Branded a Coward

1935 "A fighting son of the west proves his bravery with a swift draw and dynamite wallop"
5.5| 0h58m| NR| en
Details

Safely from behind some shrubbery, Johnny Hume, a boy of 6 or 7, witnesses the slaughter of his mother, father and brother by the guns of a gang led by "the Cat". Twenty years later finds Johnny grown to manhood, an expert bronc rider and target shooter - but paralyzed with fearful memories in an actual gunfight. This is brought home to him when some outlaws stick up the local saloon and Johnny ends up cowering behind the bar.

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SpuffyWeb Sadly Over-hyped
Senteur As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.
Geraldine The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
Candida It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.
zardoz-13 Cowboy hero Johnny Mack Brown starred in over 200 B-movie westerns during his 38-year career in Hollywood. "Branded A Coward" ranks as one of Brown's better oaters. As Johnny Hume, he plays a cowboy who is a crack shot unless somebody else is slinging lead at him. Initially, "Thundering Gun Slingers" director Sam Neufeld's horse opera opens with a family in a covered wagon setting up camp in the wilderness when a gang of ruthless outlaws open fire on them. Johnny watches as his mother and father die from gunfire. Johnny's little brother takes a slug in the shoulder, and Johnny is so frightened that he appropriates a revolver and conceals himself in the brush while the outlaws check the bodies and gallop away. From then on, poor Johnny refuses to get tangled up in a gunfight. After he wins a rodeo championship, Johnny his celebrating his triumph in a saloon when three ruffians brandish their six-guns and try to hold up the bartender. During the confrontation, the bartender shoots one of the outlaws, but he dies at the hands of another outlaw. Meantime, Johnny cowers behind the bar in abject terror. You can see his hand trembling while the robbery occurs. He flashbacks to the past when the desperadoes killed his parents. "I'm just gun shy when guns are needed," he summarizes his predicament. "I've been thinking I would get over it, but I never will. Just when I begin to get the nerve to do something, a picture what happened on that terrible night when I was a kid pops up before me. I guess most people would call it yellow." When the truth comes out about his cowardice, Johnny leaves town. As his sidekick and he are riding to another town where nobody will know about his cowardice, he intervenes in a stagecoach hold-up. When he arrives, Johnny finds the driver wounded and the shotgun rider dead. Fearlessly, Johnny draws his six-shooter and sends the outlaws packing. Whatever cowardice that he felt before, Johnny no longer feels again. The outlaws try to steal the wagon with a passenger, Ethel Carson (Billie Seward of "Twentieth Century"), inside, but Johnny thwarts them. At one point, he leaps astride the team of horses to slow them, then drops beneath the entire coach, climbs up from the back atop the vehicle from the rear, and commandeers the coach from the road agents. Incidentally, stunt man Yakima Canutt performed this audacious stunt later in John Ford's classic western "Stagecoach" with John Wayne.Johnny's stuttering sidekick Oscar (Sid Saylor of "Six Gun Man") spreads the word around the town of Lawless that Johnny is an ideal candidate for the post of town marshal. He conjures up tall tales that Johnny dealt with both Billy the Kid and Black Bart. Johnny doesn't want to take the job despite the encouragement that he receives from the town citizens. Nevertheless, Johnny doesn't trust him. He suspects that he may turn yellow again. No sooner than this happens, Johnny gets a warning from the chief villain, nicknamed the Cat, who vows to kill him because he killed his friends. Nobody knows what the Cat looks like. All they know is the Cat is "a cruel ruthless killer."Meanwhile, Ethel's father Joe (Lloyd Ingraham of "Our Daily Bread") takes an immediate disliking to Johnny when he catches a glimpse of his six-gun with the initials T.H. on it as well as four notches. As it turns out, Johnny's father killed Carson's brother. Joe argues that Johnny's father took advantage of his position as a lawman to kill his brother. Johnny learns about an anonymous villain known only as 'the Cat' and he resolves to hunt the man down that killed his mother and father. Later, Joe challenges Johnny to a duel in the street. Johnny tries to shoot the revolver out of Joe's hand, but some desperadoes in the saloon shoot out the window and hit old Joe in the heart and kill him. Predictably, Ethel turns against him."Branded A Coward' is an unusual sagebrusher because our hero's amiable sidekick bites the dust.
MartinHafer While I like a Johnny Mack Brown film because of his natural look and acting style, "Branded a Coward" just has too many strikes against it to make it a film I'd recommend. The biggest problem is the casting of a truly annoying character actor, Syd Saylor, in the film. He plays his usual stuttering sidekick--and made me feel ill watching him. Saylor's shtick was to stutter so badly that he made Porky Pig look like a polished Shakespearean actor by comparison! It not only was insensitive, it was grating. The other problems concern plot and clichés--more about that in a moment.The film begins with a pioneer family being attacked by bandits. The father and mother are killed and one brother is shot while the other hides in fear of his life. Twenty years pass and the brother who hid is now played by Brown. He is a nice guy and stands for law and order, but he also has a mental block and sometimes fear grips him when he's reminded of the slaughter of his family. This makes it especially tough when he's appointed sheriff and he's determined to bring the bandit leader, 'The Cat', to justice. How it all plays out is the big problem here--it's just too predictable that the brother he assumed was dead is not and is now The Cat!! And, it's REAAAALLLY predictable that The Cat will take a bullet to save Brown. And, it's ridiculous when all the loose ends in the story are tied together too perfectly. The only really great thing about the film is that eventually Saylor's character is killed--I could have cheered!!
