John Wayne stars as trail guide turned sheriff out to bring law and order to a small town. The local troublemaker in the town has shot Wayne's father in the back, establishing Wayne's motivation to take the job of sheriff.
The film is short -- 54 minutes -- and has an average story line. There are no surprises here, and the acting...well, the acting is wooden in most cases, even Wayne. Of course, all he had to do was play himself. The one exception is Al Bridge, who plays the head of a gang of thieves who was once nursed back to health by Wayne and so feels that he owes him a debt -- even if it goes against his lawless nature. Bridge plays the part well, even a little tongue-in-cheek, seeming to be smirking just below the surface in every scene.
As stated, the story line is predictable so there is no standout here either. The one thing that did impress me was the filming of the obligatory "big shootout" that ends the film. It is several minutes long -- between 10 and 15 minutes -- and is shot at night. In the course of the shootout the saloon is set on fire which quickly jumps to several more buildings. Early films were not known for the quality of night photography, so to see how well this fire was depicted in the film, the quality of the scenes, the staging -- everything was done well in my opinion. Cinematographers Harry Neumann and Gus Peterson did an excellent job of shooting this finale. If you are a film buff, you'll want to check out the film simply for this alone. Others might want to watch one of Wayne's earlier work. Otherwise, the film is an average western.
The New Frontier
1935
Action / Adventure / Drama / Romance / Western
The New Frontier
1935
Action / Adventure / Drama / Romance / Western
Plot summary
Pioneers are surging westward to the Cherokee Strip, eager to conquer a new frontier, while wagon masters Milt Dawson and his son, John watch with interest. The latter is not ready to try his hand at homesteading and prefers to leading outfits safely to their destination. While John is leading the Miller-Myers party of settlers, Milt returns to a nearby town to witness the dubious advantages of civilization. Some of the pioneers he helped bring west, like Parson Shaw and Tom Lewis, are struggling to bring religion and an honest work ethic to the territory, while others, like saloon proprietor Ace Holmes, open the town to murder and corruption. The honest citizens ask Milt to become the town's first sheriff. He declines but when a citizen is murdered, Milt confronts Holmes and is shot down in cold blood. John has brought the latest group of settlers through, averting a battle with a hungry gang of outlaws by befriending the leader, Kit, and leaving behind some food and supplies. John is eager to see Hannah Lewis, daughter of Tom,but his homecoming is ruined by the news of his father's death. John takes the sheriff's job and Holmes, intent on controlling the town, hies a gang of cutthroats led by Norton. John escapes a Norton-gang ambush and faces Holmes in a showdown, but is struck down from behind. Kit and his now well-fed gang rescues John. John deputizes Kit and his men and they confront Holmes and his saloon henchies and a gun battle begins, with Johh, Kit and the outlaw deputies taking cover in the drainage ditches being dug in the main street. Lewis sets fire to Ace's saloon in the hope of smoking out the bar henchies but Norton and his gang ride in and set other buildings ablaze as the gunfight rages. Kit is killed while saving John's life and the lawful factor finally win the battle against the lawless proponents.
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Surprisingly Well Photographed
Not a bad movie as 30's B-Western movies go.
A lot of 1930's B-Western movies are almost embarrassing to watch in their primitive acting and scripting. This one has plenty of both but I found myself hanging to to see how they would being about the expected happy ending. John Wayne's character sets about the task of avenging his father's death while ridding a town of it's lawless element. Of special interest is the juxtaposition of the prayer meeting lead by the parson with the gunfight between the lawless element and the town's menfolk led by Wayne. A lot of movies, even today, shy away from religious themes that involve actual religious characters but this one shows the irony prayerful words against a backdrop of killing and the burning of the town. Take a look if you get a chance.
Paying Off A Debt
John Wayne was so busy grinding out these western quickies in the days before Stagecoach that maybe he forgot around 1939 to tell Herbert J. Yates that they already had done a film entitled The New Frontier. The Duke has two films for Republic with that title. The second The New Frontier is the last of his Three Mesquiteer films and has Jennifer Jones as his leading lady under her real name of Phyllis Isley.
It's possible Yates thought that the first The New Frontier was so bad that he wanted a chance to redeem the title. The Three Mesquiteer film is better than this one that came out four years earlier.
John Wayne is a trail boss, according to the film, a vanishing breed. He and father Sam Flint are doing this line of work, bringing in settlers to the new Oklahoma territory. It will be Wayne's last job before he settles down in the new Oklahoma town of Frontier.
Problem is that gambler/saloon owner Warner Richmond wants a wide open town. The good citizens of Frontier hire Flint as a sheriff to clean up the place, but Flint gets back shot. Wayne takes his place, in the same way Tom Destry Jr., stepped into his father's profession in Destry Rides Again.
Wayne gets help from an old outlaw, Al Bridge, in his efforts. Bridge's life was saved by the Duke on a previous occasion and for an outlaw, he's a man of honor.
Except for Al Bridge who later became a Preston Sturges regular, the acting is kind of stiff. Granted that B westerns of the day were usually in some never never land west, but I think even the Saturday afternoon kid crowd knew that wagon trains had died out a generation ago with the coming of the railroad. Wayne in fact takes a specific route from Kansas to Oklahoma the long way around to bypass hostile Indians. There weren't any hostile Indians then. In fact any school kid knew that Oklahoma was the place the formerly hostile Indians got dumped.
What the film lacks in authenticity it makes up for in the final fifteen minutes as the Wayne/Bridge crowd starts shooting it out with Richmond's bunch. In fact a fire in the saloon makes this one blazing shootout.
The New Frontier is one of a minority of films that never came out on VHS or DVD of John Wayne's. Let's hope the Wayne family estate keeps it under wraps.