Border Buckaroos

1943 film

  • June 15, 1943 (1943-06-15)
Running time
60 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish

Border Buckaroos is a 1943 American Western film written and directed by Oliver Drake. The fourth of Producers Releasing Corporation Texas Rangers film series,[1] the film was shot at Corriganville movie ranch, and released on June 15, 1943.[2][3][4]

Plot

A trio of Texas Rangers impersonate a gunslinger for hire and a co-inheritor of a ranch with the goal to "play both ends against the middle" to solve a murder of a rancher.

Cast

  • James Newill as Ranger Jim Steel
  • Dave O'Brien as Ranger Dave 'Tex' O'Brien
  • Guy Wilkerson as Ranger Panhandle Perkins
  • Christine McIntyre as Betty Clark
  • Eleanor Counts as Marge Leonard
  • Jack Ingram as Cole Melford
  • Ethan Laidlaw as Hank Dugan
  • Charles King as Rance Daggett
  • Michael Vallon as Lawyer Seth Higgins
  • Kenne Duncan as Tom Bancroft
  • Reed Howes as Trigger Farley
  • Bud Osborne as Stagecoach Driver
  • Slim Whitaker as Sheriff McAllister

Soundtrack

  • Stay on the Right Trail

Written by Dave O'Brien and James Newill
Sung by James Newill

  • Driftin'

Written by Dave O'Brien and James Newill
Sung by James Newill

  • You're Here To Stay

Written by Dave O'Brien and James Newill
Sung by James Newill

See also

The Texas Rangers series:

  1. The Rangers Take Over (1942)
  2. Bad Men of Thunder Gap (1943)
  3. West of Texas (1943)
  4. Border Buckaroos (1943)
  5. Fighting Valley (1943)
  6. Trail of Terror (1943)
  7. The Return of the Rangers (1943)
  8. Boss of Rawhide (1943)
  9. Outlaw Roundup (1944)
  10. Guns of the Law (1944)
  11. The Pinto Bandit (1944)
  12. Spook Town (1944)
  13. Brand of the Devil (1944)
  14. Gunsmoke Mesa (1944)
  15. Gangsters of the Frontier (1944)
  16. Dead or Alive (1944)
  17. The Whispering Skull (1944)
  18. Marked for Murder (1945)
  19. Enemy of the Law (1945)
  20. Three in the Saddle (1945)
  21. Frontier Fugitives (1945)
  22. Flaming Bullets (1945)

References

  1. ^ "PRC's Texas Rangers".
  2. ^ "Border Buckaroos (1943) - Overview". TCM.com. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  3. ^ Hans J. Wollstein. "Border Buckaroos (1943) - Oliver Drake". AllMovie. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  4. ^ "Border Buckaroos". Catalog.afi.com. Retrieved December 30, 2019.

External links

  • Border Buckaroos at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  • v
  • t
  • e
Films directed by Oliver Drake


Stub icon

This 1940s Western film–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e