Blazing Barriers (1937) Poster

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6/10
THE CCC
boblipton19 August 2019
Frank Coghlan Jr. and Edward Arnold Jr. are a couple of budding hoodlums, looking out for the easy breaks. As things work out, they have to blow town and take to the road. Finally, anxious for square meals and a bunk, they join the Civilian Conservation Corps. Easy-going Arnold adjusts pretty quickly, but Coghlan is tougher, until he begins to grow up under the influence of pretty sheriff's daughter Florine McKinney.

The Civilian Conservation Corps was one of the more popular New Deal programs. Roosevelt had done something like it when he was governor of New York State, and the prospect of giving young men work managing the national, state and local government land, three hots and a cot, and $30 a month ($25 of which had to be sent home) kept 300,000 off welfare at a time. It's estimated that by the time it closed down in 1942, over 3,000,000 had worked for it. CCC alumni were well thought of, and those who entered the military got early try-outs for non-com spots.

So this movie, which falls into the standard mode of "bad boys make good" actually has something to say. It's running time is eked out by Irene Franklin and Guy Bates Post as two old vaudevillian who are kind to the boys, and start to kindle their redemption. It's a pleasant and watchable movie.
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5/10
The CCC makes men
bkoganbing19 June 2019
Blazing Barriers concerns a pair of kids on the lam from an attempted robbery who grab a freight train and get way out in the country. On the road like so many kids in the 30s they happen to come across a camp for Civilian Conservation Corps youth. Frank Coghlan and Edward Arnold, Jr. figure this is a good place to hide out until the heat is off.

And of course they get involved with the CCC both in reclaiming the land and their paramilitary sense of discipline. Watching this film I thought of CCC youth in the 30s and how those who were involved with it transitioned to army life in the 40s.

This programmer for Monogram is a salute to one of the most popular of New Deal programs. We could use it now in fact.
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5/10
Blazing Barriers review
JoeytheBrit22 April 2020
Likeable former child star Frank Coghlan Jr., makes an unconvincing tough guy in this low budget tale of redemption from Monogram, and he's supported by Eddie Arnold's son, who has none of his father's character. Fairly uneventful stuff until the concluding forest fire.
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3/10
Outdoor adventure from Monogram
Leofwine_draca2 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
BLAZING BARRIERS is a cheap outdoors adventure made by Monogram in 1937. Most of the film seems to have been shot in just a couple of locations and most of the supporting cast are interchangeable, just there in numbers to make the film look bigger than it is.

The protagonists are a couple of young goons by the name of Tommy and Fats. They're failed criminals who decide to escape the long arm of the law by joining something called the Civilian Conservation Corps, an outdoor outfit involved in tree logging and other forestry enterprises.

This being a somewhat moralistic story, the main characters soon change for the better, but their lives are made more complex by the arrival of an even more sinister character with destruction in mind. BLAZING BARRIERS is a predictable little effort that doesn't ring true for a second, but at least there's plenty of incident to take your mind off the cheapness of it all.
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7/10
More interesting than you would expect!
JohnHowardReid30 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Frank Coghlan Jr (Tommy McGrath), Edward Arnold (Fats Moody), Florine McKinney (Joan Martin), Irene Franklin (Fleurette), Guy Bates Post (Reginald), Herbert Corthell (Sheriff Martin), Milburn Stone (Joe Waters), Addison Randall (Arthur Forsythe), and Dick Hogan, Dennis O'Keefe, Nestor Paiva, Mary Hayes, Frank Bishell, A. Taylor, C. Carpenter.

Director. AUBREY SCOTTO. Original screenplay: Edwin C. Parsons. Additional dialogue: Lee Freeman. Photography: Paul Ivano. Film editor: Russell Schoengarth. Music: Charles K. Duval. Songs by Charles K. Duval (music) and Bernie Grossman (lyrics). Sound recording: Hal Bambaugh. Associate producer: Ken Goldsmith. Executive producer: Scott B. Dunlap.

Copyright 14 July 1937 by Monogram Pictures Corp. New York opening at the Central on a double bill with Million-Dollar Racket: 10 November 1937. U.S. release: 4 July 1937. No British or Australian theatrical release. 8 reels. 65 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Love is on the agenda in a Civilian Conservation Camp.

NOTES: Produced with the co-operation of the U.S. Civilian Conservation Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture.

COMMENT: Produced on a larger budget than usual, with surprisingly inventive direction by Aubrey Scotto (of all people!), this is quite an acceptable Monogram "B" feature. The cast is uniformly attractive, and the on-location photography most creditable.

Unfortunately, the climax of the story itself is not well-judged, though it is certainly unusual for a Monogram entry not to have a completely happy fade-out.
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Engaging Programmer
dougdoepke9 June 2018
Nicely crafted programmer. No one expects a Ben Hur from the likes of poverty row Monogram. Nonetheless, this 60-minute production is well-paced, engagingly acted, and shrewdly mounted within limits. In short, results again show the vibrancy of Hollywood's B-movie era.

Younger folks may not know about the CCC, Civilian Conservation Corps. It was one of the 1930's New Deal programs meant to alleviate effects of the Great Depression. The government funded Corps employed jobless young men to tend parts of America's great natural forests. Here, city boy delinquents Coghlan and Arnold join up to escape the law. Coghlan amounts to a tough punk on his way to prison unless he reforms. Arnold is his slow-thinking buddy. The movie's main part dramatizes the changes brought upon the toughie by his experience as a Corps member. Of course, winsome sweetie McKinney also helps, (I really like their first meet-up). Anyway, we get an idea of the Corps' paramilitary structure, which makes sense given tough conditions on the outside.

Watch for Gunsmoke's Doc Adams (Milburn Stone) in a featured part early in his career. Then too, there's a colorful turn from Post as a ham actor, and from whoever the guy is playing the murderous hayseed, a really thankless role. However, I'm still wondering about tough street kids at movie's beginning who stroll the streets in suits and ties, no less. Maybe they're applying to Harvard or Yale. Such costuming seems odd to say the least. I guess the talent show that sort of drops in was meant to show the Corps' lighter side.

Still and all, it's a lively little flick, along with an informative peek into a difficult period gone by.
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