Roscoe Ates
26 titles
Filmography
26 results

So You Won't T-T-T-Talk
(1934)A henpecked husband takes his shrewish wife, her obnoxious little brother and their uncouth neighbors on a camping trip that's anything but pleasant.

Stars Over Texas
(1946)A cowhand exploits his uncanny resemblance to a ranch's endangered foreman to help corral a gang of thievin' cattle rustlers.

The Westward Trail
(1948)
Shadow Valley
(1947)
Colorado Serenade
(1946)Upright cowboys attempt to prevent a young thug from bullying the locals.

Driftin' River
(1946)On assignment for the U.S. Cavalry, a cowboy and his pal help a pretty rancher retrieve her horses from thieves.

Tumbleweed Trail
(1946)Attended by his sidekick Roscoe Ates, Eddie Dean takes a ranch hand job with a cowgirl whose father has been murdered.

The Tioga Kid
(1948)When an outlaw, whom he closely resembles, is causing trouble for the town’s ranchers, Eddie Dean sets out to catch him and put an end to the ruckus.

Tornado Range
(1948)A federal agent intervenes in a battle between ranchers and homesteaders.

Dizzy & Daffy
(1934)Two minor league pitchers and their half-blind coach are recruited to the St. Louis Cardinals and lead their team to the World Series against Detroit.

The Cowboy from Sundown
(1940)Drought-stricken ranchers face selling cattle at a loss to pay off a banker, while a local sheriff is confronted with a challenging situation.

Alice in Wonderland
(1933)Little Alice (Charlotte Henry) meets the Cheshire Cat (Richard Arlen), Humpty Dumpty (W.C. Fields) and other Lewis Carroll characters in a surreal world.
What! No Beer?
(1933)Two of comedy's greatest masters – Buster Keaton and Jimmy Durante – appear together in this effervescent and irreverent slapstick about a couple of regular guys trying to cash in on the end of Prohibition. Durante is a barber who talks Keaton, his dim-bulb taxidermist buddy, into spending his life's savings on a brewery. Determined to be first, they start making beer before Prohibition is actually over. That makes their "competition" bootlegging thugs – something they didn't count on! Then, Buster falls for one of the gangster's molls, the cops get into the act, and Keaton and Durante have to figure out how to get out of the beer business before they're done in! From a story by Robert E. Hopkins (Anita Loo's screenwriting partner on San Francisco), this timely farce, directed by veteran Edward Sedgwick, was called "one solid riot of laughs…Rowdy and hoodlum fun" (The New York American).

The Hawk of Powder River
(1948)The "Hawk" rides into a western town and restores peace through endless effort.

Check Your Guns
(1948)A singing sheriff enacts old west gun control to thwart outlaws and a crooked judge.

Wild West
(1946)Singing Texas Ranger fends off outlaws, avenges murder of boy's father.

Wild Country
(1947)A U.S. Marshal and his pal are tasked with tracking down a murderous escaped convict who’s after the daughter of the sheriff that put him away.

Range Beyond the Blue
(1947)Singing cowboy investigates wave of stagecoach robberies.

West to Glory
(1947)A western sheriff chases a gang trying to rob a rancher's gold.

The Champ
(1931)This original father-son tale remains one of the all-time great tearjerkers. Wallace Beery plays the washed-up prizefightermaking a ring comeback to provide for his son.