Stage to Mesa City

1947 "ROARING GUNS...ROLLING WHEELS...ROUSING THRILLS!"
6.2| 0h56m| en| More Info
Released: 13 September 1947 Released
Producted By: PRC
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Lash and Fuzzy sent to help John Watson with his stage line arrive to find him murdered. Recognizing the outlaws they trail them to their leader Baxter. But before Baxter can tell who the big boss is he is shot. After getting the stage through to assure the mail contract, Lash now realizes who the boss is.

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Reviews

BoardChiri Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay
Odelecol Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.
Kien Navarro Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.
Portia Hilton Blistering performances.
janice143 I am giving this movie a 10 rating only because Lash was my first crush when we got our first television in the early 1950s. I also watched Encore Westerns yesterday, the tribute to Lash showing six of his Marshal Cheyenne Davis movies filmed in 1947. At the end of the six hours, I was going bonkers. The music drove me crazy during the chase scenes, the same music in all six movies, thank goodness for the mute button. And Fuzzy St. John's antics wore thin. I just wanted to see Lash give some lovely damsels a few smooches, but no such luck.However, what a cheap movie company this was! In almost all of the films I watched yesterday, there were the same exact scenes over and over, in each of the movies. In two of the movies, there was the same exact stagecoach chase with the same damsel in distress! Oh well, so what! I got to see my Lash in all his glory. My heart is still beating wildly. What a guy!
classicsoncall Encore Westerns featured a six-gun salute to Lash La Rue today, and I would have been remiss if I didn't take in at least one of his pictures. In this story, the black clad cowboy hero rides in to Mesa City as Marshal Cheyenne Davis along with partner and deputy Fuzzy Jones (Fuzzy St. John). They've been sent to help the owner of a stage company who's on the brink of foreclosure unless he can land a government mail contract. Said owner, John Watson (Steve Clark) is dispatched early by the bad guys, and things look pretty bleak for his son and daughter who plan to continue running the business.It wouldn't be too far off to say that a good half of this picture's run time is taken up by endless chase scenes back and forth with the villains creating havoc all over the countryside. Cheyenne and Fuzzy are just close enough each time to ride in and make the save. There's a scene where bad guy Baxter (Marshall Reed) goes for his gun to draw down on 'Chey', and he strips the gun from the outlaw's hand with the bull-whip with the kind of confidence that made La Rue a 'B' Western matinée favorite in the Forties.For this outing, Fuzzy has a gimmick where he carries around a figurine of Sitting Bull for good luck, which comes in handy in one of the shoot 'em up scenes. He's always good for a chuckle if only for his appearance alone, but he gets his share of pratfalls in during the fight scenes as usual.Pretty Jennifer Holt makes another appearance in a Lash film as one of the Watson siblings. You'll also see her with Lash and Fuzzy in "The Fighting Vigilantes" and "Ghost Town Renegades". The character of her brother Bob was portrayed by Brad Slaven.The story's finale of course is never in doubt. There's an early hook thrown the viewer when lawyer Baxter keeps throwing out references to the unseen boss calling the shots. It would have been to easy to lay that one on the disinterested sheriff (Lee Morgan), but instead the film makers settled on the post office master in a wheelchair. Attempting to get away from Cheyenne, he makes a lame move with a blanket before getting boxed up by the marshal and returned for postage due.
charlytully Since the comment from 2006 appears to be a competent remark from a Lash Larue aficionado, this review can pass on from general critique to cultural juxtaposition. Whip-wielding Lash strips guns out of henchmen's hands at about the 20:20 and 37:05 marks of this 51:39-long flick (faster-triggered opponents may have paraphrased Sean Connery's famous UNTOUCHABLES line: "It's just like a Frenchman to bring a whip to a gunfight" while dispatching the hero with a well-placed shot). Unlike Frank Sinatra's tormentor in THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN ARM, handicapper subterfuge seems less character-driven than plot-driven here. Despite this script contrivance (and enough bling on Lash's horse to give him a weight handicap worthy of Man-O-War), this film is more watchable than that other drama about delivering U.S. mail, Kevin Costner's THE POSTMAN. Finally, the apparent disinterest of the Mesa City sheriff in apprehending his town's nefarious element--leaving outside troubleshooters to insure the triumph of good over evil--could have been ripped from today's headlines nearly anywhere in America.
revdrcac In this popular film in Lash Larue's series of low-budget 1940's westerns, the black-clad whip-slinger takes on murder and corruption in a small western town. The dated storyline is interesting, though the outcome of the mystery is somewhat predictable.Larue was never an accomplished actor, yet he does have an on screen persona in these films that makes the film entertaining for B-western fans. His deadpan delivery and feisty demeanor make him even more believable as he pursues the murderin' rascal in question. As always, Fuzzy St.John gives a humorous performance as the clown in prospector's clothing who aides Lash in "tracking" the dirty villain responsible for murder and mayhem. Elementary, my dear Lash !