John Carpenter Movies
The last of the low-budget Western heroes,
Johnny Carpenter had been a semi-professional baseball player prior to heading West in search of film jobs in the very early '40s. Beginning as a stunt man under the names of
John Forbes and
Josh Carpenter, monikers he would occasionally adopt throughout his screen career,
Carpenter rode in a host of routine series Westerns and such Grade-A films as
National Velvet (1944). In 1950, he was discovered by independent producer
Jack Schwartz, who saw star potential in the handsome, dark-haired stunt man whom some considered a dead ringer for
Montgomery Clift. B-Westerns, unfortunately, were about to be made redundant by even cheaper television fare and
Carpenter never enjoyed much of a following away from the grind-houses. By the mid-'50s, he had added guest roles on such TV Westerns as Wild Bill Hickock and
Judge Roy Bean to his list of credits and had even written, produced, and starred in a handful of feature Westerns of his own, one of which,
The Lawless Rider (1954), was directed by ace stunt man
Yakima Canutt. Lacking the polish of television Westerns, none of his films made much money and he subsequently returned to stunt work. From the 1940s and until he was evicted in 1994 to make room for a housing project,
Carpenter ran the "Heaven on Earth" ranch for handicapped children in Glendale, CA. B-Western historian Boyd Magers summed up
Johnny Carpenter's contribution to a quickly vanishing genre: "The last of the shoestring independent producer/stars, he didn't make top-drawer B-Westerns, but through all the budget pinching and corner cutting, his love of Western films shows through on the screen in much the same way his friend
Ed Wood's did in low-echelon horror films." ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide