Ruth Mix

Most Popular Ruth Mix Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

Red Fork Range Trailer (1931)

12 January 1931

It's time for the stagecoach race to win the mail contract and the only entries are Reden and Farrell.

The Amazing Exploits of the Clutching Hand Trailer (1936)

17 April 1936

15-Chapter Serial about a scientist that discovers a formula for making synthetic gold and the people that want it.

The Tonto Kid Trailer (1934)

14 August 1934

Lawyer Creech is after the ranch of the dying Cartwright. First he brings in Cahill to pose as the only living relative.

Custer's Last Stand Trailer (1936)

02 January 1936

Kit Cardigan seeks the killer of his father...among other plot threads leading up to the famous historical incident.

Saddle Aces Trailer (1935)

01 June 1935

Two prisoners, Steve Brandt and Nick Montana, chained to each other, escape by jumping from the train that brought them to the penitentiary.

The Black Coin Trailer (1936)

01 September 1936

Government agents try to thwart smugglers, while some sort of plot unfolds, about a hidden treasure revealed by cursed coins.

The Riding Avenger Trailer (1936)

14 June 1936

Buck Bonner, posing as the recently deceased Morning Glory Kid, is sent to round up the Mort Ringer gang.

Custer's Last Stand Trailer (1936)

02 April 1936

The feature length version of the serial by the same name. A mystical medicine arrow, the key to a lost gold treasure, is lost in one of many Indian attacks.

Gunfire Trailer (1934)

01 June 1934

The second of four films made by Resolute Productions, Inc. that had Rex Bell, Ruth Mix and Buzz Barton billed above the title, and the basic plot is rather basic as the McGregor clan--Ross, Dan and Alex, arch-enemies of Paradise Ranch owner Jerry Vance--frame him on a murder charge, and Danny Blake, a young cowhand befriended by Jerry, and Mary Vance, an Eastern girl who co-owns the ranch with Jerry, help him clear his name.

Fighting Pioneers Trailer (1935)

21 May 1935

Driving off an Indian attack, the soldiers capture one of the Indian rifles only to learn that it came from their own warehouse.