William S. Hart Movies

William S. Hart was the most popular Western movie hero of the 1910s and the most revered Western movie actor of the silent era -- and oddly enough, that was only his second successful performing career. Born in Newburgh, NY, in 1870 (though his son always insisted it was 1864), he was the son of an itinerant laborer who moved his family to the Dakotas not long after, and Hart grew up among settlers and members of the Sioux tribe. The family's moves also took them to the Oklahoma and Indian Territories, and he knew the West of the 1870s and 1880s and always tried to give a true picture of what it was like. The family later moved back to Newburgh, and while he was in his teens, Hart decided to try for a career on the stage in New York City. He spent a few years in stock, in America and England, before graduating to leading roles in major productions during the 1890s, which included the dual lead in The Man in the Iron Mask and most notably as the Ben-Hur villain Messala in the original Broadway production. He was beloved for his Shakespearean portrayals as well and, in the midst of a wide variety of stage parts, occasionally got to play roles associated with the West, including the title parts in The Squaw Man (1905) and The Virginian (1907); he toured with the latter show for two years and later enjoyed success with The Barrier and The Trail of the Lonesome Pine.

Hart entered the movies in the early teens at the behest of his friend Thomas H. Ince, starting at 75 dollars a week; that quickly grew to 10,000 dollars a week as he proved not only a commanding and immensely popular screen presence but also as a director, screenwriter, and producer. Hart's insistence on showing the real West, and his honest, taciturn portrayals was something new and refreshing, whether he was playing heroes or villains (and, most often, villains who became heroes). His early films included O'Malley of the Mounted and -- in anticipation of Clint Eastwood's '60s persona -- The Man From Nowhere; these pictures, at his insistence, showed an unglorified, dusty vision of the West, showing how ordinary cowboys, ranchers, shopkeepers, and settlers lived and worked. He was one of the most popular leading men in movies during the mid-teens and became one of the wealthiest and most powerful men in pictures, establishing himself as an independent producer working through Famous Players-Lasky (the predecessor to Paramount), earning over four-million-dollar profits on an investment of the same size in some 27 films made there. Such was his fame on the screen, that most of Hart's fans were unaware of his background as a top Broadway actor with stage experience in New York and London. To them he was honest, taciturn Bill Hart, a two-gun threat and a realistic presence onscreen -- of those movies he made in the teens, the best of them (which he co-directed) was Hell's Hinges, a kind of Sodom and Gomorrah tale transposed to the West. By the early '20s, however, a change in public taste coupled with some personal conflicts -- including accusations (later proved false) of a son born out of wedlock, and the resulting breakup of his marriage -- marked a turn in Hart's fortunes.

Audiences wanted more romance in their Western heroes, and were getting it from players like Tom Mix; Hart's movies and portrayals were seen as old hat. He went on, however, until 1924, when he went into partnership with United Artists in the production and distribution of his last film, Tumbleweeds. A nostalgic look back at the closing of the West, Tumbleweeds is today regarded as one of the greatest of silent Westerns, though on its original release, the movie was -- based on original claims by the distributor -- only a moderate success in its own time. It did contain the essence of his screen persona and a land-rush scene that, in its editing and execution, has been compared favorably with the contemporary work of Eisenstein. Hart subsequently sued United Artists in a case that lasted for over a decade and ended up in Hart's favor, awarding him 278,000 dollars in damages in 1940. He later rereleased the movie with a sound prologue in which the aging actor gave a touching farewell to the screen and his fans.

