The Devil's Playground

November. 15,1946      NR
Rating:
6.7
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Trailer Synopsis Cast

Hoppy finds a wounded girl and later finds Judge Morton who claims the girl is his daughter and he is looking for her. But Hoppy soon learns the girl is looking for stolen gold she wants to return and the Judge in not her father but only wants the gold. Hoppy and the girl find the gold but the Judge and his men find Hoppy and the boys and trap them in a cabin.

William Boyd as  Hopalong Cassidy
Andy Clyde as  California Carlson
Rand Brooks as  Lucky Jenkins
Elaine Riley as  Mrs. Evans
Robert Elliott as  Judge Morton
Francis McDonald as  Roberts
Nedrick Young as  Curly Evans (as Ned Young)
Earle Hodgins as  Deputy Dan'l
George Eldredge as  U.S. Marshal

Reviews

Cortechba
1946/11/15

Overrated

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Claysaba
1946/11/16

Excellent, Without a doubt!!

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Contentar
1946/11/17

Best movie of this year hands down!

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KnotStronger
1946/11/18

This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.

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Diane Ruth
1946/11/19

French born director George Archainbaud crafted a superb entry in this series and it is distinguished by one of star William Boyd's finest performances. The action sequences are very exciting indeed and the story is certainly well done by screenwriter Ted Wilson. The characters in this particular film are given depth and allowed the time required to develop as the motion picture progresses. There is certainly the influence of the continental film industry on view, not so much that of German Expressionism as the early work of French pioneers. The setting of the Old West is the perfect stage for this parable of good and evil to play out, reflecting the end of the world crisis in 1946. Stunning black and white cinematography captures the symbolism of the characters themselves and serves as a powerful metaphor for the manner in which moral issues were handled during the period.

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classicsoncall
1946/11/20

I've had occasion to view a number of Hopalong Cassidy films over the past few weeks and the Alabama Hills of Lone Pine, California happened to be featured prominently in a handful of them. It's a landscape of huge boulder formations with passable trails, and in the restored Hoppy movies I've seen they're magnificent to experience. For this picture, the film makers decided to give them a somewhat mystical connotation, and for a while there during the opening segment it looked like we were going to see a ghost themed Western. I would have liked it if they followed through.Instead, we eventually learn that a woman on the run (Elaine Riley) is attempting to locate some stolen gold so she could have it returned to a bank in Soledad from which it was taken. She's pursued by a posse of outlaws led by Judge Morton (Robert Elliott) who want the gold for themselves naturally. The Judge claims the woman is his daughter, so Hoppy and his pals have some work to do to sort things out. You know, I've seen it in a few of his films now where Hoppy (William Boyd) almost magically seems to know what's what and eventually brings the viewer around to his solution, but it's only until later events reveal what he's been thinking. In that regard, he strikes me as the Charlie Chan of the Wild West.Regarding our heroine, there's a bit of a twist written into her role, and not to the satisfaction of Hoppy's buddy. The Miss is a Mrs., so scratch off another doomed romance for Lucky Jenkins (Rand Brooks). Elaine Riley made for a pretty heroine, but to be quite honest, she was a terrible actress and her performance pretty much defined the term wooden. She has a pretty extensive credits list here on the IMDb, with a fair amount of TV episode appearances in the Forties and Fifties, so maybe she just had a bad day.

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dougdoepke
1946/11/21

Catch that spooky opening. I've seen a ton of great daytime shots of the rocky Alabama Hills. This is the first night time segment I've seen and it's very effective. The movie itself is solid Hoppy as the Bar-20 boys try to get the stolen gold before the bad guys. Hoppy also has to deal with a portly sheriff more interested in a poker hand than in law-enforcement.The chuckles are also more spread around than California's (Clyde) usual silliness. It's a little hard at times knowing who is chasing whom since the cast of speaking parts is bigger than usual. And, unless my recollection is slipping, this is a Hoppy without a single fistfight! Also, catch that neat little twist with the winsome leading lady that leaves Lucky dumbfounded.In passing—Curly is played by Nedrick Young who had an interesting Hollywood career. As a writer, he penned such popular prestige films as The Defiant Ones (1958), Inherit the Wind (1960), and even Elvis's Jailhouse Rock (1957). Many of his credits were under pseudonyms since he was also blacklisted during the McCarthy period. Not the kind of career you'd expect in a Saturday afternoon programmer, to say the least.

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malcolmgsw
1946/11/22

I know that it is difficult for there to be much originality in a Hopalong Cassidy western.However sometimes you feel that the writers have tried a bit to hard.They have come up with certain story lines and mixed them together but they just don't jell.To add to this the actor playing the villain doesn't do a particularly good job.Also there is a particularly inept Sheriff who is a sort of comic Eugene Palette and it just doesn't work.I would also wonder if Hoppy is so clever why does he do the dumbest things.He is being chased on horseback with Lucky,and California and the girl.They decide to hide in a shack,which of course is soon surrounded by the villains,Hoppy has to give up because they have run out of shells!Wouldn't common sense dictate that if you were being chased the last place to go would be a confined space? So i would have to say that this is not of the teams better efforts.

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