The Wild Horse Stampede (1926) Poster

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7/10
WHO is that billed above Fay Wray?
AlsExGal15 August 2017
...That would be Jack Hoxie, a true Western star if there ever was one, and star of dozens of silent westerns, ending his silent career at Universal which was known for its Western films in the silent era.

This is a pretty short film. Hoxie plays Jack Tanner, who enters a competition to capture ten thousand wild horses for a cash prize. He then plans to ask Jessie Hayden (Fay Wray) for her hand in marriage. However, hissable villain Charlie Champion beats him to the proposal. Meanwhile a woman looking for the husband that abandoned her finds refuge in Tanner's house. When Jessie goes to Tanner's house and sees the woman in a bathrobe tending to Jack's laundry she draws all of the wrong conclusions and decides to marry Champion on the rebound. An aside here- Honestly Jessie, that woman looks like she is just shy of 40. You are less than half her age. She might be his aunt there for a visit! Lighten up! Meanwhile, Champion's men decide to let the wild horses go from Tanner's make shift corral just as Champion and Jesse are making their way into town. The key is that these are "wild" horses. They are not just going to amble out of the corral at a normal gait, they are going to stampede! And right into the path of Jesse and Champion's buggy! Tanner rides like the wind to explain about the woman at his house to Jessie if she will let him, to save her from the "wild horse stampede", and deliver one other piece of vital information that up until now all of the parties involved were not privy to.

This was a great little western with lots of action, the film moves along nicely, and special honors have to go to Bunk the Dog, who really knew how to act.

Hoxie's story is rather sad. He had great talent in roping, riding, and stunts, but westerns could not be made because of the camera's need to be static for about the first three years after and during the transition to sound. Hoxie made only one film between the end of 1927 and 1932 as a result. Plus, Hoxie's looks were those of a silent star not those of the Gables and Gary Coopers that rose up in the 1930s. If you have never seen him, Hoxie greatly resembled John Travolta in pancake makeup. Besides his style, Hoxie was illiterate, which made the transition to sound and scripted roles impossible. He died in obscurity in the 1960s, sadly forgotten with many of his films destroyed by neglect and decomposition.
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6/10
Routine Western
Maliejandra30 August 2017
Jack Tanner (Jack Hoxie) is a poor cowboy hoping to increase his fortune so he can marry his sweetheart (Fay Wray). Charlie Champion (William Steele) wants to kill all of the wild horses in the area because of their destructive behavior. Jack offers to round them up, hoping he can then sell them and make a fortune. They give him ten days.

I am not a fan of westerns because they seem to tell the same basic stories over and over again against a beautiful outdoor backdrop. This is no exception.

Hoxie seems to be an odd choice for a movie star. His enormous teeth make him seem like he is grimacing most of the time. It seems many movie fans like to pity him for the loss of his career, but I say he is lucky to have had a successful career in the movies at all.

I saw this film screened at Capitolfest in 2017.
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3/10
Mild western with beautiful scenery.
WesternOne115 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Just saw this one at Capitolfest. It's in a restored state, apparently a great German print had been recently found. The weird rock formations in the deserts and valleys are quite appealing to be seen in such a nice sharp copy. However, the story is pretty much a silly one for kids, where Hoxie is teamed with a mutt that has the brains that only movie dogs have, and an equally savvy horse, that at one point, has a fight with the bad guy's horse. If a film has a horse fight in it, it's not reaching for high art. Hoxie is going to get the right to ask for the old rancher's daughter's hand but first he has to earn some bucks by rounding up a gang of wild horses that otherwise will be killed off. Well, everyone calls him a fool for trying such an impossible stunt, but with the aid of his animal pals, it's all done in no time. A strange, husky woman is introduced with some sort of mission, she tells Jack all about it, and she does some others, but we in the audience are kept from "hearing" just what she's saying until the end, which I see as kind of a cheat. The girl, Fay Wray in an early role, gets the idea that Hox has a kept woman at his shack when she glims the strange gal, and in a fit of pique threatens to marry his rival, the bad guy. Just to top it off, the baddie has his men set the wild horses loose again, and he and Fay almost get killed in their stampede. Hoxie rescues Fay from this. The payoff is the strange woman came to collect the bad guy, who is her husband. A real programmer of it's era. I must comment that Jack Hoxie, at least here, is appallingly wooden, maybe arthritic. Even the dog and horse seemed livelier.
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