During the late '20s, he wrote an autobiography, My Life -- East and West, and a few Western novels, but apart from the reissue of Tumbleweeds was largely invisible to the public. He did play an important behind-the-scenes role in the making of one classic film, however, when he was approached by Francis X. Bushman, who had been asked to star in the silent epic Ben-Hur: A Story of the Christ, in the role of Messala. Bushman had built his career playing heroes and wasn't sure if he should -- or should want to -- play a villain of such profound proportions in so weighty a work. He talked to Hart who had played the role on Broadway for two years and reportedly offered the advice: "Trust me -- play the villain." It has since proved to be the one role for which Bushman is remembered in silent movies. In the '40s, disputes broke out in public about Hart's physical condition, and the conditions under which he was living. His closest companion was his sister who lived at his estate; she was especially passionate about the rescue of homeless animals, and after her death in 1943, he gave 100,000 toward the establishment of an animal shelter in her name in Westport, CT. In his will, Hart established a Western museum on the grounds of his estate. He remains one of the most respected and revered Western actors from the early days of the genre, and his films Hell's Hinges and Tumbleweeds are still among the most watchable of all silent Westerns. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1939  
 
The Movies March On was Number 12, volume 9 of Louis de Rochemont's March of Time series. Narrated by the stentorian Westbrook Van Vorhees, this fascinating documentary manages to squeeze 40 years of filmmaking into a mere two reels. Beginning with the once scandalous The Kiss (1898), the film jumps ahead to one of the first "story" films, Edison's The Great Train Robbery (1903, directed by Edwin S. Porter). Next is offered a cross-section of the great D. W. Griffith's Biograph films followed by snippets of such past luminaries as Mary Pickford, William S. Hart, Charlie Chaplin, Theda Bara, Greta Garbo and John Gilbert. In 1927, The Jazz Singer ushers in the talkie era, which is represented by snippets from films as diverse as All Quiet on the Western Front and the Mickey Mouse vehicle Steamboat Willie. After a round-up of recent cinematic achievements, Van Vorhees signs off with his customary "Time?.MARCHES ON!" Though undeniably superficial, The Movies March On at least never adopts a condescending tone when reviewing the silent era, which sets it apart from most summaries of its kind. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Mary PickfordLionel Barrymore, (more)
1936  
 
In this North western, a Mountie is assigned to patrol the Canadian and US border. He also stops the evil outlaws that have been terrorizing bordertowns by going undercover and infiltrating their gangs. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
George O'BrienIrene Ware, (more)
1930  
 
The tall and virile Johnny Mack Brown portrays the short and dyspeptic outlaw William Bonney, a.k.a. Billy the Kid. Wallace Beery is more effectively cast as Pat Garrett, the sheriff who's sworn to bring in Billy dead or alive despite his grudging friendship for the young killer. Hardly the "homicidal moron" described by western historians, the movie's Billy has a certain amount of charm, though he's shown to be a cold-blooded killer when the opportunity arises. The film's ending was shot twice: One ending retained fidelity to the facts by having Garrett kill Billy, while the other denouement allowed Billy to ride into the sunset, as Garrett beatifically looked on. Over the protests of western purists, the second ending was used in the American release version, though the more tragic climax was seen by European audiences. Billy the Kid was originally released in a 70mm widescreen process called Realife; to avoid confusion with MGM's 1941 Billy the Kid, the earlier film has been retitled The Highwayman Rides for television. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Johnny Mack BrownWallace Beery, (more)
1928  
 
This Marion Davies vehicle was loosely inspired by the career of Gloria Swanson. Davies plays would-be starlet Peggy Pepper, who arrives at the gates of MGM Studios with her dad Colonel Pepper (Dell Henderson) in hopes of becoming a great dramatic actress. Instead, she a scores a hit as an ingenue in the slapstick comedies starring the effervescent Billy Boone (William Haines). As the audience rocks with laughter during the preview of Peggy's first film (no one is more enthusiastic than her director Harry Gribbon), she sits in sullen silence, insisting to Billy that some day she'll invoke tears instead of laughter. This doesn't seem likely, inasmuch as Peggy can't even cry on cue (her director is forced to peel onions outside of camera range to achieve the desired emotion), but the tenacious young actress finally manages to win favor in dramatic roles. Inevitably, this causes a strain on her budding romance with Billy, and the couple slowly drifts apart. Now the unchallenged Queen of the Cinema, Peggy -- billing herself as Patricia Pepoire -- prepares to marry her oily leading man Andre (Paul Ralli), but mischievous Billy disrupts her fancy wedding. She angrily tosses Billy out of the house, realizing only when it's too late that she's still in love with him. But in the final scene, the hero and heroine are accidentally reunited on the set of a WWI picture directed by King Vidor (who also directed Show People). Two versions of Show People are currently available for TV; the "stretch-framed" Kevin Brownlow-David Gill restoration, with a new orchestral score by Carl Davis, and the original MGM release version, outfitted with a lively music and sound-effects track. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Marion DaviesWilliam Haines, (more)
1925  
 
