- Buffalo Bill finds out that a criminal gang is trying to start an Indian war to drive settlers off of land where oil has been discovered.
- Ranchers have been burned out and Buffalo Bill has been called in. He arrives just as Tom Russell is framed for murdering an Indian. Bill gets the Indian Chief to give him three days to find the killer before Tom is turned over to them. With his three days almost up, Bill gets a break when one of his Indian scouts finds the gang's hideout.—Maurice VanAuken <mvanauken@a1access.net>
- Land grabbers are after homesteader and settler lands in an area that settlers and Indians are both trapping for furs in an area that has no fur-bearing animals, that they trap, indigenous to the area, and the Indians live on a seven-teepee reservation, and none of the head crooks appear to be working in unison with each other, and Buffalo Bill is commissioned by the governor of an unknown state, that appears to be a state that Buffalo Bill was never in, to ride in and solve the local problems, although Buffalo Bill has no idea just what the problem is, but he rides around a lot, mostly directing a couple of Indians to watch this road or that road for riders...and it only takes about thirty seconds of montage stock footage under the credits to recognize this as a Jack Schwarz Bottom-of-the-Barrel Production.—Les Adams <longhorn1939@suddenlink.net>
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Top Gap
By what name was Buffalo Bill Rides Again (1947) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer