

Roaring Timber
Jim Sherwood , toughest logging boss in the timber country, takes on his toughest assignment when he agrees to cut an enormous volume of timber for Andrew MacKinley, who has to deliver the timber within sixty days.
Insights
Plot Summary
A young man is wrongly accused of stealing cattle and must clear his name. He sets out to find the real rustlers and expose their operation, facing danger and betrayal along the way. He also finds himself in a love triangle with a rancher's daughter.
Critical Reception
Roaring Timber is a typical B-Western of its era, featuring standard genre tropes and a straightforward plot. While not a critical darling, it served its purpose as an entertaining Saturday matinee feature for audiences of the time.
What Reviewers Say
- A serviceable Western with a familiar plot.
- Features standard action and a clear hero/villain dynamic.
- Offers a glimpse into the low-budget Westerns of the late 1930s.
Google audience: Audience reception information is not readily available for this film.
Fun Fact
The film stars Jack Perrin, who was a popular Western star in the silent era and continued into sound films, often playing heroic characters.
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