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Tumbleweeds marked silent-screen cowboy legend William S. Hart's return to the screen after a long absence, and it was also his swan song, as Hart's brand of individualism and moody morality gave way to the more action-oriented films of Tom Mix and the epic westerns of The Covered Wagon and The Iron Horse. Tumbleweeds takes place in 1899 when the Cherokee Strip was opened up to homesteaders. When that happens, Don Carver (Hart), the range boss for the Box K Ranch, finds himself out of work. Carver falls in love with Molly Lassiter (Barbara Bedford), the daughter of one of the families of homesteaders who have gathered in Caldwell, Kansas, preparing for the big land rush. Carver joins up with the homesteaders in the hope that he can get a piece of land and claim the site of the Box K ranchhouse, which controls the water for the strip. But he is falsely arrested and has to break free to take part in the land rush. Although King Baggot is credited as the sole director, Hart co-directed the film. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. HartBarbara Bedford, (more)
1924  
 
William S. Hart's second-to-last film was not the box-office failure some accounts seems to suggest. But the veteran star was fighting for control over his films with Paramount executive Adolph Zukor and lost. He plays a singing outlaw (!) who along with a friend robs a stagecoach in order to provide for the latter's motherless child. The friend is killed and Hart's Singer McKee vows to raise the child. She grows into the vamp-ish Phyllis Haver and they fall in love and marry. In order to enable his wife to enter into society, Singer commits another crime and is shipped off to prison. Paroled years later, Hart returns to home and hearth to discover he has become a father. Considering Hart's advanced age (he was close to sixty), the story was too ludicrous for words and the studio revoked his script approval rights. The great Western star refused to compromise, but returned to the screens a final time in 1925 for his masterpiece, Tumbleweeds. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. HartPhyllis Haver, (more)
1923  
 
In his third-to-last Western, austere silent-screen hero William S. Hart tackles the legend of gambler/lawman Wild Bill Hickock. Unfortunately, Hart's approach was, to quote the trade-paper Wid's, "rather dull and tedious." Hart belonged thoroughly to the 1910s, and his stark ways were considered old hat and no match for the circus atmosphere created by younger cowboy stars. Hart is otherwise well-cast as the former gambler turned upholder of law and order after a run-in with a gang of stage robbers. Having given up his guns for good, he finds Dodge City so rough that he quickly retrieves them. Only an approaching blindness can threaten Hickock's tough adherence to law and order, but when arch-enemy Jack McQueen (James Farley) accuses him of losing his nerve, Hickock is ready with his usual no-nonsense response. There's a woman (Kathleen O'Connor), of course, but only briefly since she is devoted to another (Carl Gerard). And there's the inevitable gallery of colorful supporting characters, from Bat Masterson (Jack Gardner) and Calamity Jane (Ethel Grey Terry) to none other than Abraham Lincoln himself. Despite all this, the film was an expensive failure and hastened Hart's departure from Famous Players Lasky. Supporting actors Carl Gerard and Ethel Grey Terry were married in real life. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. HartEthel Grey Terry, (more)
1922  
 
