After Rob Russell steals Tim Clark's ranch, Clark starts prospecting for silver.After Rob Russell steals Tim Clark's ranch, Clark starts prospecting for silver.After Rob Russell steals Tim Clark's ranch, Clark starts prospecting for silver.
Rube Dalroy
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Jack Evans
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Jack Hendricks
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
Sheik the Horse
- Pal (Tim Clark's Horse)
- (uncredited)
Merrill McCormick
- Green - the Agent
- (uncredited)
Bud Osborne
- Jiggs Tyler
- (uncredited)
Arthur Thalasso
- Jake
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOne of over 100 Columbia features, mostly Westerns, sold to Hygo Television Films in the 1950s, which marketed them under the name of Gail Pictures; opening credits were redesigned, with some titles misspelled, the credit order of the players rearranged, some names misspelled, and new end titles attached, thus eliminating any evidence of their Columbia roots. Apparently, the original material was not retained in most of the cases, and the films have survived, even in the Sony library, only with these haphazardly created replacement opening and end credits.
- ConnectionsEdited into Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch (1976)
Featured review
Excellent cast, generally good dialog, great directing
Though there seem to be some script holes, generally this is well written with some very good dialog.
Tim McCoy was one of the best cowboys and was also a pretty good actor.
As noted elsewhere, John Wayne was second billed, but had only a small part. Wallace MacDonald, as his buddy, does more, but his constant use of "y'all" to one person is one of the script's major flaws.
As sheriff, Tully Marshall has one of his best roles. It is well written and very well played.
Alice Day -- billed as "Alice Fay" on the DVD I own, from Canadian Disc Plaza, on a "Classic Westerns" collection of supposedly John Wayne movies -- is the least capable of the cast, but even she brightens up as the story progresses.
Bad guys Wheeler Oakman and Richard Alexander also shone and Walter Brennan, as usual, stood out in one of his early appearances.
Director D. Ross Lederman showed a lot of skill in his framing and camera angles. He was held in high-enough esteem to have stayed busy nearly his entire life with dozens of movies and dozens more TV shows.
I highly recommend "Two-Fisted Law," despite the pointless generic title.
Tim McCoy was one of the best cowboys and was also a pretty good actor.
As noted elsewhere, John Wayne was second billed, but had only a small part. Wallace MacDonald, as his buddy, does more, but his constant use of "y'all" to one person is one of the script's major flaws.
As sheriff, Tully Marshall has one of his best roles. It is well written and very well played.
Alice Day -- billed as "Alice Fay" on the DVD I own, from Canadian Disc Plaza, on a "Classic Westerns" collection of supposedly John Wayne movies -- is the least capable of the cast, but even she brightens up as the story progresses.
Bad guys Wheeler Oakman and Richard Alexander also shone and Walter Brennan, as usual, stood out in one of his early appearances.
Director D. Ross Lederman showed a lot of skill in his framing and camera angles. He was held in high-enough esteem to have stayed busy nearly his entire life with dozens of movies and dozens more TV shows.
I highly recommend "Two-Fisted Law," despite the pointless generic title.
helpful•92
- morrisonhimself
- Feb 27, 2011
Details
- Runtime1 hour 4 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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