The Californian (1937) Poster

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5/10
Murietta with a happy ending
bkoganbing15 June 2014
A year before The Californian came out, MGM did a film about the famous bandit of early California statehood days Joaquin Murietta which starred Warner Baxter. Robin Hood Of El Dorado had a much bigger budget than this one had which was obviously an attempt by 20th Century Fox to cash in on what MGM did.

Darryl Zanuck didn't shell out any big bucks for this film which is barely an hour running time. He did use an actor past his glory days in Hollywood with Ricardo Cortez in the lead. The story begins as California has recently been taken over post the Mexican War and the natives, both grandees and peons are wondering about the new American conquerors. But Nigel DeBrulier is sending his son to Europe for a fine education befitting a Don's son. He takes leave of his son Gene Reynolds who returns years later as Ricardo Cortez

Cortez sees the people including his father crushed with onerous taxes and becomes the Robin Hood of the people. He takes over a rather bedraggled bandit gang that George Regas has and as Robin Hood Cortez makes them his Merry Men. But he won't give Katherine DeMille a tumble because he has his own Maid Marian in Marjorie Weaver. Katharine is a woman scorned and that sets up trouble.

So far this is pretty much along the story of Robin Hood Of El Dorado and Joaquin Murietta in real life. But Zanuck felt the film needed a happy ending. It sure works out better for Cortez and Weaver than it did for Murietta.

The Californian is good low budget entertainment, a kind of preliminary for 20th Century Fox who would do The Mark Of Zorro a few years later along similar lines.
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5/10
Made cheaply doesn't have to mean cheap looking.
mark.waltz28 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
While for some reason, this has fallen into the public domain, this 20th Century Fox Western is actually one step above the typical D grade Western with its use of action, romance, music and humor to move the story along. Ricardo Cortez, who may not have risen to the upper echelon of legendary Hollywood stars of the 1930s, is excellent in this variation of a familiar story. Cortes was able to cross over to pretty much every genre that Hollywood specialized during the 1930s, and here, utilizes his talent as a romantic hero along with the ability to be genuinely funny.

The film opens with his character as a child leaving his family to go off to get an education and when he returns as an adult, he immediately confronts the corrupt government who is trying to squeeze every last nickel out of everybody. This puts his child sweetheart, Marjorie Weaver, at risk, and Cortez will do anything to save her.

Fast pacing and excellent photography helps this film moves along at a brisk pace, and while the film is over in less than an hour, you feel that you've gotten your time's worth. unlike the low-budget westerns of the poverty row Studios, the cameraman plays particular attention to detail of individual characters and there are more close-ups as a result. Even in scenes when there is no dialogue and only the sound of horses clomping, it doesn't feel like you are living in a vacuum. Even the location shots seem to be more well-selected, and the costume design is top notch.
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4/10
Disappointing
boblipton19 February 2024
Gene Reynolds is sent from happy, carefree California to Spain to grow up to be a Spanish gentleman. When he returns as Ricardo Cortez, he finds California changed, his father almost broke, because the Yankees are in charge, making up false taxes and seizing the ranchos. So he joins the bandits under George Regas, and takes over on a paying basis.

This cheap movie directed by Gus Meins looks like it's going to be Zorro, but turns into something far more standard and uninvolving. There's the typical bad guy and it all depends on getting the the incriminating documents to the honest deputatio from San Francisco. Despite a cast which includes Nigel de Brulier, Marjorie Weaver, Katherine De Mille, and Pierre Watkins, and which was distributed by 20th Century-Fox, this Sol Lesser production is strictly Poverty Row in scripting and execution.
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