The stern William S. Hart was wearing out his welcome by the early 1920s, at least according to the review of his films. Hart would not give up his austere, almost mythical view of the West, his innate sentimentality, not to mention the demand for a romantic story-line despite advancing years. His popularity was slipping, and there was talk that Paramount wouldn't renew his contract after Travelin' On. Hart did three more films for the company, however, but was unable to regain his former popularity. This time Hart's enigmatic drifter incurs the enmity of a preacher (James Farley) when both men fall for the same woman, the wife of the saloon owner (Ethel Grey Terry). Hart saves the woman from the lecherous preacher and becomes her protector from afar. When her husband is arrested for robbing the stage (to pay for a new church, no less), Hart takes the blame rather than see the woman he loves the widow of a murderer. Sentenced to hang, he manages to escape the noose in the nick of time and goes "Travelin' On." ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. HartJames Farley, (more)
1921  
 
William S. Hart takes his good-bad man character out of the West for this capital-versus-labor drama. Widower Robert Evans (Hart) labors as a factory foreman, and his young son, Danny (Will Jim Hatton), works alongside him. Evans urges his boss, Henry Chapple (Frank Brownlee), to repair the machinery before an accident happens, but Chapple is more concerned with contracts than with the safety of his workers. That same day, Danny is caught in a defective belt and killed. Evans, distraught over his son's death, is walking by the river when he sees Chapple's car plunge into the water. He saves the baby (Richard Headrick) and runs away with it, leaving the Chapples to believe their child has drowned. He raises the boy, Georgie (played as a youngster by Georgie Stone), as his own. When he encounters Chapple and his wife (Myrtle Steadman), and he sees how badly Mrs. Chapple still misses her son, he confesses that he has their boy and returns him to them. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. HartFrank Brownlee, (more)
1921  
 
The great silent western hero William S. Hart was no longer in his prime when he produced (for Paramount-Artcraft) this moralistic tale of a Mountie chasing down the murderer of a saloon keeper. Along the way, the lawman encounters a gang of robbers and, to gain their confidence, pretends to rob a bank himself. The ruse works, and he is admitted to the gang's mountain lair. There, he falls for the sister (Eva Novak) of one of the bandits (Antrim Short). A jealous rival (Leo Willis) gets wise to the ruse, however, and the Mountie is sentenced to be hanged by the gang leader. He is rescued, in the nick of time by the girl and her brother. As it turns out, the boy is the wanted killer of the saloon keeper. Rather than arrest the brother of his beloved, officer Hart nobly resigns from the force, returning, as an inter title explains, " to his loved one no longer O'Malley of the Mounted." In accordance with changing tastes, the usually reticent Hart added several scenes of rodeo excitement to this otherwise average potboiler. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. HartEva Novak, (more)
1921  
 
A gambler (William S. Hart) seeks revenge on the villain (Alexander Gaden) who ravished his sister (Helen Holly). The brute also attempts to, as an inter title puts it, "possess" the gambler's sweetheart (Vola Vale) and, still not satisfied, lecherously pursues the daughter of his partner-in-crime, an Indian chief (Standing Bear). Hart wrote the story himself, and the film reflects his, by 1921, slightly anachronistically stern view of the West. The great star was no longer the box-office draw of yore, his popularity usurped by more flamboyant, if not downright tongue-in-cheek, cowboys such as Tom Mix and Hoot Gibson. Hart released three more films in 1921 but none the following year and only one in 1923. He wound up his career in 1925, but on a high note: Tumbleweeds, a fascinating epic of the Oklahoma land rush. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. HartVola Vale, (more)
1921  
 
Twin brothers, separated at birth, are again found on opposite sides of the law in this typical William S. Hart western. Actually, Hart plays no less than three roles in this film: Ben Trego, a western pioneer who is killed during an Indian raid, and Trego's sons, both of whom are saved but adopted into different families. One grows up to become Paul Marsden, governor of Utah, the other, "Three Word" Brand (because of, as the title explains, the sparsity of his speech), the co-owner of a ranch. When the partner, Barton (S.J. Bingham) is falsely accused of murder and thrown in jail, "Three Word" urges the governor to intervene. The governor comes to investigate and, noticing the strong resemblance, "Three Brand" cooks up a scheme to derail the politician and take his place. At the capital, he manages to kill a crooked water bill and sign Barton's pardon. The brothers eventually learn the truth of their common parentage and "Three Word" is free to marry Barton's daughter Ethel (Jane Novak). According to contemporary reviews, Hart played his three roles to the hilt, and the film was highly praised for its fine camerawork (by the dependable Joseph H. August). ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. HartJane Novak, (more)
1920  
 
