Hoppy is leading a scientific expedition and the Chinese who have a hidden settlement nearby are trying to stop them. Saulters and his outlaw gang are also in the area looking for a gold mine. When Saulters men attack, the gold mine is found. Hoppy agrees to file for the Chinese and heads after Saulters in the chase to the land office.
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This is a bit of a head scratcher Hopalong Cassidy Western for most of it's run time until things are tied up near the end of the story. Characters prefer to remain mysterious for a good part of the picture, and the payoff, as another reviewer correctly mentions, seems totally unrealistic. Quite honestly, did Hoppy and his pals have to be led through some Indian ruins, up and down rock walls and through a circumspect revolving door to come upon a serene looking 'Peaceful Valley'? Wouldn't it have been there if they simply rode their horses around the ruins to the other side? But I guess the intrigue and gun play that's standard for these horse operas was necessary to fashion an offbeat story. If you think about it though, the whole basis for the archaeological expedition Hoppy was leading eventually came to naught. You would think a scientist like Professor Balto Stubbs (Hal Price) would be able to tell the difference between a legitimate artifact and a thirty year old Buddha figure he found digging around in the ruins.While all this was going on, somehow a gold mine winds up at the center of the story, with an outlaw gang led by Slade Saulters (Douglas Fowley) trailing the expedition and keeping an eye on the Chinese immigrants. When the suspected gold mine actually pops up, Hoppy offers to take a claim that was already drafted ten years earlier (???) by the Chinese leader Moy Soong (Soo Yong), to the town of Paiute to file it. Cassidy cautions however, that once filed, the owners would have to pay back taxes on the land on which the mine was located. What? Is anyone following this? At least you had the usual hi-jinks for a Hoppy film bookending the story with California Carlson (Andy Clyde) running a 'hole in the coin trick' with a burly blacksmith. Unfortunately, Johnny Nelson's (Brad King) designs on pretty archaeologist Jennifer Kendall (Barbara Britton) come to naught. I think she might have smiled at him just once.My best takeaway from the picture though had to do with the 'La Luz Del Dia' Cantina in the town of Paiute. Translated, that's 'The Light of Day', and it would be, with cerveza going for ten cents. That's beer for a dime! - how do I get there?
This Hopalong Cassidy was one of the wilder films of the series. For one thing Hoppy and his pals are serving as expedition guides into the California desert for some archaeologists who want to prove that the Chinese settled here before Columbus or the Vikings arrived.This was a really stupid premise and these people of science which included a woman, the upcoming Barbara Britton, look like professors of the absent minded kind.Who's settled there was some Chinese people seeking refuge and headed by dragon lady type Soo Young. I guess Anna May Wong was unavailable. They do have however a goldmine that some villainous Occidentals want to steal. That's where Hoppy and his friends come in.One of the sillier Cassidy films.
What a great movie. The storyline was truly ahead of its time, during a period of flagrant racism in the 1940's. It was great to see Cassidy stand up for the weaker Chinese immigrants. I loved the ending when Cassidy rides to the land office to claim the mine for the Chinese immigrants that discovered it. I was really surprised to find a movie from this time period that was actually a very accurate portrayal of early 19th century Chinese immigration. The early Chinese settlers came from the Canton province of mainland China, where they were drawn to the West with opportunities in the railroad expansion connecting together the eastern US with the western US. A treasured movie indeed.
Poor entry in the Hoppy series — seems out of place for a Hoppy film. Reminded me of Tarzan leading an expedition through sacred ruins to old Egyptian remains. It was confusing for most of the time. We didn't know —till the end— what the disparate groups wanted and how they knew so much about each other.**Spoilers*** There was the scientific expedition Hoppy was leading to old Indian ruins. There were Chinese who we later learn were interested in protecting their "Shangri La" community hidden in the desert, waiting to file legal claim to it. And there were American gunmen believing that there was a hidden gold mine in the Indian ruins that the Chinese were hiding. Added to that was the Sheriff and his posse wondering what to do.The mystery was confusing and boring. There was little action (gunplay). The sets at the ruins were phony looking. Mostly there was boring talking. I love Hoppy movies generally, but find it hard to take his comic sidekicks (California Carlson here). Hoppy's young romantic sidekick here was the worst of the lot (Brad King as Johnny Nelson); he was a stiff, uninteresting actor.