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  • Sunset Carson, the towering B-movie cowboy, stars in this unpretentious oater from 1946. He plays a postal inspector out to foil a few sassy bandits attacking a stage line and generally creating the usual western outlaw mayhem .

    Along the way, Carson encounters the lovely heroine Peggy Stewart and Tom London as a senior postal inspector . London was a prolific cowboy co-star, appearing in hundreds of films and TV episodes.

    This movie is fun for the western film fan, but Carson was not a very good actor at all. While likable, he struggles here as usual. Fortunately a good supporting cast makes this an average film of a once popular genre.
  • Paularoc6 June 2012
    Although Sunset Carson couldn't act worth beans, there was something appealing about his manner and performance. And fortunately, most often those in supporting roles in his movies were very good. In this picture, Sunset is a U.S. Postal Inspector investigating stagecoach mail robberies. Under suspicious circumstances, Sunset meets Julie Bennett (Peggy Stewart) who he comes to find out works in the Wells Fargo office as a clerk. Sunset then meets Pop Underwood (Tom London) who is posing as a saddle maker but is actually a senior Postal Inspector. It is soon revealed that Julie is a Pinkerton agent also investigating the stage robberies. The two best things about this movie are that Peggy Stewart plays a Pinkerton agent (were there women agents back then?), and Pop Underwood's talking pet parrot. Sunset comes to Pop's aid when he is being harassed in a saloon; a fist fight ensues (a realistic fight and one where the tables don't break every time a fighter falls on them) with the parrot providing commentary. My favorite line is when the parrot (after a particularly good knock down) says "Oh, my aching back." Unfortunately, the parrot is only in this one scene. Had he been in more, I probably would have ranked this movie higher.