The Stolen Ranch (1926) Poster

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7/10
Shellshock and ranches
boblipton25 October 2012
Breezy and Frank return from the Great War to find out what happened to Frank's uncle's ranch. Frank is sure that his uncle wanted him to have it, but he is still suffering from shell shock, so Breezy goes in alone to investigate.

To the modern audience the western is a purely nostalgic genre, but in 1926 there were plenty of modern westerns that combined the tropes of the old and new West -- horses and oil wells, World War One veterans and breaking broncs -- the B western was a lively form in the late silent era, a place for skilled talent who needed a job and for new talent looking for a chance.

The latter category includes one of the screenwriters, George H. Plympton, now best remembered for writing the "Flash Gordon" serials, and for the budding director of this one, William Wyler, who would become one of the most accomplished directors of the sound era. He got the job because he was a relative of the studio owner, "Uncle" Carl Laemmle, but he directed for more than forty-five years because he did great work in every genre.

It kept him from being bored and he never bored the audience. Here, though, he's busy proving his competence and this movie is a nice hodge-podge of standard western bits. In fact, the survival of this movie is almost certainly due to Wyler being the director -- none of the people in front of the camera got far out of the B movies. Nor should they have. Their performances are amiable but broad. Still, it's a good whack at combining comedy, romance with issues of mental illness (shell shock), short (under an hour) and if you want to introduce someone to silent B westerns without the distraction of the stars of the era -- I'm very fond of Hoot Gibson, myself -- this is a good one.
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5/10
seems like something that could've happened
lee_eisenberg25 March 2021
This early effort from William Wyler (a few decades before he turned out "Roman Holiday", "Ben-Hur" and "Funny Girl") has a routine plot - a man tries to stop the takeover of his ranch - but the incorporation of World War I distinguishes it a little. I get the feeling that there could've very well been efforts to steal people's property while they were off fighting. As for World War I itself, don't get me started on how it set the stage for all sorts of bad things!

"The Stolen Ranch" is no impressive movie by any stretch, but is worth seeing as a historical reference for Wyler's early work.
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7/10
Solid, character-based, silent filmmaking
davidmvining23 June 2023
Alright, now I really want to find the rest of the Blue Streak series because if they're anything like The Stolen Ranch, then they must be fun and surprisingly affecting little short stories of films. I've some experience with this era and genre of film, mostly the early works of John Ford, but The Stolen Ranch is so competently made, intelligently written, and professionally executed that it's obvious that Wyler had used the opportunity of his first eight films (seven two-reel films in the Mustang series and the first in the five-reel Blue Streak series, of which The Stolen Ranch is the second) learning the new craft of filmmaking as well as anyone else of his generation. My only reservation is that I wanted more time in this little universe with these characters to get to know them better.

Breezy Humes (Fred Humes) and Frank Wilcox (Ralph McCullough) return from WWI to the America West where Frank's uncle left him a ranch in his will. The ownership of the ranch is in question because the overseer, Sam Hardy (William Bailey), has called the will a forgery and claimed ownership. Frank, though, has been greatly affected by his involvement in the war in Europe, and it's here where the film has a surprising emotional depth from the beginning.

It's obvious from some of Wyler's later work like The Best Years of Our Lives that he had great affection for the men who went to war, and it's interesting to see it manifest so early in his career in slightly different form. In the trenches, Breezy and Frank were hit with a gas attack, but Breezy's air mask had a tear in it, making it useless, so Frank shared his own mask with Breezy. This bond of friendship is deep, and it makes complete sense why Breezy would decide to set his own concerns aside to help Frank figure out what's going on with his house. This movie is only an hour long, largely concerned with action, and yet it spends the time to give flashbacks to the act and dialogue around the connection that establishes both characters extremely well. It's actually kind of remarkable to see this level of complexity in building of character in so short of time in a silent film. Throw in the fact that Frank is suffering from shellshock, and you've got two likeable characters to lead a film.

Anyway, Breezy goes to the ranch to get a job, and because he has no experience with horses, he gets a job in the kitchen alongside Mary Jane (Louise Lorraine). Now, for all my praise of the two central, male leads, the pair of romantic subplots are pretty much mundane and typical. They're not a drag on the film, but they don't provide much either. The other romance is between Frank and June (Nita Cavalier) whom he meets painting in the countryside, and it does create a plot connection that plays out later as well. These aren't bad, but they're just not nearly as interesting as the central relationship between the two men.

