Billy “The Kid” Bonney (Buster Crabbe) and his two buddies Fuzzy (Al St. John) and Jeff (Bud McTaggart) are just trying to mind their own business and make a living in the old west but they keep getting accused of every crime that happens. This time, they’re sentenced to hang for a crime they didn’t commit. Luckily, a group of strangers break Billy and his friends out of jail and send them on their way to the next town. However, the men who broke them out of jail are soon committing crimes while disguised as Billy, Fuzzy, and Jeff! Billy teams up with Sherriff Masters (Ted Adams) to stop the imposters, who are working for Boss Jim Stanton (Glenn Strange).
One of the joys of Poverty Row westers like this one is that they always featured the same stock company. Al St. John was everyone’s sidekick. Ted Adams was often a sheriff. Glenn Strange was always the criminal mastermind pulling the strings. Milton Kibbee was always a corrupt judge or ranch owner. George Cheseboro, Horace B. Carpenter, Jack Curtis, and Budd Buster are amongst the very familiar faces in Billy The Kid Trapped. It gives each film a homey feel that will be appreciated by fans of the genre. The hero of the films often changed but the stock company always remained the same.
I like the idea behind Billy The Kid Trapped but the film still feels repetitive, even though it’s less than an hour long. After Billy captures the men who are imitating him and his friends, a crooked judge sets the men free and the immediately go back to imitating Billy. Billy has to capture them all over again. No wonder Billy aged so quickly! (Buster Crabbe was in his mid-thirties when he was playing The Kid.) The movie does have all the usual gunfights and horse chases that people watch these movies for. It’s comforting that, no matter what, the villain is always going to turn out to be Glenn Strange.
Pingback: Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 6/2/25 — 6/8/25 | Through the Shattered Lens