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IMDbPro

The Painted Desert

  • 1931
  • U
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
873
YOUR RATING
William Boyd in The Painted Desert (1931)
DramaWestern

Two men find an abandoned baby and fight over the ownership of the child, resulting in lifelong rivalry.Two men find an abandoned baby and fight over the ownership of the child, resulting in lifelong rivalry.Two men find an abandoned baby and fight over the ownership of the child, resulting in lifelong rivalry.

  • Directors
    • Howard Higgin
    • Tom Buckingham
  • Writers
    • Tom Buckingham
    • Howard Higgin
  • Stars
    • William Boyd
    • Helen Twelvetrees
    • William Farnum
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    873
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Howard Higgin
      • Tom Buckingham
    • Writers
      • Tom Buckingham
      • Howard Higgin
    • Stars
      • William Boyd
      • Helen Twelvetrees
      • William Farnum
    • 25User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos12

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    William Boyd
    William Boyd
    • Bill Holbrook
    • (as Bill Boyd)
    Helen Twelvetrees
    Helen Twelvetrees
    • Mary Ellen Cameron
    William Farnum
    William Farnum
    • Cash Holbrook
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    • Jeff Cameron
    Clark Gable
    Clark Gable
    • Rance Brett
    Charles Sellon
    Charles Sellon
    • Tonopah
    Hugh Adams
    • Dynamite
    Wade Boteler
    Wade Boteler
    • Bob Carson
    Will Walling
    Will Walling
    • Kirby
    Edmund Breese
    Edmund Breese
    • Judge Matthews
    Edward Hearn
    Edward Hearn
    • Tex
    • (as Guy Edward Hearn)
    William Le Maire
    • Denver
    • (as William LeMaire)
    Richard Cramer
    Richard Cramer
    • Provney
    Clem Beauchamp
    Clem Beauchamp
    • Miner
    • (uncredited)
    George Burton
    • Santa Fe
    • (uncredited)
    Cy Clegg
    • Miner
    • (uncredited)
    Edgar Dearing
    Edgar Dearing
    • Buck's Partner
    • (uncredited)
    James Donlan
    James Donlan
    • Steve - Ore Wagon #2 Shotgun Rider
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Howard Higgin
      • Tom Buckingham
    • Writers
      • Tom Buckingham
      • Howard Higgin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    5.2873
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    Featured reviews

    6oldblackandwhite

    Keep This One In A Glass Case -- It's A Museum Piece

    The Painted Desert is best remembered as Clark Gable's first substantial role for good reason. The future King of Hollywood's natural, dynamic style of acting stands out in this extremely creaky early talkie Western. In an unrewarding heavy role Gable speaks in his trademark relaxed, cocky manner, while other, more experienced actors such as J. Farrell MacDonald, early silent era star William Farnum, and a stiff-as-a-board Bill Boyd deliver their lines one distinctly enunciated word at a time as if speaking toward a microphone hidden in a cactus. Admittedly Boyd wasn't much of an actor in spite of his good looks and sunny disposition, but MacDonald and Farnum were. Blame an under-financed sound department and uninspired direction by Howard Higgins, who also co-wrote the murky script for this lumbering oater. Those who would excuse the stiff direction and acting as caused by unavoidable problems with early sound equipment should first take a look at Joseph Von Sternberg's Morocco (1930), released the year before The Painted Desert, but showing a marvelously sophisticated and artistically pleasing use of sound. Other than Gable, the only other actors who managed to rise above the restraints of the over-compensating sound technicians and Higgin's stodgy direction were gorgeous leading lady Helen Twelvetrees and Boyd's beautiful white horse.

    That's not to say that The Painted Desert doesn't have some good points -- especially for die-hard Western fans. Most of the low, low budget must have been spent carting the actors, crew, and equipment around several scenic Arizona locations, including the sure-enough Painted Desert. Sets by art director Carrol Clark and costumes by Gwen Wakeling were well turned out and authentic looking. Oldblackandwhite, who is one of the vanishing breed of Texans still preferring the Stetson style to the ubiquitous Beaver Cleaver ball cap, wishes he could find the hatter Ms. Wakeling used for this picture. The sets and costumes, along with a folksy, real-to-life dialog, as plodding as the delivery was, gave the movie an authentically quaint, rustic 19th century ambiance missing in many a better produced Western.

    Best of all, and almost worth the price of a DVD -- a cheap one anyway -- was having a tense, climactic, sixgun showdown between two elderly gentlemen! But there wasn't much else to get excited about in The Painted Desert. Mainly for curiosity seekers, dedicated Clark Gable fans, fanatical Western aficionados, and the usual desperate insomniacs. Neither the best nor the worst from Old Hollywood's Classic Era.
    GManfred

    Bad Blood

    Two prospectors come across an abandoned covered wagon - abandoned, that is, except for a baby. They have a disagreement, one stays to raise the baby and the other leaves, leaving his partner holding the bag, er, baby. Fast forward twenty-odd years, and the baby grows up to be William Boyd. The two prospectors are deadly enemies, and the grown-up baby tries to bring them together. Added bonus; the one who left now has a pretty daughter, a development not lost on the boy.

