Riders of the Range
Directed byOtis B. Thayer
Story byCourtney Ryley Cooper
Produced byRoy M. Langdon
StarringEdmund Cobb, Dolly Dale, Helen Hayes
CinematographyW. E. Smith
Production
company
Art-O-Graf
Distributed byTruart Film
Release date
February 15, 1923
CountryUnited States
LanguagesSilent
English intertitles

Riders of the Range is a 1923 American silent Western film presented by Clifford S. Efelt, directed by Otis B. Thayer, and starring Edmund Cobb, Dolly Dale, Helen Hayes and Frank Gallagher. The film was shot in Colorado by Thayer's Art-O-Graf film company.[1][2] It was a Roy M. Langdon Production. The film was released on VHS by Grapevine Video.

Plot

A growing number of cattle raids prompts the cattlemen to call on their cattlemen's association president Martin Lethbridge to investigate. Sheep Ranchers are suspected, who led by Gregg Randall blame the cattlemen for increased casualties among the sheep herds. Letherbridge falls in love with Randall's daughter, Dolly, and eventually exposes Blunt Vanier as the cause of the conflict.

Cast

  • Edmund Cobb as Martin Lethbridge
  • Frank Gallagher as Blunt Vanier
  • Clare Hatton as Gregg Randall
  • Roy Langdon as Bob Randall
  • Harry Ascher as Red Morriss
  • E. Glendower as Soapweed Harris
  • B. Bonaventure as Roddy, the sheriff
  • Levi Simpson as Wagner
  • Dolly Dale as Dolly
  • Helen M. Hayes as Inez
  • Mae Dean as Neil Barclay
  • Ann Drew as Mary Smithson

Crew

References

  1. "A Guide to Silent Westerns" By Larry Langman, Greenwood Publishing Group, January 1, 1992, page 369
  2. "Genre and Hollywood" By Stephen Neale, Psychology Press, 2000, page 25


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