Man of the Forest

1933 "HIS GUNS ROARED DEFIANCE TO A LAW THAT TWISTED JUSTICE!"
5.5| 1h2m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 24 August 1933 Released
Producted By: Paramount
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Beasley, who is after Gayner's land, plans to kidnap his daughter. But Dale overhears their plan and kidnaps her himself. When Gayner arrives to retrieve his daughter, Beasley kills him and makes the Sheriff arrest Dale for the murder.

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mark.waltz Yes, those are indeed real African lions playing the part of mountain lions in this western that has a very misleading title. There really is no forest here, although there are a lot of trees. The first "mountain" lion seen is stalking Scott as he prepares to head out of the mountains after having a conversation with landowner Harry Carey over his inability to own land due to a previous incarceration. Carey intends to hand over the deed to his niece (not daughter as the plot description insists) but the nefarious Noah Beery has other plans.Those other plans don't just include kidnapping the pretty Verna Hillie, but later manhandling her as well, and that totally irks his long-time mistress Blanche Friderici, a widow who has hoped for marriage, but that hope has long been dashed. Scott manages to get Hillie first (Uncle Harry has been brutally murdered), and after convincing her that he's on her side and courting her with some adorable lion cubs, must protect her from the nefarious Beery and his men (which also includes Barton MacLane).There's a running gag of funny man Vince Barnett trying to "wrastle" an ornery mule. I just wonder why it is that every "B" western must include some buffoon or grizzled side-kick when the plot on its own carries the film well enough. Still, there's enough action and excitement in the hour long running time including trapping the good guys in a burning building, but unpredictability has never been a factor in these low budget oaters, even those made by "A" studios such as Paramount here.
railyard First of all, let me say that I'll watch any movie with Randolph Scott in it. My wife and I agree that he was the best of all the cowboy stars whether the movies were A, B, or Z. This was a thoroughly enjoyable film. It had a familiar but good story line, great scenery, and an outstanding supporting cast headed by Noah Beery and one of my favorites, Big Boy Williams. The acting was above average for this type of movie. Scott was handsome and actually dashing with his little mustache. He showed lots of wit and charm and none of the woodenness that would come later to his acting. I couldn't help laughing at some of the lines concerning women, considering his so- called homo affairs with Cary Grant at the same time that this movie was filmed. "I don't like women, I never have!" is quite a line as well as Harry Carey saying to him "maybe this will change your mind about women". The big blooper of the movie was trying to pass off African lions as mountain lions. They must have come from Buster Crabbes's jungle adventures. I did feel bad for the cubs when the mother was killed. Scott even said that they were too young to drink milk from a bowl And I HATE, HATE, HATE leg traps! Didn't he realize that he could have caught one of his own pet lions? In spite of the leg traps, this is a nice little movie that I won't mind watching again in a few months.
sflynn22 This is a standard Western with all the proper elements: do-right hero (R. Scott), do-wrong villain (Noah Beery), henchmen and "characters", pretty scenery, and African lions (???).It is interesting to see a youthful Randolph Scott with a face-altering mustache and spouting an odd aristocratic Southern dialect ("they ah coming hyeah") while masquerading as a woman-hating mountain man.The "mountain lions" are of course African lions loaned out from Tarzan.The scenery, wherever it is, is very nice: mountains and lonesome pines.Noah Beery makes a nice villain, really very good at it, and Verna Hillie is attractive enough.The plot and acting are no more absurd than a million other B-westerns.
bkoganbing Randolph Scott who later became exclusively a western star got his first notice as a western in a series of Zane Grey films that were B films for Paramount his original studio. This is one of several Grey stories that Scott filmed at Paramount in the early Thirties.It's not one of the best ones. He's a small land owner caught between two enemies, Harry Carey, Sr. and Noah Beery, Sr. They've had a feud going for a score of years. The beautiful niece of one of them comes west and the other sees an opportunity to finally grab the other's ranch.Of course the niece falls for Scott, but he's got to do some shrew taming at first. And then Carey is killed and he's blamed for it. Noah Beery the brother of Wallace Beery played a fine line of movie villains in mostly low budget stuff like this. Here's he's a villain in the Snidely Whiplash tradition with designs on the little Nell heroine. In fairness Beery isn't given all that much to work with as his Verna Hillie the heroine.Of course this is a must for Randolph Scott fans who are a loyal bunch. It's a fine chance to see him in his younger days before those post World War II B westerns that he is now a screen legend for.By the way Scott has a pet mountain lion who plays an interesting role in his rescue from the dastardly Beery.