Carson City

He comes tearing in with a gun and a grin ... to carve a new notch in the Silver Belt of Nevada !

6.1
19521h 27m

Production

Logo for Warner Bros. Pictures

Mine owner William Sharon keeps having his gold shipments held up by a gang of bandits. Sharon hires banker Charles Crocker, who happens to have connections in the Central Pacific Railroad, to build a spur line from Virginia City to Carson City, so that the gold can be shipped by railroad. Silent Jeff Kincaid is the railroad engineer. However there is opposition to the railroad, chiefly from another mine owner, Big Jack Davis.

Cast

Photo of Randolph Scott

Randolph Scott

Silent Jeff Kincaid

Photo of Lucille Norman

Lucille Norman

Susan Mitchell

Photo of Raymond Massey

Raymond Massey

Big Jack Davis

Photo of Richard Webb

Richard Webb

Alan Kincaid

Photo of James Millican

James Millican

Jim Squires

Photo of Larry Keating

Larry Keating

William Sharon

Photo of George Cleveland

George Cleveland

Henry Dodson

Photo of William Haade

William Haade

Hardrock Haggerty

Photo of Don Beddoe

Don Beddoe

Charles Crocker

Photo of Thurston Hall

Thurston Hall

Charles Crocker

Photo of Ida Moore

Ida Moore

Spinster on Stagecoach (uncredited)

Photo of Sarah Edwards

Sarah Edwards

Spinster on Stagecoach (uncredited)

Photo of Iris Adrian

Iris Adrian

Saloon Girl in Fight (uncredited)

Photo of Stanley Andrews

Stanley Andrews

Mine Owner on Train (uncredited)

Photo of Ray Bennett

Ray Bennett

Guard (uncredited)

Photo of Stanley Blystone

Stanley Blystone

Mine Owner (uncredited)

Photo of Edmund Cobb

Edmund Cobb

Workman (uncredited)

Photo of Mikel Conrad

Mikel Conrad

Workman (uncredited)

Photo of Edgar Dearing

Edgar Dearing

Daly - Railroad Conductor (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

6/10

Proposed Railroad Is Threat To Carson City.

Carson City is directed by André De Toth and written by Sloan Nibley and Winston Miller. It stars Randolph Scott, Lucille Norman, Raymond Massey, Richard Webb and James Millican. Music is scored by David Buttolph and cinematography by John Boyle. Plot finds Scott as engineer Jeff Kincaid, who clashes with bandits and town locals when he is hired to build a new rail track through Carson City.

Based in Nevada but filmed in Bronson Canyon in California, Carson City is routine stuff that still manages to come out in credit by the end. Story is set up around the building of the railroad between Carson City and Virginia, Scott and his rugged band of engineers have their work cut out in more ways than one. When a major player who is opposed to the railroad is murdered, it's no surprise who is going to get the blame. Cue dastardly goings on, sabotage, heroics and much macho posturing. In the mix is a love interest for Randolph, courtesy of a lifeless Lucille Norman, but naturally the trajectory of true love is not straightforward.

Railroad Workers Terrorise Town!

De Toth came on board late in production after Michael Curtiz baulked at trying the new Warnercolor process (this was the first film to use the process). De Toth went on record to say he only did the film for the money, but he gets much entertainment from a pretty standard script. Action quota is high, with exploding rocks, wagon over a cliff, stagecoach heist, train robbery, saloon brawls and great drama garnered out of a landslide/rescue passage of play. For Scott fans it's a pleasurable watch as it finds him in typically upright and stoic form, in fact the first time we see him he is indulging in a good old knuckle fight. Though asking us to accept his romance with Norman when there is 20 years between the two actors is a bit of a stretch.

The scenery is pleasing yet the Warnercolor is as lifeless as Norman's performance, but the print of the film is in good shape and as long as Western fans prepare for standard formula dressed up nicely, then they should enjoy it well enough. 6.5/10

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