Tamil Movie Dubbed In Hindi Free Download Cavalcade Of The West

Tamil Movie Dubbed In Hindi Free Download Cavalcade Of The West

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Tamil Movie Dubbed In Hindi Free Download Cavalcade Of The West

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Two brothers are separated when young. One becomes the pony express rider Clint Knox and the other the outlaw Ace Carter. Their next meeting finds Ace way-laying Clint as he delivers the mail.
During the gold rush days a wagon train is attacked by a gang of renegades. John Knox is killed and one of his young sons, Asa Knox, is kidnapped by the renegade leader. The other son, Clint, and his mother Martha escape and reach St. Joseph, Missouri. Clint grows up and becomes a crack rider for the Pony Express. The kidnapped brother, now known as Ace Carter, has been raised by the outlaws with a contempt for the law. He is an unsuccessful rival of Clint's for the Pony Express job, which fosters enmity between them. Ace holds up a stagecoach on which Martha Knox and Clint's sweetheart, Mary West, are passengers. Clint takes the trail and runs him down. Clint later learns Ace's true identity and saves him from a lynch mob. Because of the circumstances, Ace's captors relent, and the two brothers and their mother are reunited.
Young Asa Knox is taken away from his surviving family by an outlaw after his father is killed. Mrs. Knox heads back to St. Joseph, Missouri with her other son Clint. The Knox family&#39;s original destination was California during the glory days of the Gold Rush, so for the math to work, the Knox boys would have just been hitting their twenties when we rejoin them in St. Joe of 1860. Instead, Hoot Gibson, portraying Clint, looks every bit of forty four, his real age at the time of the film. Ace Carter (Rex Lease), who grew up an outlaw himself, looks at least ten to fifteen years younger. So much for that casting decision.<br/><br/>Back in 1936, I imagine every Western made found itself exploring what was probably a new theme at the time. I haven&#39;t run across many &#39;B&#39; Westerns where the Pony Express plays a role, so seeing how it was used here looked fairly original. The man in charge of the service is named Christman (Earl Dwire), and he explains that the Express will utilize one hundred ninety relay stations, and employ eighty men and five hundred horses for trips between St. Joe and Sacramento. His goal is to make the trip in ten days, a rather impressive feat it seems, even without complications.<br/><br/>Clint is initially turned down by Christman for a job as a Pony Express rider, citing his need to be around to help his mother and fiancée. You&#39;ll have to pay attention to Mom Knox&#39;s speech encouraging her son&#39;s employment as if the future of the country depended on it. It&#39;s almost as eloquent as the Gettysburg Address, which by the way wouldn&#39;t exist for another four or five years.<br/><br/>The film plods along at times, and does manage to use some of the standard clichés of the genre, most notably when Ace uses the old rope across the trail trick to knock Clint off his horse. Modern day viewers who haven&#39;t grown up with these oaters will probably be shocked to learn that holding up a stagecoach could get you death by hanging, even if the guy you shot was only wounded. Fortunately, Ace&#39;s holdup victims all had their backs to him, and Mom isn&#39;t talking. Hoot Gibson&#39;s character explains how fate might have dealt a different hand if back when they were kids it was Clint who was kidnapped instead of Ace. The judge was OK with that, so no necktie party.<br/><br/>The film was directed by Harry Fraser, who during the mid 1930&#39;s also did the same for a couple of John Wayne&#39;s Lone Star Westerns - &quot;Neath The Arizona Skies&quot; and &quot;Randy Rides Alone&quot;, both from 1934. Catch those films for some interesting techniques, notably flash forward sequences used to pace riders on horseback along to their destination; it wasn&#39;t used in &#39;Cavalcade&#39;. At least the hero getting the girl remains a staple here, but then again there was never any doubt. Hoot Gibson got to kiss his girl way back in the middle of the story, how novel was that!
Forget the pretentious title, but don&#39;t forget to watch this movie, first chance you get. It is volume three of a set called &quot;Legends Of the West,&quot; one of those compilations filled, mostly, with junk but, every now and then featuring some gems.<br/><br/>&quot;Cavalcade Of the West&quot; is the brightest gem. It stars a real cowboy, Hoot Gibson, who looks more like a mild-mannered office clerk. Looks deceive. Watch how he mounts and rides his horse - and watch how he emotes in a part that calls for heart.<br/><br/>You have to pay close attention from beginning to end to fully appreciate this beautiful story, and how it is told. I don&#39;t choke up easily, but this movie captured my emotions.<br/><br/>It was made in &#39;36 so it is a little creaky. It goes for the familiar every now and then, but there is nothing in it that is not important, nothing that will not capture your heart and fascinate you.<br/><br/>The movie was a total surprise and a most pleasant one. Gibson and Rex Lease are excellent and, by the way, too many of the few reviews gave away way too much of the plot. These guys are fascinated by their prose.<br/><br/>Bottom line: If you can get your hands on this Platinum release (P.O. Box 2798 in La Crosse, Wisconsin 54602) grab it. I paid $5 for mine at a Big Lots.<br/><br/>As far as I&#39;m concerned, this is a must-see which you will want to see, and savor, several times.

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