Fugitive Valley

July. 30,1941      NR
Rating:
5.8
Trailer Synopsis Cast

The Range Busters have a plan to get into the outlaw's hideout in Fugitive Valley.

Ray Corrigan as  Crash Corrigan (as Ray 'Crash' Corrigan)
John 'Dusty' King as  Dusty King
Max Terhune as  Alibi Terhune posing as The Professor (as Max 'Alibi' Terhune)
Elmer as  Elmer - Alibi's Dummy
Julie Duncan as  Ann Savage
Glenn Strange as  Gray
Bob Kortman as  Red Langdon
Ed Brady as  Doctor Steve
Tom London as  Marshal Warren
Reed Howes as  Jim Brandon

Similar titles

Texas Trouble Shooters
Freevee
Texas Trouble Shooters
The Range Busters are together again to try and stop a swindle.
Texas Trouble Shooters 1942
Arizona Stage Coach
Arizona Stage Coach
In the midst of some friendly horseplay on their "Flying R" ranch, the Range Busters, Crash Corrigan, Dusty King and Alibi Terhune, are sobered by the arrival of a buckboard bearing their old friend Larry Meadows and his niece Dorrie Willard. Meadows seeks their aid against a gang of outlaws terrorizing his town. Ernie Willard, Dorrie's brother, has been taken in by Tex Laughlin who is using the Willard ranch as an undercover for his real occupation as a member of a gang of outlaws led by Tim Douglas, a supposed friend of the Willards.
Arizona Stage Coach 1942
Underground Rustlers
Underground Rustlers
Gold stages are being held up in the far west at a time when the U.S. government needs bullion, just before the famed "Black Friday" attempt to corner the gold market.
Underground Rustlers 1941
The Range Busters
Prime Video
The Range Busters
A phantom-like gunman is murdering the hands at the Circle T Ranch and the Range Busters are recruited by its owner to stop the "phantom". Only, the ranch owner is killed before they can arrive. First film in the Range Buster series.
The Range Busters 1940
The Kid's Last Ride
Prime Video
The Kid's Last Ride
The fifth film in the 24-film Range Busters series finds "Crash", "Dusty" and Alibi, on their way to Gopher City to become the town's peace officers. In the saloon, young Jimmy Rowell is losing money in a crooked poker game to saloon owner Bob Harmon. Harmon and his henchman Bart Gill are in reality wanted-outlaw brothers Jim and Ike Breedon seeking revenge against Jimmy and his school-teaching sister Sally as their father, a circuit judge in Nebraska, had sentenced their brother Bud to be hanged. Harmon involves Jimmy, because of his gambling debts, in a robbery of a rancher known to keep large amounts of money at his ranch. The Range Busters break up the robbery, Bart is killed, as is Rancher Fleming, and Jimmy is wounded but escapes. Harmon, setting a trap for Crash, tricks Sally and Jimmy to his hideout, and Crash follows them.
The Kid's Last Ride 1941
Haunted Ranch
Haunted Ranch
Both the Range Buster and Rance and his outlaw gang are looking for stolen gold bullion. To scare people away from the ranch where the gold is hidden, Rance has his man imitating ghosts. The gold is in a steel cased organ but a certain combination of organ stops need to be pulled to obtain the gold.
Haunted Ranch 1943
The Trail of the Silver Spurs
The Trail of the Silver Spurs
The Range Busters are investigating a gold robbery from the Denver Mint in a supposedly deserted ghost town, but they soon find they're not the only town resident with a nose for gold.
The Trail of the Silver Spurs 1941
West of Pinto Basin
West of Pinto Basin
The Range Busters head for Pinto Basin where a series of stage robberies have occurred. To try and find the gang's boss, Crash sends out a empty money box. The plan backfires when the boss has the Range Busters identified as the robbers. Thinking it is now safe, the bank sends out a big money shipment. Needing to rob the stage, the boss gets the boys out of jail so they can be blamed. But this is just the chance they need to catch the robbers.
West of Pinto Basin 1940

