The Bells of San Angelo was the second Republic Roy Rogers western to be filmed in the ""new"" Trucolor process. Set in the modern west, the story involves a silver-smuggling racket headed by rotten Rex Gridley (John McGuire). In a novel scripting touch, Roy Rogers doesn't outwit the villains-and in fact is soundly beaten by the bad guys halfway through the film. It's up to heroine Lee Madison (Dale Evans), a writer of fanciful cowboy novels, to save the day! Roy Rogers is taken off his ""King of the Cowboys"" pedestal in Bells of San Angelo and the film is all the better for it hes just human after all.
https://dvdstorespain.es/es/peliculas/20351-bells-of-san-angelo-reino-unido-dvd--0671765906298.html20351Bells Of San Angelo [Reino Unido] [DVD]<div> <br /> The Bells of San Angelo was the second Republic Roy Rogers western to be filmed in the ""new"" Trucolor process. Set in the modern west, the story involves a silver-smuggling racket headed by rotten Rex Gridley (John McGuire). In a novel scripting touch, Roy Rogers doesn't outwit the villains-and in fact is soundly beaten by the bad guys halfway through the film. It's up to heroine Lee Madison (Dale Evans), a writer of fanciful cowboy novels, to save the day! Roy Rogers is taken off his ""King of the Cowboys"" pedestal in Bells of San Angelo and the film is all the better for it hes just human after all. </div>https://dvdstorespain.es/555573-home_default/bells-of-san-angelo-reino-unido-dvd-.jpg8.1818instockSunflower Pictures8.18188.1818002015-10-19T22:49:58+0200/Inicio/Inicio/DVD/Inicio/Películas/Inicio/Nuevos
The Bells of San Angelo was the second Republic Roy Rogers western to be filmed in the ""new"" Trucolor process. Set in the modern west, the story involves a silver-smuggling racket headed by rotten Rex Gridley (John McGuire). In a novel scripting touch, Roy Rogers doesn't outwit the villains-and in fact is soundly beaten by the bad guys halfway through the film. It's up to heroine Lee Madison (Dale Evans), a writer of fanciful cowboy novels, to save the day! Roy Rogers is taken off his ""King of the Cowboys"" pedestal in Bells of San Angelo and the film is all the better for it hes just human after all.