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  • After trying out many different character names such as Dave Saunders, Dave Collins, Kansas Jones, Dave/Tim/Ross Taylor (just to name a few), Tim Holt began using his own name (on and off) for the series of Westerns he did with Richard Martin. By the way, Holt's birth name was Charles. Martin wisely stuck with the same character name of Chito Rafferty as Holt's Irish-Mexican sidekick and a sometimes comic relief.

    The identity crisis aside, these westerns were usually short in length (this one is 59 min) and fairly entertaining. "Desert Passage" happened to be one of the best in the series supported by a competent cast of actors. Veteran screenwriter Norman Houston provided a neat script loaded with double-cross, intrigue and comedy. Holt is good in his role but he seems to have packed on a few pounds. Pay attention to Martin who has been blessed by the script with some real cracker lines.

    The story tells of Holt and Rafferty being owner/operator of their "Lavic Stage Lines." They are on the end of their bankroll and are preparing to sell their business to the next "nitwit" who's willing to buy it.

    The two men discovered that a few people in town are looking for a youngish man with greying temples. They then stumble onto the very person who was being attacked at gunpoint. After saving the man's life, our two heroes were offered $1000 for his protection and a ride on their stage coach to a safer destination south of Lavic.

    The movie "Pulp Fiction" has a memorable line of "I'll be out within three shakes of a lamb's tail" which I never knew was an old saying. In "Desert Passage," Chito said "That will only take two shakes of a pig's tail!"

    My main criticism with some of the series (or any other Westerns for that matter) is with the shooting action. Nobody seem to be able to aim accurately when a subject is exposed in the open unless necessary for the script. This is not as apparent in this movie.

    Good fun B-Western. 7/10. Another one in the series I would recommend is "Storm Over Wyoming."
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Another in the series of several unconnected B Westerns starring Tim Holt, using his own name, with sidekick Chito Jose Gonzalez Bustamante Rafferty, played by Richard Martin. This one also features several other recognizable character actors including Walter Reed, John Dehner, Clayton Moore (TV's The Lone Ranger), and Denver Pyle. The film itself is average and nothing special, though it does provide enough intrigue for an hour's worth of entertainment if your tastes are not too discriminating and you enjoy the genre.

    Holt and Rafferty are the good guys who find themselves involved in a situation which they'll see through to a predictable conclusion. As is somewhat typical, they will inadvertently work for the bad guy(s), at least temporarily, until an innocent victim woman sets them straight and they end up helping her instead. There are sexist overtones, acceptable at the time, which seem laughable today - e.g. the men are helpless or unwilling to feed themselves until the woman agrees to cook the meal, at their service. But overall, I personally don't find men assisting a woman who needs help offensive, regardless of the era. In this case, the woman is Emily Bryce, played by Joan Dixon, whose father & his bank were cheated out of his money by John Carver (Reed).

    Carver, who's just been paroled for his crime, initially hires Holt & Rafferty to be his bodyguards, providing him safe passage to Mexico with the Lavic Bank money he'd hidden before he was imprisoned. His lawyer Bronson (Dehner) would love to get his hands on the loot as would Carver's former cellmate Langdon (Lane Bradford) and his associate Allen (Pyle). Carver's former girl Roxie Blondell (Dorothy Patrick) and her current beau Dave Warwick (Moore) would also like to get the money. A lot of the action takes place at a stopover along the way, owned by Burley (Michael Mark), who's mysteriously gone missing but whose dog continues to howl. The film ends with the requisite chase and shootout in which the good guys' aim is naturally much better than the bad guys.
  • Actor Tim Holt uses his own name to play another western protagonist in this story about a man with ill-gotten money who wants to leave Arizona territory before others can appropriate the cash for themselves. Holt and his comic sidekick, Chito (Richard Martin), sign on to protect the fleeing man (Walter Reed as John Carver).

    Among those sniffing around for the funds are Clayton Moore (TV's Lone Ranger) as Dave Warwick and Dorothy Patrick as Roxie Van Zell.

    Dissatisfied with his scripts, Holt made this his final role with RKO. The film also features music by Paul Sawtell, who was terrifically prolific. In 1952 alone, he worked on more than thirty films.
  • There are plenty of them in here, for fans of this, I think this is a good programmer. Lots of things occurring, people entering and exiting rooms, on horses, in carriages, amidst the desert obviously.
  • This was Tim Holt playing the boss of his own nitwit stagecoach line, along with Richard Martin playing Chito Rafferty for the last time – apparently this was his 33rd outing. By now Holt was even chunkier but still looked the part runnin' jumpin' an' shootin', and looked relevant to the plot of yet another competent b western movie. He was only about 33 years old at the time but retired from films after this – the end of the gravy trail.

    About to sell his and Chito's business they save the life and continue to protect a mysterious sinister grey templed gent with plenty of money who has to get somewhere fast to get away from a mysterious duo out to crease him. The plots thicken and the film bristles with mysterious baddies after the guy's money, eventually you're wondering if everyone has nobbled everyone else at least once with this aim. Not a very large cast and a not very large plot still make this entertaining to watch, just don't expect too much from a b film and it'll nearly always deliver. In fact it's fascinating in places: when Carver is initially shot at and his lack of gratitude but the depth of his pockets; lawyer Bronson's enigmatic appearance at the roadhouse; the escape from the bedroom down yes a knotted bedsheet; many others.

    Although the script only paid lip service to human nature and plot development it's still nice and relaxing with nothing in it to worry about, like taking an hour's holiday. The biggest puzzle to me is all those clean crisp banknotes were so manhandled how come there was any left to handle at all by the end, and with such vicissitudes as they had gone through Chito was no fool in wanting to spend his share as fast as possible.
  • Compared to other Holt westerns I have seen, Desert Passage takes a back seat to action and the plot unravels slowly. At times, I was a little confused over what it's about but 20 minutes in it picks up some pace. Basically an ex-convict has returned to collect the stolen money he had embezzled and then hides it in a bridle. Other greedy characters want the money, while Tim Holt and Chico try to stop them. This western is competent with good characterisation and suspense but I found it a little meandering at times and lacking action. The stagecoach chase finale is excitingly filmed.
  • Tim and Chito, his sidekick are hired to bring a shady character to mexico. But it's rough territory. And those best laid plans always go awry. Joan Dixon is Emily, who's mixed up in this somehow, but isn't saying anything to anyone. But she seems to know the stranger in town (walter Reed) . And now there are two men following them. Who's the good guy and who is the bad guy? Clay Moore was the Lone Ranger, in films and in the tv series. Tim Holt was king of the westerns, but died young at 54 from cancer. Directed by Les Selander. He and holt had made 21 films together! It's good.. the usual western. Shooting. Galloping. Bank robbers. Coyotes.
  • The only reason why I watched this tepid and forgettable western is that because it was directed by Lesley Selander - a western maker whose filmography has always interested me, I don't know why - and also because I have always been curious of RKO B westerns, I also don't now why: Republic Pictures, Monogram, PRC - all no majors companies - but RKO .... The film itself looks like thousands of others of this kind. It remains a good time waster which you will rapidly forget just after the viewing. And the short length helps to appreciate it, beecause it is not boring, with a good music and cute western atmosphere.