Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Rose of the Rancho (1936 film)

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Directed by
  
Marion Gering

Edited by
  
Hugh Bennett

Initial release
  
1936

Production company
  
Paramount Pictures

6.1/10
IMDb

Produced by
  
William LeBaron

Production company
  
Paramount Pictures

Director
  
Marion Gering

Cinematography
  
Leo Tover


Screenplay by
  
Frank Partos Charles Brackett Nat Perrin Arthur Sheekman

Starring
  
John Boles Gladys Swarthout Charles Bickford Grace Bradley Willie Howard Herb Williams

Written by
  
Frank Partos, Charles Brackett, Nat Perrin, Arthur Sheekman

Cast
  
John Boles, Gladys Swarthout, Grace Bradley, Charles Bickford

Similar
  
The Romance of Transp, Dots, Wild Country, Boogie‑Doodle, Old Glory

Rose of the Rancho is a 1936 American action film directed by Marion Gering and written by Frank Partos, Charles Brackett, Nat Perrin and Arthur Sheekman. The film stars John Boles, Gladys Swarthout, Charles Bickford, Grace Bradley, Willie Howard and Herb Williams. The film was released on January 10, 1936, by Paramount Pictures.

Contents

Cast

  • John Boles as Jim Kearney
  • Gladys Swarthout as Rosita Castro aka Don Carlos
  • Charles Bickford as Joe Kincaid
  • Grace Bradley as Flossie
  • Willie Howard as Pancho Spiegelgass
  • Herb Williams as Phineas P. Jones
  • H. B. Warner as Don Pasqual Castro
  • Charlotte Granville as Dona Petrona
  • Don Alvarado as Don Luis Espinosa
  • Minor Watson as Jonathan Hill
  • Louise Carter as Guadalupe
  • Pedro de Cordoba as Gomez
  • Paul Harvey as Boss Martin
  • Arthur Aylesworth as Sheriff James
  • Harry Woods as Bull Bangle
  • Benny Baker as Hill-Billy Boy
  • Russell Hopton as Frisco
  • Reception

    Andre Sennwald of The New York Times said, "Gladys Swarthout's voice can be heard, if you listen carefully, above the groans and bone-creakings of the plot in Rose of the Rancho at the Paramount Theatre. With an ambitiousness that must have seemed more plausible in the studio conferences than in the pre-view room, Paramount has converted David Belasco's ancient hack-piece into an elaborate musical horse opera. It is the misfortune of the film that, instead of combining the most fascinating qualities of operetta and the six-shooter drama, it merely accents the weaknesses of both forms in one handsome blur."

    References

    Rose of the Rancho (1936 film) Wikipedia