    The story is fairly interesting and could have been more so if the movie hadn't been cannibalized and crucial scenes removed for other movies. Several reviewers have mentioned some scenes have been taken out and with them much of the excitement was drained from the film. In addition, the acting is slow and deliberate giving the movie an artificial, stilted feel and will catch modern audiences off balance. On the whole, though, it is worth a look due to the peculiar nature of the subject matter, and to see Clark Gable as a bad guy minus his customary charm, and William Boyd before he hit the bigtime as Hopalong Cassidy.
    5view_and_review

    Feuding Friends

    The only thing I can say after watching this movie is that I saw some history. This movie is over 90-years-old as of today and it looked it. The picture quality and the sound were a tad above awful and the acting was not far behind. Cinematic issues aside, this movie had a very simplistic plot and I still had a hard time following it. It was too hard to make out the faces to know who was who and who did what.

    Two traveling companions, Cash Holbrook (William Boyd) and Jeff Cameron (J. Farrell MacDonald), found an abandoned baby boy. What do you think their next course of action was? If you said locate a family for him then you're wrong. They got into a lifelong feud over the boy. They split right then and there over who should raise the boy and Cash Holbrook was the victor in that respect. He raised him and named him Bill Holbrook (William Boyd).

    Years later, when Bill was an adult, we got to see what became of Bill and the two men. Cash was the wealthy owner of a cattle company while Jeff was a struggling rancher who owned the rights to a local watering hole. Jeff's watering hole was the only thing Cash wanted of his.

    Bill would eventually split from his father and go work for Jeff. Actually, Cash kicked his adopted son out of the house which prompted Bill to go work for Jeff. Why was Bill run off by his pa? Bill had the audacity to suggest that Cash work with Jeff to help mine some tungsten on Jeff's land. For such a blasphemous suggestion Cash ran off his beloved adopted son.

    Would Jeff and Cash ever become friends again? Would Bill ever reunite with his adoptive father? It wasn't very compelling stuff, but what else were you going to watch in 1931?

    Free with Amazon Prime.
    7FightingWesterner

    Incomplete But Still Good

    Two men traveling west find a baby boy in the desert and quarrel over which one will raise him. One steals away with the boy and becomes a wealthy rancher while the other stays put beside a waterhole and remains an impoverished homesteader.

    Years later the boy has grown up to become a fair-minded man who tries to reconcile the two bitter enemies, partnering with his father's old friend in a mining operation beset by mistrust due to unexplained sabotage.

    The Painted Desert is mostly remembered nowadays for featuring future Hopalong Cassidy star William Boyd and the first talking performance by Clark Gable.

    Though undoubtedly harmed by having nearly all it's action sequences carved up as stock footage for later films, it's still worth watching and has a nice Hollywood sheen not seen in later B-westerns.
    7rsoonsa

    One of the better early sound westerns.

    Two long time friends find a baby boy left behind within an abandoned camp in old Arizona, and their conflict over who should take charge of the infant quickly lowers their relationship to the freezing point, where it remains for over 20 years although they are neighbouring ranchers, and the grown youth's attempt to bring about a reconciliation forms the heart of this interesting early western. William Boyd, later renowned as Hopalong Cassidy, is featured as the young man, Bill, raised by Cash Holbrook (William Farnum), with J. Farrell MacDonald as Jeff Cameron, the other of the feuding pair, and when Bill, a mining engineer, discovers a valuable lode of tungsten ore on Cameron's land, he forthwith fosters a mining project which he believes will be putting an end to the longstanding conflict. Actually filmed in Arizona's scenic Painted Desert region, the work is efficiently directed by Howard Higgin, who is abetted by the fine camerawork of Edward Snyder, with excellent sets arranged by Carroll Clark, and the cast generally performs well, a strong performance being given by Clark Gable as a completely unrepentant villain, only the tasteless characterization by Helen Twelvetrees as Cameron's daughter tainting the production.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      William Boyd and Clark Gable, during the making of the film (11 October 1930), narrowly escaped serious injury from falling rock after two tons of explosives went off with considerably more force than planned in Dinosaur Canyon, some 70 miles northwest of Flagstaff, Arizona. While Boyd and Gable were 200 feet from the blast, rocks and boulders rained down between where they were standing. Not so lucky were a number of technicians, some 15 of whom were taken to hospitals in Flagstaff and Tuba City, and director Howard Higgin, who suffered a broken ankle and various cuts. The female lead, Helen Twelvetrees, had already returned to Los Angeles, as most of the principal photography was completed. Dynamite and black powder had been placed in the face of a 400-foot cliff and in an old mine tunnel, the explosion being expected to crumble the cliff. Unexpected presence of hard rock lent the blast violence that had not been anticipated, and showered rock and stone over an area of nearly half a mile.
    • Quotes

      Mary Ellen Cameron: Well, Dad, if they think they're going water cattle here tonight, here's two Winchesters who'll say they ain't!

    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood: The Great Stars (1963)
    • Soundtracks
      Oh! Susanna
      (1848) (uncredited)

      Written by Stephen Foster

      In the score during the opening credits

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 31, 1931 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Obojena pustinja
    • Filming locations
      • Painted Desert, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Pathé Exchange
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 19 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White

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