The Lone Ranger

The Lone Ranger thunders to the motion picture screen!

6.1
19561h 26m

The territorial governor asks the Lone Ranger to investigate mysterious raids on settlers by Indians who ride with saddles. Wealthy rancher Reese Kilgore wants to mine silver on Spirit Mountain which is sacred to the Indians.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Lone Ranger, The - Trailer (1956)

Lone Ranger, The - Trailer (1956)

Cast

Photo of Clayton Moore

Clayton Moore

The Lone Ranger

Photo of Lyle Bettger

Lyle Bettger

Reece Kilgore

Photo of Bonita Granville

Bonita Granville

Welcome Kilgore

Photo of Perry Lopez

Perry Lopez

Pete Ramirez

Photo of John Pickard

John Pickard

Sheriff Sam Kimberley

Photo of Beverly Washburn

Beverly Washburn

Lila Kilgore

Photo of Michael Ansara

Michael Ansara

Angry Horse

Photo of Frank De Kova

Frank De Kova

Chief Red Hawk

Photo of Lane Chandler

Lane Chandler

Chip Walker

Photo of Malcolm Atterbury

Malcolm Atterbury

Phineas Tripp (uncredited)

Photo of Kermit Maynard

Kermit Maynard

Rev. Purdy (uncredited)

Photo of Jack Mower

Jack Mower

Townsman (uncredited)

Photo of Buddy Roosevelt

Buddy Roosevelt

Rider (uncredited)

Photo of William Schallert

William Schallert

Clive - Secretary (uncredited)

Photo of Robert B. Williams

Robert B. Williams

U.S. Marshal, Abilene (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

Mature picture moves away from serial silliness.

The Lone Ranger is directed by Stuart Heisler and written by Herb Meadow and George W. Trendle. It stars Clayton Moore, Jay Silverheels, Lyle Bettger, Bonita Granville, Perry Lopez, Robert J. Wilke and John Pickard. Music is by David Buttolph and cinematography by Edwin B. DuPar.

Wealthy rancher Reese Kilgore (Bettger) aims to grab silver-rich Indian land by skilfully pitting Indians against settlers, but the suspicious territorial governor sends The Lone Ranger (Moore) to investigate.

I think most of us Western fans of a certain age remember fondly The Lone Ranger TV series, and with that we obviously remember it as being child friendly. So it's reasonable to expect this filmic version as being more of the same? Yet although it is of course safe for the kiddies to enjoy, it's very mature in narrative terms.

It's not an origin movie, though the screenplay allows space for us to get the birth of the masked man as it were. Naturally we are in the realm of the good versus the bad, but as we deal with bile strewn racial prejudices, we also get the flip side in the form of the strong friendship between Lone Ranger and Tonto (Silverheels).

Pic is crammed full of lush locations, fast paced action, plenty of fights - both with fists and weaponry - stock genre characters, and two of the coolest horses in genre lore. All that and the signature William Tell Overture music that brings simultaneously a smile to the face and a tingle to the youthful spine in all of us. Hooray! 7/10

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