There are machinations around Sam finding out that Frank is somewhere nearby with some suspicion that Breezy has a connection to him. There's a chase back and forth from the shack Frank is holed up in and the ranch, and a moment for Frank to completely get over his shellshock (this turn is...fine, not great), and it's all heart warming by the end. That heart-warming quality comes from the fact that the two central male characters are so clearly defined and likeable. They've been through hell together. They have only each other, and they make their future together. That their romances feel somewhat perfunctory is unfortunate and probably a symptom of the fact that the film had to do everything in about fifty minutes. I will say that Mary Jane has a moment that feels like it's going to be eye-rolling nonsense when she overhears a conversation, turning a moment into empty melodrama for the sake of empty melodrama, but Wyler and his writers (Robert F. Hill and George H. Plympton) pull her out and make the character less simplistic than she could have been.

Wyler's impeccable visual sense isn't developed at this point (he made about 30 films in 4 years at this point, so there just wasn't time), but it's never less than perfectly competent, the framing of a talented young filmmaker who's working very quickly. Performances are good as well, nothing that would embarrass anyone, even deep into the silent period that this is.

The biggest effect this has had on me is wanting to find the rest of the Blue Streak series that Wyler made for Universal in the 20s. The Stolen Ranch is so well done on every major level of storytelling and filmmaking, that its resolution feels completely earned and fulfilling. It really needed more time for smaller characters to flesh out and Frank's healing is the kind of movie logic stuff that never quite satisfies, but everything else is so well built.
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Fred Humes the Hero
drednm12 December 2016
THE STOLEN RANCH is a solid little Western with the added twist of two war buddies (one with shell shock) working undercover to get back the ranch that the foreman has taken for his own (possibly believing the heir was killed in the war). It's just enough of a new spin to make this modern-day Western story work nicely.

Fred Humes is the likable star and pal to the shell-shocked heir (Ralph McCullough). He plays Breezy and the name is apt. He's especially good in the kitchen scenes with Mary Jane (Louise Lorraine), and there are a few very funny bits concerning potatoes. William Bailey plays the scheming usurper, and Nita Cavalier plays the blonde.

Janet Gaynor is often listed as an extra, but there were no scenes in the version I saw where she could possibly be, so it's either a mistake or her scenes were deleted.
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8/10
Surprisingly well-made "B" from director William Wyler
JohnHowardReid7 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
William Wyler never had anything much to say about the twenty-one 2-reel and eight 5-reel silent westerns upon which he cut his directorial teeth for Uncle Carl Laemmle in 1925, 1926 and 1927. Wyler always described them as rush jobs. "We shot from Monday through Friday in Lone Pine's Alabama Hills, then received a new script on the Saturday. I didn't direct all of them. Bill Crinley directed quite a few, but he died just after Christmas in '26. Ray Taylor and Ed Kull directed some too. As for the actors, Edmund Cobb was probably in more of them than anybody, but he wasn't always the number-one star. Fred Humes was in quite a few, while Louise Lorraine was a big star in serials like The Great Circus Mystery." In other interviews Wyler often implied that these films were shot entirely on location, but it's obvious from viewing the excellent DVD print that a great deal of The Stolen Ranch was made on Universal's sound stages.

In view of Wyler's negativity, I was amazed at just how well-made The Stolen Ranch actually is. It's no Shane or Duel in the Sun for sure, but it is a highly professional offering, and most skillfully put together. Although the basic plot is a familiar one, the sub-plot featuring Ralph McCullough's superb performance as a shell-shocked veteran is not. This alone should put The Stolen Ranch on every must-see list.
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**** Modern Western
GManfred16 August 2018
"The Stolen Ranch" takes place just after WWl but on a ranch where everyone rides horses. Two soldiers back from the war try to get a job on a nearby ranch where a local baddie lives. He is trying to own another nearby ranch by dishonest means but our hero is on the job. There is, of course, a love interest and on the whole this is ground that's been covered many times. Can't really recommend it - sometimes old silent movies are just old movies with no real reason to be seen. Shown at Capitolfets, Rome NY 8/18.
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