William S. Hart added a bit more suspense and drama in this otherwise typical Hart western. The greatest western star of the mid 1910s, Hart again played a good-bad man reformed by his love for a righteous woman (Anna Q. Nilsson) and a young child, in this case, Nilsson's son (Richard Headrick). The villain is the woman's brutish husband (Joseph Singleton) who eventually gets the heave-ho (literally, over a cliff). What makes this western very unusual for its time (or any time, for that matter) is the lack of the traditional happy ending. Although pardoned by the sheriff for killing Singleton, Hart refuses to marry the widow despite their obvious love for one another because he deems himself unworthy after killing her husband. Critics have bemoaned such "Hart-isms," but the decision actually seems quite logical and understandable this time. This was the first film Hart made after leaving Thomas Ince and organizing his own production company. Leading lady Anna Q. Nilsson was Scandinavia's first gift to the American film industry. Arriving in New York as a domestic around 1905, the Swedish beauty rose to screen stardom in the early to mid-1910s without the benefit of a single acting lesson. Hollywood chronicler Adela Rogers St. Johns later termed the actress the screen's "only blond vamp." ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
William S. Hart
1920  
 
Cowboy star William S. Hart takes one of his rare vacations from Westerns in this picture to play a crook-turned-cop (at least he's still playing the good-bad man). After being forced to serve in World War I France, cracksman "Square" Kelly (Hart) comes home to San Francisco and decides to go straight. This earns him the enmity of his former gang, and even his mother (Getrude Claire), who thinks he has gone yellow. When Kelly discovers that his brother Jim, a fellow gang member (Francis Thorwald) was shot in the back by its leader, Tierney (Thomas Santschi), he goes out for revenge with his fists flying -- but this time he has the law on his side. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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1920  
 
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Veteran star William S. Hart both produced and starred in this western about a railroad-station agent who loses his job because of a villain's machinations. The villain (G. Raymond Nye) is a major stockholder in the railroad company and covets Hart's girl (Mary Thurman). Working as a ranch hand, Hart discovers that his enemy is actually the leader of a gang of train robbers. According to its publicity, Sand was President Woodrow Wilson's favorite Hart western. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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1920  
 
A tough outlaw, "Sierra" Bill (William S. Hart), falls in love with a travelling girl violinist, Nelly (Eva Novak), and forces her into marrying him. They have a child, but family life is interrupted by a gambler, (J. Gordon Russell), who not only persuades Nelly to leave her husband but ruins him at the gaming table. Half crazed with thoughts of vengeance, "Sierra" breaks out of jail and goes after the villain. Returning to the homestead a changed man from having "passed through bitterest sorrow and misery of the 'Testing Block,'" Sierra and Nelly reunite. Hart penned the story for this moralistic western directed in the usual stark way by Hart collaborator Lambert Hillyer. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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1919  
 
Cowboy hero William S. Hart tries something altogether different in this film. He plays Hairpin Harry Dutton, a burglar who is sent to prison. He spends his incarceration dreaming of his pretty young wife (Juanita Hansen) and son and making firm resolutions for the day he gets released. But when he finally gets out, his plans are dashed -- his friend (Walter Long) informs him that his wife has divorced him. Not only that -- she has married the policeman who arrested him. Angrily, the former burglar plans to seek revenge, but when he sees his son, he realizes his actions would be pointless and wrong. So, leaving his ex-wife with her new husband, he starts off on a new life, taking his son with him. While well-received, this film did not encourage Hart to abandon his Western roots very often. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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1919  
 
