Joseph Kane (1) (1894–1975)
Author of Roy Rogers: 10 Episodes 2 Pack DVDs
For other authors named Joseph Kane, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Image credit: wikimedia.org
Series
Works by Joseph Kane
In Old Caliente [and] Rough Riders' Round-Up (Double Feature Video) — Director — 5 copies
The Great American Western: Volume 30: Gabby Hayes / Roy Rogers (4 movies) — Director — 4 copies
The Great American Western — Director; Director — 3 copies
Roy Rogers King of the Cowboys: 20 Feature Films and More on 6 DVD Set! (2014) — Director — 3 copies
Riders of the Whistling Pines [and] Springtime in the Rockies (Feature Films) — Director — 3 copies
Bad Man of Deadwood [and] Sheriff of Tombstone (Double Feature Video) — Director — 2 copies
Boots & Saddles [and] Riders of the Whistling Pines (Double Feature Video) — Director — 2 copies
All Star Westerns: Sagebrush Trail/King of the Cowboys/Bandit King of Texas/Wagon Wheels Westward — Director — 2 copies
Roy Rogers King of Cowboys 5 Feature Films — Director — 1 copy
Divided We Fall - 10 Civil War Movies: Abraham Lincoln , Hearts in Bondage, The Arizona Kid, Colorado, Santa Fe Trail, Renegade Girl, The Proud Rebel, Drums in the Deep South,… (2015) — Director — 1 copy
Gene Autry: The Singing Cowboy Collection (10 films) — Director — 1 copy
The Great American Western: Volume 27 (4 movies) — Director — 1 copy
Great American Western Classics: Volume 2: Colorado Sundown / Gunsmoke Ranch — Director — 1 copy
20 Movies: Collision Course — Director — 1 copy
Gene Autry TV Classics Westerns 4 Episodes (Video) — Director — 1 copy
Angel and the Badman / The Outlaw / King of the Cowboys (Triple Feature Video) — Director — 1 copy
John Wayne: Westerns 5-Pack: Dakota / King of the Pecos / Rio Grande / Blue Steel / Old California — Director — 1 copy, 1 review
In Old Caliente [and] Lights of Old Santa Fe (Video) — Director — 1 copy
The Great American Western: Volume 28 — Director — 1 copy
Fair Wind to Java [1953 film] — Director — 1 copy
Shine on Harvest Moon [1938 film] — Director — 1 copy
Boots & Saddles [and] Lights of Old Santa Fe (Double Feature Video) — Director — 1 copy
Git Along Little Dogies [1937 film] — Director — 1 copy
John Wayne: Platinum Film Collection (29 films) — Director — 1 copy
Associated Works
Roy Rogers 4 Video Set (Carson City Kid, The Yellow Rose of Texas, The Cowboy and The Senorita, & Home In Oklahoma) [VHS] (1994) — Director — 1 copy
Cowboy Classics 6 Disc Set: Gene Autry & Roy Rogers [DVD] — Director — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1894-03-18
- Date of death
- 1975-08-25
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- film director
film producer
film editor
screenwriter - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- San Diego, California, USA
- Place of death
- Santa Monica, California, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- California, USA
Members
Reviews
This fun oater has a young Roy as Bill Hickok. While it isn’t going to hold up under any historical scrutiny in regard to real events in the life of Bill Hickok, it sure is fun to watch. George Gabby Hayes and Sally Payne, portraying Calamity Jane and her Uncle Gabby, offer some fun dialog, their exchanges some of the best in the short Republic programmer that entertains in spades. Joseph Kane directs another of Roy’s films from an original story by Norton S. Packer and Olive Cooper. show more It’s got the Civil War, a shipment of gold, and foreign bad guys trying to take over California, but Bill Hickok ain’t about to let them. It’s even got a tie-in with the plot to kill Abe Lincoln!
Young Bill Hickok (Roy Rogers) gets wounded in a valiant effort to hold off Morrell’s Raiders, a bad bunch who have been disrupting communications to create chaos so that the foreign bad guy, Nicholas Tower (John Miljan), can move in and take over California. The papers dub Hickok “Wild Bill” and a legend is born. Bill has a pic of a Southern Belle in his pocket that saves him during a shootout, so you know there is going to be some cowboy romance. Hickok is on the Union side of the issue, but everybody plays fair and square here — except the bad guy from another country trying to work the war to his advantage. Pretty Jacqueline Wells (Julie Bishop) portrays Hickok’s love, Louise Mason, but it’s Sally Payne as the tomboy Calamity Jane and Gabby Hayes as her uncle, Gabby Whitacker, who make this one fun.
Hickok gets accused of stealing gold meant for the Union at one point and has to light out to clear himself. Silent star Monte Blue is Marshal Evans, who wants to give Hickok a chance, but only if he can come up with some proof of his innocence. Calamity and Gabby lend him a hand, and there’s some nice stunt work involving a moving wagon during the finale. Before it's all wrapped up, Payne gets to sing about tamales and chili beans, and Roy gets to serenade his girl and nearly singlehandedly expose the men behind the plot to kill Lincoln. Well, you just have to go with it.
There is a really fun bit that ends this one on a high note, like it began. Roy was more fond of his modern western stories, but this one is set in the West of old, and is a good old-fashioned, rootin’-tootin’ cowboy movie. Coming in at under an hour, this is a good one for Roy’s fans! show less
Young Bill Hickok (Roy Rogers) gets wounded in a valiant effort to hold off Morrell’s Raiders, a bad bunch who have been disrupting communications to create chaos so that the foreign bad guy, Nicholas Tower (John Miljan), can move in and take over California. The papers dub Hickok “Wild Bill” and a legend is born. Bill has a pic of a Southern Belle in his pocket that saves him during a shootout, so you know there is going to be some cowboy romance. Hickok is on the Union side of the issue, but everybody plays fair and square here — except the bad guy from another country trying to work the war to his advantage. Pretty Jacqueline Wells (Julie Bishop) portrays Hickok’s love, Louise Mason, but it’s Sally Payne as the tomboy Calamity Jane and Gabby Hayes as her uncle, Gabby Whitacker, who make this one fun.
Hickok gets accused of stealing gold meant for the Union at one point and has to light out to clear himself. Silent star Monte Blue is Marshal Evans, who wants to give Hickok a chance, but only if he can come up with some proof of his innocence. Calamity and Gabby lend him a hand, and there’s some nice stunt work involving a moving wagon during the finale. Before it's all wrapped up, Payne gets to sing about tamales and chili beans, and Roy gets to serenade his girl and nearly singlehandedly expose the men behind the plot to kill Lincoln. Well, you just have to go with it.
There is a really fun bit that ends this one on a high note, like it began. Roy was more fond of his modern western stories, but this one is set in the West of old, and is a good old-fashioned, rootin’-tootin’ cowboy movie. Coming in at under an hour, this is a good one for Roy’s fans! show less
A collection of The Duke's finest. Featuring DAKOTA (1945), KING OF THE PECOS (1936), RIO GRANDE (1950), BLUE STEEL (1934), and IN OLD CALIFORNIA (1942.) See individual titles for details.
Un team di agenti segreti viene inviato in una località del sud America, dove si sono nascosti sia Hitler che altri gerarchi nazisti come Martin Borman.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 76
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 229
- Popularity
- #98,339
- Rating
- 2.8
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 33
- Languages
- 1