Reviews

Lawbolisted
1941/07/30

Powerful

... more
Moustroll
1941/07/31

Good movie but grossly overrated

... more
Allison Davies
1941/08/01

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

... more
Juana
1941/08/02

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

... more
classicsoncall
1941/08/03

For anyone keeping score, this was the eighth Range Busters film from Monogram Studios, who churned them out at a gallop beginning with the first in the series simply titled "The Range Busters". To give you an idea how prolific they were, eight pictures were made in 1941 alone, with a total of twenty four appearing between 1940 and 1943. The original trio of Ray 'Crash' Corrigan, John 'Dusty' King and Max 'Alibi' Terhune appeared in the first sixteen pictures, and an educated guess tells me that Alibi's wooden dummy Elmer did too.Most of these pictures offered pleasurable matinée entertainment for young fans of the day, though some might find they take a little getting used to today. As a fan of this stuff, I can watch them all, but even so some are better than others. This one's OK, but it's got some clumsy elements that are downright hokey, like the lame gimmick the doc called 'actiminikosis' when treating Crash and Dusty for their discolored blue tongues. Seems I developed the same symptoms once when I had some blueberry pie.The story opens with Crash getting arrested and then breaking out of jail with Dusty's help, along with outlaw Red Langdon (Bob Kortman), who shows his appreciation by introducing the boys to his outlaw bunch holed up in Fugitive Valley. It's a standard plot device used in dozens of B Westerns, here used with a slight twist as Alibi comes on the scene pretending not to know his partners, and using the stage name of Professor Hammo the Great, renowned magician and ventriloquist. That's where Elmer comes in, though he didn't really have much of a part to play in this one.A cool element in the story has to do with the character of Ann Savage (Julie Duncan), who's role is left rather ambiguous as she assumes the identity of a mysterious outlaw known as 'The Whip'. Meeting up with her 'gang' at a secret hideout, she takes part in a robbery, and it's not until the finale that we learn she's actually working as an undercover Pinkerton Agent to take down the baddies led by Glenn Strange. The final showdown is a rather awkward affair, as some of the bad guys get shot down returning fire with no cover, not really a smart move if you ask me.If the idea of a a woman heading up an outlaw gang is one that you find intriguing, a picture I can recommend has Jennifer Holt in the title role of "The Hawk of Powder River", an Eddie Dean flick from 1948. It's not often you'll see a female gunned down in a Western, but it happens in that one. Meanwhile, back in Fugitive Valley, the boys in conversation with Miss Savage have some thoughts about settling down only to be brought back to their senses by Alibi, anxious to get on to their next adventure with his closing remark - "Come on, we're ridin'."

... more
MartinHafer
1941/08/04

This B-western starts off with two big strikes against it. First, it features Max Terhune and his 'friend', Elmer. Elmer, it turns out, is a ventriloquist's dummy and the idea of this in an old-time western is just plain stupid. It's also one of the most inexplicable things I've ever seen in a movie and it's hard to believe 56 films were made with this wooden dummy (a literal wooden dummy--I am not making some sort of pejorative comment about Elmer's acting talents)! Elmer appeared in mostly westerns with the likes of Gene Autry, Robert Livingston and Johnny Mack Brown and even appeared in a Dick Tracy film!!! Second, the film begins with standard plot #6--the fake prison escape in order to find out where the bandit hideout is--something that was done dozens and dozens of times before and after--making the film very predictable. Because of these problems, Ray Corrigan starts off the film was some major handicaps. At least Dusty King's singing is a pleasant addition.As I mentioned above, the film begins with Corrigan being locked up and then 'rescued' by one friend--and soon meeting 'by accident' with another. In the process, another prisoner (a real prisoner) shows them where his hideout is at Fugitive Valley. Now you'd THINK with a name like this that the authorities would have already suspected Fugitive Valley was a hideout! The three Range Busters (the name given to this trio of good guys in a string of B-westerns) must find out who the leader is--the Whip! The gang keep insisting that there is no real Whip--it's just an alias they all use. But Corrigan's razor-sharp instincts tell him that there is a Mr. Big behind all this and he's determined to find him or her. Overall, despite the plot and Elmer, the acting and singing are fine--even if it's all very predictable if you've seen more than a few westerns. Not bad...but not particularly inspired either.By the way, if you like trivia, note Gray in this film. He's Glenn Strange and played in a ton of westerns...as well as played Frankenstein's monster in several of Universal's horror films {such as "Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein").

... more
Snow Leopard
1941/08/05

With a fair amount of action and pleasant leading characters, "Fugitive Valley" is satisfactory light entertainment. The story is clever, though occasionally far-fetched, and makes up to some degree for the mostly stock villains.The three Range Busters are infiltrating a notorious gang of criminals in an attempt to break it up and determine the identity of their elusive leader. Lawmen are waiting on the outside to move in if the trio succeeds, but suspicions soon begin to mount. Meanwhile, the daughter of Fugitive Valley's doctor seems to be involved in her own secret activities. It's an interesting combination of circumstances, and the story that follows is mostly done well.While its nothing to take seriously, this is a mostly pleasant way to pass an hour for anyone who likes old Westerns.

... more