Boss rider "Careless" Carmody (William S. Hart) is made sheriff of an Arizona frontier town by Chicago swindler Prentice (Bert Sprotte). The naive Carmody actually believes Prentice to be on the up and up and vouches for him in a land deal with Ruth Fellowes (Seena Owen). Taken to the cleaners, so to speak, Ruth blames Carmody, who, in love with the girl, follows Prentice back to Chicago. Rounding up Prentice's enemies among the cow men at the stockyards, "Careless" finally gets the goods on the swindler. Not one of Hart's better vehicles, Breed of Men, in the words of critic Louis Reeves Harrison, "lacked that essential element of drama -- suspense." ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

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1919  
 
A lesser-known William S. Hart vehicle, The Money Corral casts two-gun Bill as a rodeo story. A Chicago banker hires Hart to protect his riches from a criminal gang. The big-money scene finds Hart roping and hog-tying the baddies, just as we knew he would. Eva Novak, one of Hart's favorite leading ladies, provides the feminity to these rugged proceedings. William S. Hart is also credited with the direction of The Money Corral, though as usual he relied upon a battery of faithful assistants. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1918  
 
As usual serving as his own producer and director, William S. Hart played the title role in the six-reel western Selfish Yates. The story is set in Arizona, where the aptly nicknamed Yates is the proprietor of the local saloon. Unable to find any other work, pretty Mary Adams (Jane Novak) is forced to scrub floors in Yates' establishment. At first treating her with the same disdain that he extends to the rest of the townsfolk, Yates slowly but surely falls in love with Mary, and for her sake he changes his selfish ways. In traditional Bill Hart fashion, the unheroic hero ends up putting his own life in jeopardy to save Mary from the clutches of resident villain "Rocking Chair" Riley (Bert Sprotte) -- and, just to prove that he has thoroughly reformed, Yates compassionately allows Riley to escape an angry lynch mob. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1918  
 
Cowboy star William S. Hart plays Jefferson "Riddle" Gawne, a man who really carries a grudge. When he finds his brother dying and hears that the killer has run off with his brother's wife, he swears revenge. Years pass and Riddle earns the enmity of cattle rustler Hame Bozzam (Lon Chaney). When Easterner Kathleen Harkless (Katherine MacDonald) comes to town, things really heat up between our hero and Bozzram, as both men want the girl. Riddle is shot and nearly killed by Bozzram, but he recovers to win Kathleen and emerge victorious over Bozzram, who, it turns out, was his brother's murderer. This film was based on a serial, The Vengeance of Jefferson Gawne by Charles Alden Seltzer, which appeared in the Argosy. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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1918  
 
In this Western, William S. Hart plays the Bandit, who is in love with Belle Shields (Hart's frequent co-star, Rhea Mitchell). But then the Sky Pilot (an archaic slang term for preacher) comes to town, and draws Belle's attention. The Bandit realizes that he has lost Belle to the preacher (Robert Edeson), and takes to drink. In the saloon, he gets in a brawl with several men over Belle and is getting a sound thrashing when the Sky Pilot shows up to help him. He not only reforms the Bandit, but Belle, too, and he marries her. A friend of Belle's introduces her to the shady Jack Malone, who tries to kiss her after having a couple of drinks. Even though he is supposed to be behaving himself, the Bandit is incensed by this and he seeks vengeance on Belle's behalf. The two men have a gunfight and Malone is killed. Belle is now able to resume her peaceful life as the minister's wife. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide

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1918  
 
Along with Hell's Hinges and Tumbleweeds, Blue Blazes Rawden is currently among the most readily available of William S. Hart's westerns. Hart, of course, plays the title character, a brawny lumberjack who enters into a poker game with a deceptively mild-looking English gambler named Ladyfingers Hilgard (Robert McKim). The stakes are Hilgard's gambling emporium -- and, it is implied, the Englishman's girlfriend Babette Du Fresne (Maud George). Accusing each other of cheating, Rawden and Hilgard decide to settle their differences with their six-shooters. And this is only the beginning of the picture, which by the final reel has incorporated practically all of the familiar William S. Hart elements, including the self-sacrificial redemption of the "good bad man" hero. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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