classicsoncall "Branded a Coward" has one of the classic B Western story lines - a young boy sees his parents killed by outlaws and one day comes back to avenge the innocent. The minor twist here is that Johnny Hume (Johnny Mack Brown) really didn't plan it that way, but as one thing leads to another, well, you know.Sometimes you have to consider the era when these old time oaters were made. For 1935 this one wasn't all that bad. The leap of faith needed here is how quickly Johnny makes the transition from a 'cowering behind the bar' onlooker to full fledged Western hero when he throws down with the outlaws attacking the stagecoach in the first half. That scene offers the equally classic 'under the stagecoach' maneuver that became a trademark of many films in which Yakima Canutt appeared. Yak portrays gang leader 'Cat' as the story opens, but as things progress, hints are dropped that a new Cat mysteriously appears to take over the gang whenever it's thought the one prior has been compromised.I've only seen Syd Saylor a couple of times before and I don't recall him ever doing the stuttering gimmick. It wears after a while, but it's still a downer when he gets knocked off before the picture ends. All the while he tried getting his words out I kept thinking Porky Pig in those old Warner Brothers cartoons, and had to consider whether Saylor's bit had anything to do to inspire that character.Well you had to wonder if the finale wasn't just a bit too contrived. With the appearance of Johnny's older brother Billy, who also witnessed the death of their parents, an explanation of how he became the new 'Cat' would have been in order. Instead, you just had to take the twist ending on faith that the good brother would come out on top. But Johnny getting the girl (Billie Seward) at the end of the story - that was just par for the course.
John W Chance Johnny Mack Brown made some of the best and fastest westerns for Universal during the 1940s. Here, in one of his 'Supreme Pictures', the story is a little off beat, in that although playing the crack shot rodeo rider Johnny Hume, in an early bar hold up sequence, he hides behind the bar as a shivering, frozen wide-eyed coward, unable to use the gun shaking in his hand.The reason for this is because twenty years earlier, his mother and father, who were driving their covered wagon through unknown territory with him and his older brother, were suddenly ambushed and killed by an outlaw gang. His visual flashback to this scene turns him 'yellow' in the presence of real danger. Hence to everyone he's a coward.This covered wagon ambush, with every one in the family getting killed (except for the hero) was used several times, not only in the remake "Fast on the Draw" (1950), but also in the totally botched "The Rawhide Terror" (1934), "Cavalcade of the West" (1936) and I'm sure in a few others. Of course, the other brother really doesn't die but grows up to be the new leader of the enemy gang! (Sorry for the spoiler!) Guess who has to kill him at the end? You don't see a cowardly hero again until "Sugarfoot" (1958-1959) on TV. But Johnny, although he then skips town with his side kick, Oscar (the sometimes tedious Syd Saylor), suddenly is magically transformed having no trouble at all with two six guns ablazin' knocking off some 'henchmen' and rescuing 'Ethel' (a name forever associated with Vivian Vance, if it wasn't a bad enough unglamorous name already) from an attempted stage robbery, and capturing the stage coach single handed. Back in the town of Lawless, he reluctantly agrees to become sheriff, because we now realize he has a score to settle with "The Cat."As noted by others, it was unusual to see the sidekick getting killed. Then we had the low melodramatic trick of never seeing the face of the boss villain, in this case "The Cat," but only his shadow. And in another unusual twist, Johnny kisses the girl in the middle of the picture, not just at the end. In much of the movie we have more dialog by different characters than we would get, say in a John Wayne 'Lone Star,' but this tends to slow the movie down. When I was around seven years old, Johnny Mack Brown was my favorite cowboy. Inexplicably, this movie doesn't tell me why. We do see his athleticism, because we can see that he actually is the one leaping up on his horse three times. The Mighty Yak, Yakima Canutt, does his amazing, great, slide under the stage coach and then climb up the back of it trick, and he also does a tension building drop off a cliff into a river.But really that's about it. Billie Seward is undistinguished. Syd Saylor's stuttering act gets a little grating. He has a much broader role, as a publicist / acrobat in the Clyde Beatty serial "The Lost Jungle" (1934), although the feature version is better than the serial. He also does okay as Tex Ritter's sidekick in westerns like "Arizona Days" (1937) and "Headin' for the Rio Grande" (1936). He appeared, mostly uncredited, in over 400 movies and TV shows.Despite the unusual elements, it moves a little too slowly. I give it a four.