Ambush Trail
Ambush Trail
NR | 17 February 1946 (USA)
Ambush Trail Trailers

One of four western films made for PRC by bantam-weight Bob Steele, Ambush Trail stars Steele as cowpoke Curley Thompson. The villain of the piece intends to bankrupt all the local ranchers and grab up the surrounding property for himself. But with Curley involved, the bad guy and his minions don't have a chance. The screenplay, by D. W. Griffith alumnus Elmer Clifton, is a medley of western cliches, pausing every so often for a first-rate action sequence. Perennial sagebrush sidekick Sid Saylor provides negligible comedy relief.

Reviews
LastingAware The greatest movie ever!
BroadcastChic Excellent, a Must See
Majorthebys Charming and brutal
Bluebell Alcock Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies
bkoganbing Ambush Trail from PRC studio has Bob Steele as a young rancher who might have picked the wrong time and place to settle on a ranch he's just bought. The other ranchers in the valley are being starved out by a gang led by perennial western villain I. Stanford Jolley who won't let wagons with supplies get through. Jolley's planning to acquire the whole valley if he can. Why he wants it stays a mystery unless he's just greedy by nature. Steele is suspected it in the murder of sheriff Henry Hall, but Deputy and brother to sheriff Kermit Maynard trusts him. One look at Jolley's men and I can understand that.In fact there's a big old surprise waiting for Jolley at the end of the film. He slipped up big time in his scheme though not for lack of trying.The plot does get a bit confusing, but Ambush Trail holds up well for Bob Steele fans.
classicsoncall Here's a typical B Western story coming out of the 1940's, but if you're a fan of this stuff like I am, you manage to find something unique in each one. Syd Saylor provides the comic relief here as the partner of Bob Steele's character, Curley Thompson, using a running double-talk gag about a charley horse, which if you listen closely enough almost makes some sense.If you've seen enough of these old time oaters, you'll easily identify the baddies, led this time by I. Stanford Jolley as Hatch Bolton. His henchmen include Charles King as Al Craig, and John Cason as Ed Blaine. It's a common scenario, Bolton's scheme to force the local ranchers into selling out to him is carried out by controlling the supplies and livestock feed heading into town, and if the ranchers can't buy it, they have to pack it in.With a clue provided by a rancher shot through the window of his cabin, Curley deciphers a drawing that resembles a pair of steer horns over a bar. Well what could that be other than a pair of steer horns hanging over the bar of a local saloon? It's where the former sheriff hid the ranchers' money to buy needed supplies in a kind of hide in plain sight scenario. With Curley driving a decoy rig to draw out the bad guys, his partner Sam Hawkins (Saylor) takes a wagon loaded with supplies into town to save the day for the ranchers.Bob Steele fans ought to be pleased with this entry as he mixes it up with the bad guys a few times in the fisticuffs department, and Syd Saylor is entertaining as mentioned earlier. However I found Kermit Maynard to be somewhat frustrating in his role as deputy sheriff Walter Gordon. Most of the time he appeared to be clueless both in his role and in his screen presence, with an expression on his face most of the time that made it seem like he didn't know where he was.
dougdoepke He may have been small (5'5'') but there was no more energetic player among the matinée heroes than Bob Steele. His barroom brawls, a matinée staple, are still an impressive example of a buzz saw in action. Here he rescues local ranchers from an embargo on supplies set up by the local greed merchant. Of course, it takes a lot of hard riding and fisticuffs, just the sort of thing we Front Row kids expected from our heroes.It's cheapo PRC producing, so the action never leaves the non-scenic LA area, but that's okay because director Fraser makes good use of the scrubby hills. Good to see veteran baddies Charles King and I. Stanford Jolley picking up a payday for what they do best, menace the hero. But get a load of leading lady Lorraine Miller's hair—there's enough there to fill several mattresses—the style of the day, I guess. It's better than average dialog from scripter Clifton. I especially like comic-relief Syd Saylor's charlie-horse explanation of why he can't ride a horse—it's almost like an Abbott & Costello routine. Anyway, it's a good mix of action and chuckles from the Jimmy Cagney of the matinées, the great Bob Steele.
lividevereux It's incredible what old westerns were like. How they could fit in an entire story in one hour is impressive. As in many old westerns there are the countless nameless riders and horses doing their jobs expertly, not to mention the expert mounting that Bob Steele did with his horse. Bless their hearts for jobs well done. This is not a sleeper of a movie. The pace is fast and the movie is quite entertaining. You are left with a satisfied feeling at the end of the movie. Typically, in a western there is the good against evil scenario. While dealing with that, there is no brutality nor extreme violence, as we are bombarded with everyday in films of today.