Border Patrol (1943): Hopalong Cassidy Rides Against Corruption
Directed by Lesley Selander and released by United Artists on April 2, 1943, Border Patrol is a 65-minute Western adventure starring William Boyd as the iconic Hopalong Cassidy. The film blends action, mystery, and social commentary, as Cassidy and his sidekicks uncover a sinister labor exploitation scheme near the U.S.–Mexico border. It’s one of the more politically charged entries in the long-running Hopalong Cassidy series.
Plot Summary
Texas Rangers Hopalong Cassidy, California Carlson (Andy Clyde), and Johnny Travers (Jay Kirby) investigate the mysterious disappearance of 25 Mexican laborers hired to work at the Silver Bullets mine. Upon arrival, they discover the workers have been enslaved and the mine is run by the ruthless Orestes Krebs (Russell Simpson), who uses forced labor and silences dissent.
As the Rangers dig deeper, they’re framed for murder by the corrupt local sheriff and sentenced to hang. With help from sympathetic locals, including Inez La Barca (Claudia Drake) and Don Enrique Perez (George Reeves), they escape, expose the criminal operation, and bring justice to the borderlands.
Cast Highlights
- William Boyd as Hopalong Cassidy
- Andy Clyde as California Carlson
- Jay Kirby as Johnny Travers
- Russell Simpson as Orestes Krebs
- Claudia Drake as Inez La Barca
- George Reeves as Don Enrique Perez
- Duncan Renaldo as Commandante
- Robert Mitchum (credited as Bob Mitchum) in a minor role as Quinn
- Pierce Lyden, Victor Adamson, and Roy Bucko in uncredited roles
Trivia & Behind the Scenes
- This was one of Robert Mitchum’s earliest screen appearances, before his breakout in Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944) and Out of the Past (1947)
- The film was part of the Hopalong Cassidy series, which included over 60 films between 1935 and 1948, making it one of the longest-running Western franchises
- Director Lesley Selander was a prolific Western filmmaker, known for his fast-paced shooting schedules and efficient storytelling
- The film’s plot—centered on forced labor and border corruption—was unusually topical for a 1940s B-Western, reflecting wartime concerns about labor ethics and international relations
- George Reeves, later famous as TV’s Superman, plays a sympathetic Mexican landowner, showcasing his early versatility
- The mine’s name, Silver Bullets, is a tongue-in-cheek nod to Western iconography and perhaps a subtle jab at simplistic heroism
- The film was shot in black and white, with location work and studio sets typical of the era’s modest-budget Westerns
- Distributed during World War II, the film subtly reinforces themes of justice, unity, and anti-authoritarian resistance
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