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  • JOHN PAYNE plays a college guy who gets a lumberjack job on a crew run by STANLEY FIELDS. Fields is a rough mannered, diamond-in-the-rough type of guy who manages to win the attention of GLORIA DICKSON when she applies for a job as singer in the local tavern. And unfortunately, he has most of the footage throughout the film.

    Turns out that Dickson is Payne's former sweetheart which sets up the usual formula triangle with Payne caught between the newly married couple and his friendship with both.

    Some of the timberland footage looks like stock shots used from other Warner films about lumberjacks. The story, as well, seems like a retread of familiar films dealing with the same background and romantic triangle.

    With Fields using rough tactics to get his logs to the mill on time, we know there will be some sort of conflict between him and Payne before the story is over. Too much plot takes place in the last ten minutes, involving a vengeful runaway train, which gives the story an abrupt feel before it winds up in downbeat fashion.

    Summing up: Forgettable B-film leaves a bad impression.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The 1932 Edward G. Robinson adventure film "Tiger Shark" had at least three unofficial remakes that kept the basic plot but change the occupation of the leading characters. 1938's "Slim" and 1941's "Manpower" were A films, while this, made in between those two, is an obvious programmer. It has the benefit of dealing with the logging industry, a subject matter I'm fascinated by because of how the trees are cut and transported, and mostly because these films are usually set in the far north of the United States.

    Character actor Stanley Ridges plays the role which Robinson played in both "Tiger Shark" and "Manpower", a gregarious lumberjack who quickly be friends newcomer John Payne and instantly becomes jealous when he realizes that there's something going on between pain and his new wife Gloria Dickson whom he married out of spontaneity, turning into a nasty boss even before she has thought of straying. Ridges enthusiastically creates a character that never has any consistency of behavior or personality, and therefore I found his performance to be completely false.

    Dickson is a bit better, but her character isn't really given much chance to develop outside of the fact that she obviously appreciates his interest in her but is in fact desperately in need of a meal ticket. Payne, one of the sexiest actors of the early 1930s, is a decent romantic hero, although one with a past. Character actors Jimmy Conlin and Victor Kilian (as the evil saloon owner) add spice to the familiar story. The real star, however, is the cameraman, especially when he focuses on falling trees and a runaway train going over a collapsed bridge. The ending is lightened up from the other three films to truly turn Ridges' character into a complete buffoon. Certainly not unwatchable, this still left me wanting more than the script and performances gave me.
  • Some elements of Tiger Shark and a lot of footage and some of the plot of Valley Of The Giants are involved in this knockoff picture from Warner Brothers B picture unit. Stanley Fields is King Of The Lumberjacks in his local logging area. But he's without a Queen.

    That problem might be solved by the arrival of Gloria Dickson in camp and they marry in a whirlwind courtship. But then John Payne who was a kind of protege for Fields returns. Payne and Dickson have history and I don't need to say any more.

    Logging sequences and the climax of the runaway logging train are edited into this film from Valley Of The Giants.

    If you like tall trees and the trio of stars this film is yours.
  • boblipton23 May 2008
    Warner's TIGER SHARK plot -- usually with Edward G. Robinson in the lead and a top director like Howard Hawks or Raoul Walsh directing -- gets the B treatment among lumberjacks . Stanley Field, of course, doesn't have the range of Robinson, but John Payne is fine in an early outing as the juvenile lead, and Gloria Dickson is absolutely terrific. She never got out of the Bs, and was working for Columbia when she died in a fire at her home four years later, alas.

    This feature is one of the very short, one-hour second features that Warner Brothers produced under Briney Foy in the pre-war period. Overall, it's a good, workmanlike piece.
  • Stars John Payne and Gloria Dickson. Stanley Fields is the Boss. Fields has a pretty interesting story... he had started out as a boxer, which explains the first five minutes of the films, where they box for no reason. and Fields only made a couple more films, then died the next year. Payne is Slim Jim, who shows up and wants to work as a lumberjack, but has to prove himself, of course. Jackson also shows up in town, as a singer, and we can tell right off SOMEONE is going to fall in love. Jimmy Conlin is the pianny player.. he was a bit-part player in just EVERYTHING in the 1930s and 1940s. Everyone has a backstory, and we hear it, and watch it play out. An age old story. Surprisingly good film. Some very predictable scenes, but oh, well. Just part of the deal. Shown on Turner Classic Films. Only 81 votes so far, so they must have just started showing it. Directed by William Clemens for Warner Brothers. A 58 minute shortie, but a goodie.