Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA good-natured saddle tramp traveling with his sidekick is mistaken for a ruthless outlaw with a price on his head.A good-natured saddle tramp traveling with his sidekick is mistaken for a ruthless outlaw with a price on his head.A good-natured saddle tramp traveling with his sidekick is mistaken for a ruthless outlaw with a price on his head.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Townsman
- (Nicht genannt)
- Bartender
- (Nicht genannt)
- Poker Player
- (Nicht genannt)
- Rancher on Street
- (Nicht genannt)
- Posse Rider
- (Nicht genannt)
- Small Man
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Cooper, as "Melody Jones," plays his normal low-key hero role and Demarest provides most of the laughs. Young is attractive and plays an intriguing character and Duyea does what he does best: play the villain. However, the latter has a smaller role than usual.
This is corny in spots, but it was meant to be since this is supposed to be a spoof of westerns. The only thing that didn't come off well was the special-specials, but they weren't much back in the days of this film but they are very dated now.
A nice, lightweight enjoyable satire.
For Melody yes, but for the viewer it's a recipe for one of the best comic westerns ever made. Gary Cooper who produced as well as starred in this film, seems to be having a grand old time spoofing all the western heroes that people like he have played for years.
Quite a few stock western types are here. Loretta Young is the killer's girlfriend, a Calamity Jane type who's pretty accurate with a rifle fortunately. William Demarest is the cantankerous old timer sidekick, he could have had a great career portraying those had he stuck to westerns. And Dan Duryea is just fine as the real Monty Jarrad who's coming back to his hometown to get the loot he's stashed there.
Cooper as Melody gets in one fix after another at almost a dizzying pace. His final showdown with Dan Duryea must have influenced John Ford when he made The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. Though this is a comedy and Ford's film was deadly serious, the showdown between Cooper and Duryea is quite serious.
I'm also sure that Mel Brooks was influenced by Along Came Jones when he created his classic Blazing Saddles.
Thank you to director Stuart Heisler and writer Nunnally Johnson for creating a fabulously funny film.
"Along Came Jones" is an entertaining satire of western movie. The naive story is silly in many moments, but the sweet Loretta Young is wonderful, showing a magnificent chemistry with the hilarious Gary Cooper. Dan Duryea is the perfect villain in this enjoyable amusement. My vote is six.
Title (Brazil): "Pistoleiro do Destino" ("Gunman of the Destiny")
The casting of the two leads, and Duryea-- plus William Demarest as Coop's exasperated sidekick-- make this a little film worth checking out. It succeeds, where other films fail, because the filmmakers keep it simple. They get by with so little, but it does so much in the way of entertaining the ordinary western fan.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis movie is unusual in that star/producer Gary Cooper mercilessly spoofs his own slow-talking cowboy persona.
- PatzerWhen Cherry shoots Melody's hat, the bullet enters on the front up near the crown. As Melody walks away, no exit hole is seen anywhere, either in the top of the crown or out the back of the hat.
- Zitate
George Fury: Who is it?
Melody Jones: That used to be Packard, the Express Company fella.
George Fury: Well that cinched the duck! Now they got a corpus delicti!
Melody Jones: A what?
George Fury: A dead body! That's the way the law says it. Corpus delicti. Means that if they got a corpse, you're delicti! Before this, even if they hung ya, we could have proved it was a mistake.
- VerbindungenFeatured in John Wayne Made Me Cry: Our Western Heros (2002)
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Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 30 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1