Fuzzy Settles Down

1944 "FUZZY FINDS PEACE AND QUIET...Behind the Butt of a Six-Gun!"
6| 1h0m| G| en| More Info
Released: 25 June 1944 Released
Producted By: PRC
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Billy Carson and Fuzzy Jones have just collected a reward and Fuzzy indulges in a dream of getting away from the hectic life he has been leading and wants to settle down. They arrive in Red Rock just as the newspaper is being sold at foreclosure and, despite the attempts by Lafe Barlow to intimidate him from bidding. Fuzzy finds himself the owner of a newspaper. Fuzzy meets Edith Martin, daughter of the former owner, and unthinkingly commits himself to carrying on her father's policy of bringing a telegraph line to Red Rock. For reason of his own, Barlow is against this and has his henchmen wage a campaign of terror against the ranchers and citizens. Before long, Billy who had been lazily indifferent to everything connected to Fuzzy and his newspaper, decides to take a hand on the side of the good guys.

Genre

Western

Watch Online

Fuzzy Settles Down (1944) is currently not available on any services.

Director

Sam Newfield

Production Companies

PRC

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.
Watch Now
Fuzzy Settles Down Videos and Images

Fuzzy Settles Down Audience Reviews

Marketic It's no definitive masterpiece but it's damn close.
Baseshment I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.
Invaderbank The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.
Dana An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.
weezeralfalfa One of the PRC series of B westerns starring Buster Crabbe as Billy the Kid/Billy Carson, and comical sidekick Al St. John as Fuzzy. In this series, every now and then, Fuzzy gets a hankering to buy and run a small business, at least for a short while, until Billy decides it's time to vacate this town. The owner of the newspaper, John Martin(John Elliot) was shot dead in the street after giving a speech promoting his crusade against the local outlaws, and advocating the local financing of a telegraph line. This left his daughter Edith in charge of the newspaper. However, she couldn't run it alone. Thus, pretty soon , it was in foreclosure, and a sheriff's sale held. Bidding rose to $3000., which was all the money, save 50c,that Fuzzy had from his reward money for bringing in 2 bank robbers. So, he bid $3000.50. Unrecognized outlaw Pete(John Merton) wanted to bid up again, but bad boy Billy pushed through the crowd and punched Pete in the breadbasket, so that he was temporarily unable to speak. This sealed the deal for Fuzzy. Of course, Billy and Pete had a slugfest after Pete recovered. And, of course, Fuzzy was woefully qualified to be a newspaper editor........When Fuzzy and Billy go into the saloon, Fuzzy is reading a newspaper. Pete throws an uncooked egg that goes through the newspaper and hits Fuzzy in the face. Billy returns the favor, and Billy and Pete are in another brawl........Later, rancher and unrecognized leader of the local criminal element, Lafe Barlow(Charles King) warns Fuzzy and Edith that inflammatory editorials will be risky to their well being. Barlow would become the leader of the minority anti-telegraph faction, whereas Fuzzy would become the leader of the majority pro-telegraph faction. Fuzzy was elected to take care of the money from the most recent telegraph drive. After accidentally spilling the ink bottle near the money, he hid it, but, unfortunately, some peeping Toms saw where he hid it. They burst in, knock him out, and take the money. A little later, Billy is trailing a suspicious man, who goes to Barlow's ranch house. Billy bursts through the door, and knocks out the man. Soon, Pete enters and Billy knocks him out(for the 3rd time), as well. He then searches around the desk, and finally finds what appears to be the stolen money. He takes Pete with him to town, and enters a room where Barlow is whipping up the crowd to lynch Fuzzy. He shows the money, and Pete corroborates his finding. I'm very surprised that he doesn't point out the ink-stained bills as proof that this is the stolen money!.......The climactic scene follows. I will let you see the film to find out what happens. It's available at YouTube. In any case, as with his other short-term entrepreneurships, when Fuzzy sees Billy leaving town, he abandons his property and catches up with Billy. Poor Edith: she lost her newspaper owner, and her potential boyfriend(Billy).
MartinHafer Al St. John got his start in pictures by appearing in numerous comedy shorts along with his uncle, Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle. By the 1930s, St. John had reinvented himself and was no longer a comic foil but a cowboy sidekick--and was re-christened Al 'Fuzzy' St. John--and he made a ton of westerns as Fuzzy. The title of this film refers to this character, though it certainly could also be referring to the print available from archive.org--a site linked to IMDb for hundreds of public domain films. So, if you can find a better copy elsewhere, more power to you--this one is badly in need of restoration.The film begins with a bank robbery. Fuzzy solves this crime and collects a reward. On a whim, he buys a local newspaper--one dedicated to standing up to the evil rustlers. With the help of his friend, Billy (Buster Crabbe), he fights the forces of not-niceness. Naturally, they aren't about to just give up and frame Fuzzy for embezzling the funds for the new telegraph lines. Can these swell heroes prevail? While this film is made by the crappy low-budget PRC Studio, the acting and script are pretty good. Plus, unlike many other series westerns, there's no singing! Enjoyable fluff--with a very strange ending.
FightingWesterner On a whim, Fuzzy Jones uses his reward money from the capture of a fugitive in order to buy a small town newspaper, of which the previous owner was gunned down for going up against a group of cattle rustlers. Picking up where the slain man left off, he uses the pen and Billy Carson uses his gun to clean up the town.One of many times Fuzzy tried to settle down, this light-hearted, fast-paced, and action-packed entry in Producers Releasing Corporation's Billy Carson series is well-written and one of the best.There's a heavy emphasis this time on Al "Fuzzy" St. John. However, Buster Crabbe delivers one of his best performances ever, with the usually more stoic hero caught in a particularly silly frame-of-mind and getting almost as many laughs as Fuzzy this time around!
Snow Leopard While it's a very predictable story, this B-Western is still not bad overall. Buster Crabbe and Fuzzy St. John are a likable pair of heroes, and it has a couple of lighter moments and some decent action. The story starts with Fuzzy deciding that he wants to 'settle down' instead of wandering about with Crabbe. He decides to become a 'respectable' citizen working on a newspaper, but very soon he gets caught in the middle of a dangerous confrontation with a gang of rustlers. Quite a bit happens after that, and while most of it is pretty predictable, the action is not bad. St. John also gets more screen time than he does in a lot of his supporting roles. Overall, it's nothing great, but worth a look if you like older Westerns.