The oater's got some good imaginative touches, like Roy's car-chasing showdown or the big gun-toting posse hidden behind a ridge. No western cliches here.
It's a complex plot set in contemporary times, as Roy tries to win reward money to save a needy boys' ranch. Trouble is bad girl Bonnie also wants the money for her ritzy beer joint, while bad guy Duke robs a bank, leading people to think reformed good guy Judge Grey has done it. Too bad Sheriff Bob is Roy's rival over sweetie Terry's affections though she keeps rejecting both. So Roy's got his work cut out for him, in more ways than one. Plus, you may need a scorecard to keep up.
Anyway, there's lots of good outdoor visuals, along with plenty of hard riding, but few fast guns, and no flying fists. And catch that opening scene with actress Ona Munson as baddie Bonnie. It fairly oozes an evil of cowboy noir, if there were such a thing. Then too, comical sidekick Burnette gets as much solo screentime as hero Roy, which he uses humorously and in a skillful way. Nonetheless, the youthfully handsome Roy shows who's in charge, despite the lesser screentime.
All in all, it's an imaginative oater with fewer genre cliches than usual, so catch it if you can. And, oh yeah, speaking of leading lady Grey as sweetie Terry, I'd sure like to ride off into the sunset with her. Okay, I can dream can't I.