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- The Border Phantom Full Movie In Hindi Free Download
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- Cowboy Larry O'Day and his sidekick Lucky Smith happen upon a distraught Barbara Hartwell, who is about to be arrested for the murder of her uncle. With Barbara behind bars, Larry is determined to find the real killer and soon finds himself in the middle of a mystery involving crazed German entomologists and a smuggling ring bringing Chinese "picture girls" across the Mexican border for sale to wealthy Chinese bachelors.
- This is without a doubt the worst Bob Steele film I have ever seen. While I wouldn't go so far as to give it a 1 like bkoganbing did, I sure thought it was terrible. What's worse is that some of Bob Steele's westerns were quite good, so I knew he was capable of much, much better.<br/><br/>The film is set in the modern day and is about a murdered entomologist. The sheriff is about the dumbest guy I've ever seen in one of these films and he's intent on arresting the dead guy's niece only minutes after he's arrived to investigate. However, an unknown benefactor helps her escape jail--and immediately the moron sheriff assumes Larry (Bob Steele) did it--mostly because Larry had the unmitigated gall to be a stranger in town AND question the idiot sheriff's competence. Naturally, good 'ol Larry didn't do it and, surprisingly, the leads point towards a guy smuggling in illegal aliens!!! <br/><br/>The plot is certainly bizarre, but this isn't the only thing working against this terrible film. For some odd reason, the writer felt it was important to pepper the movie with jokes--none of which were funny or worked in the least. Add to that the most shiftless and annoying sidekick in movie history and you have the makings of a lousy B-film. Not 100% terrible...just 98.7%!
- Entomologist Frank Ball is bughunting near the Mexican border. He tells his niece, Harley Wood, to take a message in to sheriff Horace Murphy. As Miss Wood goes to her horse, she hears and shot and rushes back to find her uncle dead. Soon she finds herself in jail under suspicion of murder. Can wandering cowboy Bob Steele and comic sidekick Don Barclay untangle the mystery?<br/><br/>Bob Steele's westerns were a lot slicker now that they were being financed and released by Republic Pictures, and there's little doubt that director S. Roy Luby, whose other job was editor knew how to order the set-ups for under-rated cameraman Jack Greenhaigh efficiently. The problem is with the script by Fred Myton, who had been writing silents and B movies since 1916. Steele was an action star, whose athletic and acrobatic movements had been well served by direction under his father, Robert Bradbury. In this one, he has to spend most of his time talking. He doesn't even get into a fistfight with anyone until 51 minutes into the movie, and then all the action shots are chopped up by cross-cutting.<br/><br/>Myton's script also uses standard tropes: dumb cops, mysterious Orientals who dress in traditional Chinese garb in the middle of the American desert... with changes of costumes the whole movie could have been shifted to an urban setting with little loss. While the actors give good performances, and that's good, that's not what's supposed to distinguish westerns; good westerns, even B westerns, require open vistas, horses, action and more of the culture that makes the West different from downtown than a comic sidekick wearing chaps.
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