The story revolves around a strange friendship between slick gambler Tennessee and a straight-arrow prospector known only as Cowpoke. They’re in the gold rush town of Sandy Bar, California, where gambler Tennessee partners with fancy bordello madam and saloon owner of a place called ‘The Marriage Market,’ Elizabeth ‘Duchess’ Farnham. When one evening oily businessman Turner loses big to Tennessee at the saloon’s poker game, he sends a contract killer to kill the gambler. But a stranger in town, known only as Cowpoke, intervenes and instead kills the gunslinger. Tennessee puts Cowpoke up in the Duchess’s swell place and learns that Cowpoke came here to marry tomorrow. When Tennessee learns he wants to marry gold-digger Goldie Slater, a discard of his, he tries to warn the headstrong cowboy but is told to mind his own business. Unable to stand by doing nothing, Tennessee lures Goldie to go with him to San Francisco by offering more than the $5,000 Cowpoke gave her as a wedding gift and she jilts a humiliated Cowpoke at the altar. When Tennessee gets her out of town, he dumps her and steals back Cowpoke’s money. Tennessee returns to find that Cowpoke is gunning for him and the old prospector Grubstake, his partner in a mine, has been killed in his room and he’s been framed for the murder. —Ozu’s World of Movie Reviews
Allan Dwan (April 3, 1885 – December 28, 1981) was a pioneering Canadian-born American motion picture director, producer and screenwriter. Born Joseph Aloysius Dwan in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Dwan moved with his family to the United States when he was 11 years old. At the University of Notre Dame, he trained as an engineer and began working for a lighting company in Chicago. However, he had a strong interest in the fledgling motion picture industry and when Essanay Studios offered him the opportunity to become a scriptwriter, he took the job. At that time, some of the East Coast movie makers began to spend winters in California where the climate allowed them to continue productions requiring warm weather. Soon, a number of movie companies worked there year-round and, in 1911, Dwan began working part time in Hollywood. While still in New York, in 1917 he was the founding president of the East Coast chapter of the Motion Picture Directors Association.
After making a series of… read more