Thunderbolt's Tracks (1927) Poster

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6/10
The Marines Take to the Water Hole
boblipton29 August 2006
Jack Perrin and Harry Tenbrook, WWI Marine Corps vets, head out west to visit the father of their deceased buddy and get involved in a fight over water rights.

There used to be a large genre of 'modern' western, some examples of which survived through the collapse of the B Western in the 1960s. But while the modern western by the 1960s had become nostalgic to the point of depression for the Good Old Days of Open Spaces -- think of THE MISFITS -- the modern western of 1927 did not even recognize that the good old days were gone -- think of one of the characters in SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL Sheriff, on being told that James Garner was heading to the frontier of Australia: "I thought we were the frontier." It would take another forty or fifty years before the Western became a closed, nostalgic art form, its vision of freedom, growth and frontier shifting to science fiction.

In the meantime, you got these mixed genre works. This is a pretty good B picture, done with occasional gusts of comedy -- Tenbrook digging a trench in eight seconds, or Perrin trying to thread a needle. It's a movie for people to have fun with and it succeeds.
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5/10
So who did direct Thunderbolt's tracks?
JohnHowardReid2 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
J.P. McGowan told me straight out that he most definitely did NOT direct this movie, even though he receives a screen credit for doing so!

J.P. did not tell me who did direct the film, but I'm game to make a judgment as to who actually did the directorial work (see below) - but it's certainly no wonder that the actual director is hiding his contribution!

"Thunderbolt's Tracks" is at best a ploddingly paced film with virtually nothing to recommend it except the genial presence of its star, Jack Perrin.

Perrin is amazingly charismatic as the hero who helps out a dead dreary family whom villainous Ethan Laidlaw has lumbered with an eatery (not a ranch) that pays off in bottle tops.

As for the director, I'd say that the writer Bennett Cohn himself directed this film.

And as for the script, it has nothing to do with thunderbolts or horses of any description.
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