye and Bill Williams scowl effectively the nasty gunslingers .

It contains colorful and briliant cinematography by George Robinson. Showing spectacular and breathtaking landscapes shot on location in Bloomquist Ranch, Douglas, Guadalupe Canyon,Pirtleville, McNeal, Leslie Canyon National Wildlife Refuge, Baker Canyon,Arizona . As well as evocative amd moving musical score by Universal's regular : William Lava , Henry Mancini , Hans J. Salter , Frank Skinner , Herman Stein , though all of them uncredited . This B-title motion picture was well produced by Universal Pictures and professionally directed by Jesse Hibbs who carries out a more of a character study of three people than it is a routine western and some pedestrian scenes . It was a limited box-office for Universal Pictures , but nowadays , being considered a very decent movie . Hibbs was an American director of second features , primarily westerns , at Universal in the 1950's . Being especially known for TV series as ¨Perry Mason¨ (1957) , ¨Gunsmoke¨ , ¨Laramie¨ and ¨F.B.I.¨ (1965) as well as Westerns and Thrillers . He directed various Audie Murphy vehicles such as : this ¨To hell and Back¨ (1955) , ¨World in My Corner¨ (1956) , ¨Ride a Crooked Trail¨ (1958) and ¨Medal of Honor¨ . Rating 7/10. Entertaining adventure western in familar style that will appeal both, children and adults.
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6/10
Mari Blanchard Tries To Tame A Mustang And Joel McCrea
boblipton14 June 2021
Joel McCrea is one of those no-truck-with-women guys, raising Race Gentry out in the west. When Mari Blanchard needs help catching and breaking a mustang that's gotten free, the two of them help her out. Gentry yearns for her, but Miss Blanchard sets her cap at McCrea. He seems mostly amused, but there seems to be more to it.

It's a handsomely shot Universal "Shaky A" with scenes of the horse lifted from 1949's RED CANYON. McCrea offers his lines in his usual straightforward manner, Gentry struggles to make the transition from boy to man, and Miss Blanchard, who was the inspiration for Al Capp's Stupifyin' Jones, oozes sex appea.
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6/10
One wild stallion
bkoganbing20 July 2014
Although not one of his better known films I'm sure that Black Horse Canyon must have been a film near and dear to Joel McCrea's heart. In real life McCrea had eschewed Hollywood even though he was one of the few film stars actually born there. McCrea lived on a working ranch and in his spare time was a working cowboy. Nothing phony about this man in his westerns. I've no doubt he broke horses there as long as age permitted.

McCrea and his young partner Race Gentry are after a wild black stallion who keeps driving off their stock to increase his herd. Among horses he's Rob Lowe in his Brat Pack days and the mares just line up for him. But Mari Blanchard of the neighboring ranch wants him too and she's got more of a right. She owned him and everyone knows it way back when the horse was a colt and went wild.

Still another party is Murvyn Vye who owns another ranch and he either wants to tame him or kill him. He's a mean guy as only Murvyn Vye can be mean.

Besides capturing the stallion there's a rivalry of sorts for Blanchard between McCrea and his young partner. Of course it all works out in the end.

Nice color outdoor cinematography and a real western feel characterize Black Horse Canyon. Joel McCrea's will appreciate it as no doubt McCrea did back in the day.
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6/10
Just Another Wild Horse Movie!
bsmith555217 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Although well produced and in glorious Technicolor, this little "B"+ western turns out to be just another routine wild horse oater. Most of the film has stars Joel McCrea, Mari Blanchard and Race Gentry chasing a black stallion named "Outlaw" back and forth across the countryside.

There is very little action and only a few shots fired . The "action" revolves around the principals chasing, capturing and breaking the horse. Rival rancher Murvyn Vye has his sights set on "Outlaw" as well and provides what little conflict there is in the story. One of Vye's hands gets trampled to death by the horse but nobody seems to care and the issue is never resolved.

McCrea, who was a working cowboy on his own ranch, is at home here. There is no doubt in his ability to handle horses and his expertise with a rope. As a side bar, young Gentry develops a crush on the older Banchard which she uses to her advantage. But we all know who is going to get the girl in this one.

Also in the rather small cast are Irving Bacon as Blanchard's uncle, John Pickard as Vye's ranch hand and Pilar Del Ray as the servant girl with a crush of her own on Gentry.
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6/10
Capture and tame, or capture and kill.
mark.waltz21 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Outlaw is not necessary a horse of a different color, but a beautiful black stallion whose coat is a glossy black which describes its fury at the attempted capture. As a colt, it was tamed by equally fiery rancher Mari Blanchard, but ran off and began to spook other horses on other ranches, causing other ranchers to desire its death. Blanchard's neighbor Joel McCrea wants to capture and tame it as well, but with both Blanchard and McCrea coveting it, they are at odds until they join together to make sure nasty neighbor Murvyn Vye doesn't achieve his dream of killing the beautiful buck.

Colorful and majestic with its mountainous Arizona settings, this is an A list Universal western of a different color, aided by a dramatic musical score and good support by Irving Bacon. Only Race Gentry as McCrea's young ward, comes off poorly, speaking his lines with a deadpan delivery that isn't really convincing acting. Pilar Del Rey adds some spice as a young Mexican woman who loves Gentry. What she sees in him is beyond me. Outlaw is quite the non-human scene stealer, and McCrea and Blanchard together are just as fiery. The presence of McCrea is enough to convince me that Outlaw was treated with great care.
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10/10
Excellent Western Movie
bettertroutponds9 July 2015
I love this movie! I have seen many western movies and the only question is how to get a DVD of this movie!!!

The scenery, the theme and lack of violence is actually quite amazing. This is an ideal movie for those who love westerns and horses. And yes, this horse is a great actor and also a wonderful animal. Joel McCrea and everyone in the movie did well. A straight forward and lovely movie. The real ranch setting adds much to the movie. The taming techniques used to "break" this horse are legit and although the well trained horse is not really wild the whole story set well with me. The canyon terrain and water hole attractions and all make this quite authentic to the way a real wild horse would behave and Mari Blanchard and The young man Ti in the movie role do well. Outlaw the movie name of this black horse is simply movie magic. Any horse rancher should want their own copy.
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10/10
Just another great Joel McCrea western!
donwc19966 February 2011
Excellent western in Technicolor! It's about a wild black stallion that Mari Blanchard wants for stock rearing purposes. Joel McCrea and Race Gentry as her neighbors set about to help her capture the horse. Another neighbor, Murvyn Vye,also wants the horse for his own purposes. As things proceed, both McCrea & Gentry fall in love with Blanchard. There are no shootouts only some fighting. The scenery is incredible. I've always liked McCrea--especially in the westerns that he did. He was an excellent horseman in real life. Another interesting aspect of this film was the close relationship between McCre and Gentry. McCrea had raised Gentry after the death of his parents &they have a very close and neat relationship.
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10/10
A Perfect Summer Afternoon Matinee
OldieMovieFan8 October 2022
This screenplay was designed, performed, filmed, and sold for all those theaters standing in the sunny June afternoon on shady town squares.

Little groups of junior high kids out on summer vacation, meet at the swimming pool to leap off the high dive after lunch then stroll to the movies all together, hair still dripping, shouting and teasing and throwing rocks and barely touching hands and blushing furiously amid the great gusts of summertime laughter. Their world was an Impressionist painting, every thing around them more unfocused and more trivial the further it was from a lover's face. Then into the lobby, where two tickets and two soda pops and a giant box of popcorn was a dollar which was a big percentage of a week's income earned from a paper route, but what was money for? And then into the relief of the cool darkness after the brilliant, hot outdoors and finally the frantic fear of touching hands again, terrified of rejection and even more afraid of a shy, thrilling acceptance.

This was the audience and Black Horse Canyon was the perfect movie, a simple tale of wild horses, haylofts and corrals, riding and saddles and hackamores... everything more unfocused and more trivial the further it was from a lover's face... McCrea the consummate, laconic cowboy and Blanchard the beautiful lady who needs a little protection from dastardly rustlers - but not very much because she really can handle most things herself.

"Black Horse Canyon" is an Impressionist's vignette, an American Dream, about hard work, and fighting the good fight, and about falling in love on sunny June afternoons.
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