Sunday, March 31, 2019

VCI Entertainment To Release Red Ryder: The Color Westerns - The Complete Cinecolor Collection As A Double-Disc DVD Product Offering On July 30


DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
Western cowboy legend Red Ryder began life as a comic hero in November of 1938 and ran continuously until 1965 in newspapers across the country.   He was the brain child of Stephen Slesinger, who had the foresight of acquiring the exclusive rights to market a loveable little bear by the name of Winnie-the-Pooh, which would eventually (after his death, his wife took charge) find his way to the Walt Disney Studios.

Slesinger, who also developed the “King of the Royal Mounted” comic strip, recruited Fred Harman to illustrate the comic panels … he did so until his retirement in 1964.   The comic strip for Red Ryder and his sidekick, Little Beaver, was so successful that it spawned the 12-chapter serial, The Adventures of Red Ryder in 1940, a prime time radio series in 1942 (which ran for seven years) and beginning in 1944 a total of 27 theatrical films featuring Red Ryder and Little Beaver were released.

VCI Entertainment announced this past week that the last four films in the venerable Red Ryder film series — which were all filmed in color — will be available on July 30 as the DVD product offering titled, Red Ryder: The Color Westerns - The Complete Cinecolor Collection.

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph TribbeyWe kick off the series with director Lewis Collins’ February of 1949 theatrical release of Ride, Ryder, Ride, starring Jim Bannon (T-Men, Johnny O'Clock, The Thirteenth Hour and star of the 1950s TV series, The Adventures of Champion) as Red Ryder and child actor Don Reynolds (as an adult he would become a horse trainer and handler for Hollywood film and TV productions, including the three Lord of the Rings films) as his sidekick, Little Beaver.     Emmett Lynn co-stars as Buckskin Blodgett, another Red Ryder sidekick, with the legendary Peggy Stewart (her film career spanned 75 years and 129 screen credits, including such non-Western films as The Vampire’s Ghost, The Tiger Woman, The Runaways, etc.) as a newspaper editor who teams with Red to avenge her brother’s death at the hands of outlaw Frenchy Beaumont (Edwin Max) and his gang.

In August of 1949, Bannon, Reynolds and Lynn teamed once again with director Lewis Collins for the second color film in the series, Roll, Thunder, Roll!   The female lead this time was none other than Nancy Gates, who would go on to star in such films as Suddenly — opposite Frank Sinatra — Torch Song, The Atomic City, Hell’s Half Acre and writer/director Edward Bernds’ 1956 sci-fi masterpiece, World Without End.

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
Others included in the cast of Roll, Thunder, Roll! are Glenn Strange (House of Frankenstein, House of Dracula, Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein), I. Stanford Jolley and Marin Sais reprises her role as The Duchess (Red Ryder’s aunt).

In October of 1949 the same core group team up once again for the release of The Fighting Redhead, with Peggy Stewart returning as rancher Sheila O’Connor, whose cattle are being rustled by Faro Savage (John Hart — as Hawkeye in the ‘50s TV series Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans and was the TV version of The Lone Ranger from 1950 to 1953, when Clayton Moore “went on strike”).

The gang is back for one last ride during Christmas of 1949 in Cowboy and the Prizefighter, with Karen Randle (Blonde Dynamite, Mysterious Island) as the female lead, with John Hart back as another heavy in partnership with none other than Marshall Reed.

All four of the color films in the venerable Red Ryder film series are here in one priced-to-own DVD collection … mark it down, July 30, Red Ryder: The Color Westerns - The Complete Cinecolor Collection.

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey



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