Trigger Fingers (1939) Poster

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6/10
Lightning Bill poses as a gypsy!
planktonrules14 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
In the late 1930s, Tim McCoy made a series of eight 'Lightning Bill Carson' films. Carson was a federal agent who usually went under cover to investigate crimes. In some, he posed as a Mexican bandit (and actually did a very good job with these roles), in one he posed as a Chinese guy (this was NOT a great performance--as ANY Westerner playing an Asian is pretty sad to watch) and here in "Trigger Fingers" he goes under cover as a Gypsy! It's the last of the Lightning Bill films and all but the first film in the series appear to be available on DVD or are in the public domain (so they can be downloaded for free from links on IMDb).

The film begins with Lightning Bill investigating the actions of the Lasson County Gang. He thinks they are rustling cattle after he finds one of their saddles with fingerprints on it but needs to go under cover to prove it. Now I know fingerprints were NOT something used in the old west (they came into widespread use after 1900), but like all the Lightning Bill films, it's set in a weird anachronistic world--with some old and some modern in the same movie. For example, while they usually ride horses, sometimes they ride in cars--an odd notion that also happened in many Gene Autry and Roy Rogers films. In a twist, not only Bill but his friend Magpie and lady friend Margaret all pose as Gypsies. Now despite Margaret being in the last Lighting Bill movie, she is a different actress and she isn't exactly the same character. This sort of inconsistency isn't unusual for B-westerns, as continuity was never was a strong point in the films.

While this case is pretty entertaining, it soon becomes obvious that McCoy's 'Gypsy' is actually very much the same Mexican character he is in other films--minus the bandit part of the personality. Instead, he travels telling fortunes--while actually using this as a ruse to get fingerprints on the cards to compare to the one on the saddle found at the beginning of the film. But, when the boss-man of the baddies realizes who the three are, he tries to set them up to be killed by a posse of angry ranchers.

This is the last and and among the weakest of the Lighning Bill movies. The one where he was Chinese was worse and the very first film does not appear to be available but the other five are clearly better than "Trigger Fingers". Watchable but just not up to the standards of the average film in the series.

Ambush scene with Model T Ford is lifted directly from "Lightning Bill Carson Rides Again" (1938).
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6/10
Tim McCoy's Lightning Bill Stars in "Trigger Fingers"
glennstenb18 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
"Trigger Fingers" apparently is just a random title slapped on this late 1930's very low budget B-western, the last of the Lightning Bill Carson series, but the film itself is enjoyable for fans of star Tim McCoy and of the genre. This is one of those films that occurs in a land that time forgot, kind of, in that even though it is 1938-39, this particular valley still retains the wild west of horse and buggies, six-guns hanging from everyone's hips, and posses and shootouts are standard fare. Unfortunately, McCoy's Gypsy costuming (required for his law-enforcement effort) and his wearing contemporary attire at other times precludes the greatest draw in a McCoy film, that of watching him regally do his thing in his cowboy garb and big signature hat. Luckily his expressive eyes are as effective as ever!

The undercover Gypsy masquerade is curious and lends something fresh to an otherwise standard story line. While the acting is adequate, the film itself is produced with some rough edges, such as dialog start-ups and rejoinders often being a little delayed. On the bright side, one gets easily comfortable spending time with the characters. Fun moments include Tim and his 2-person crew testing for fingerprints with a 1930's hi-tech portable crime lab on the ground beside their horse-drawn covered wagon, and the running gag of McCoy and his male partner teasingly addressing their female partner by her less-preferred nickname.

This is a minor film, for sure, but some of us out here in Western Movie Land will enjoy it nonetheless.
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