There's a prosperous, modern capitol city that the rail road wants to run a spur to. To do that, they must find a way through Ghost Valley, but Francis Ford's shipping company which controls all access to the city and is strangling it -- despite its evident prosperity -- sends a bunch of scalawags to stop the railroad surveyors. Only a masked bandit called Pinto Pete (Ashton Dearholt), his deadly whip, and his comic servant stand guard against the desperate villains.
It all sounds pretty unlikely, and that's the way director Francis Ford handles this comedy-adventure. Dearholt and pal are a mock heroic pair, like the Cisco Kid would become when reduced to B movie status twenty years later. There is some spectacular fight sequence in high cliffs that look a lot like the sort of thing that the serials had been doing for a while; Ford had starred in and directed them for Universal, when he and Grace Cunard were Universal's top moneymakers. Now he was working for the States Rights market instead, but he still knew how to shoot a fight scene.
It all sounds pretty unlikely, and that's the way director Francis Ford handles this comedy-adventure. Dearholt and pal are a mock heroic pair, like the Cisco Kid would become when reduced to B movie status twenty years later. There is some spectacular fight sequence in high cliffs that look a lot like the sort of thing that the serials had been doing for a while; Ford had starred in and directed them for Universal, when he and Grace Cunard were Universal's top moneymakers. Now he was working for the States Rights market instead, but he still knew how to shoot a fight scene.