In the closing days of the frontier, a group of Rangers in New Mexico receive a telegram telling them that it is time to disband and to turn law enforcement duties over to the local sheriff. However, there’s a viscous outlaw named Hashknife (George “Gabby” Hayes) on the loose so Bob Houston (Bob Steele) and Slim (Al St. John) pretend that they never received the telegram so that they can arrest him. Hashknife kidnaps Bob’s girl (Gertie Messenger) and that makes thing personal.
Riders of the Desert is an appropriate name for this film because the majority of its 50-minute running time really was just taken up with footage of men riding their horses from one location to another. Even though the film was less than an hour long, the story sill needed some filler.
Riders of the Desert is still a pretty good western, though. It’s definitely better than the average Poverty Row western. As always, Bob Steele look authentic riding a horse and Al St. John provides good support as Fuzzy. The disbanding of the Rangers gives the first half of the film an elegiac feel that would later show up in several of the westerns made during and after the 1960s. The old west is coming to an end and there’s less need for the Rangers. The second half of the film is almost all action and George “Gabby” Hayes is a surprisingly effective villain. Of course, this movie was made before he became Gabby.
As with most Poverty Row westerns, this is not the film to watch if you’re not already a fan of the genre. But for those who like westerns, Riders of the Desert is a good one.