A cowboy comes to the aid of a lady rancher threatened by Mexican bandits who believe there is a treasure buried on her land.A cowboy comes to the aid of a lady rancher threatened by Mexican bandits who believe there is a treasure buried on her land.A cowboy comes to the aid of a lady rancher threatened by Mexican bandits who believe there is a treasure buried on her land.
Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
- Bill Williams
- (as Big Boy Williams)
Frank Yaconelli
- Frank Gorman
- (as Frank Yacanelli)
Hal Taliaferro
- George Holt
- (as Wally Wales)
Charles K. French
- Old John Holt
- (as Charles French)
Dick Botiller
- General Tirado
- (as Dick Bottilier)
Julian Rivero
- Young and Old Pedro
- (as Julian Revaro)
Silver Tip Baker
- Man at Dance
- (uncredited)
Chuck Baldra
- Fight Spectator
- (uncredited)
- …
Bob Burns
- Townsman at Dance
- (uncredited)
Art Dillard
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Oscar Gahan
- Tobacco Chewer
- (uncredited)
Helen Gibson
- Woman at Dance
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe earliest documented telecasts of this film occurred in Milwaukee Saturday 28 February 1948 on WTMJ (Channel 3) , in New York City Wednesday 22 December 1948 on WATV (Channel 13), in Chicago Monday 6 March 1950 on WGN (Channel 9), and in Los Angeles Friday 21 July 1950 on KTSL (Channel 2).
- ConnectionsRemade as Boots of Destiny (1937)
- SoundtracksOh, Susanna
(uncredited)
Written by Stephen Foster
Sung by Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams and Frank Yaconelli
Featured review
Way back at the turn of the last century some Mexican general who had his army like Villa, Zapata, and the rest of them did came across to the USA and before he died buried a whole lot of loot. He hid a map of his treasure, booty if you will, in the heel of some really nice looking boots before he died.
Fast forward and by some incredible means Guinn Williams becomes owner of said boots and foreman of the ranch that Marion Shilling owns and the treasure is buried. A greedy neighbor played by Tom London knows about the map in the boot and will stop at nothing to get a hold of the loot.
That about sums up Gun Play. In those early years Guinn Williams was a cowboy hero in these poverty row westerns. But someone saw he could play amiable lunkheads so much better. Occasionally Williams could be a serious villain like in the first version of The Glass Key with George Raft. But for myself I can't get used to seeing him as anything other than a doofus sidekick as he was to Errol Flynn in a few westerns.
There's nothing much really to recommend Gun Play, a poverty row western with few pretensions and some bad editing.
Fast forward and by some incredible means Guinn Williams becomes owner of said boots and foreman of the ranch that Marion Shilling owns and the treasure is buried. A greedy neighbor played by Tom London knows about the map in the boot and will stop at nothing to get a hold of the loot.
That about sums up Gun Play. In those early years Guinn Williams was a cowboy hero in these poverty row westerns. But someone saw he could play amiable lunkheads so much better. Occasionally Williams could be a serious villain like in the first version of The Glass Key with George Raft. But for myself I can't get used to seeing him as anything other than a doofus sidekick as he was to Errol Flynn in a few westerns.
There's nothing much really to recommend Gun Play, a poverty row western with few pretensions and some bad editing.
- bkoganbing
- Aug 21, 2016
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime59 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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