Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuGene Autry inherits and runs a meat packing company. To get Gene to sell, the lady owner of a rival company starts a feud to derail Gene, who tries to recover by using rallies, parades, and ... Alles lesenGene Autry inherits and runs a meat packing company. To get Gene to sell, the lady owner of a rival company starts a feud to derail Gene, who tries to recover by using rallies, parades, and bands.Gene Autry inherits and runs a meat packing company. To get Gene to sell, the lady owner of a rival company starts a feud to derail Gene, who tries to recover by using rallies, parades, and bands.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Emily Spencer
- (as Isobel Randolph)
- Taylor
- (Nicht genannt)
- Packing House Employee
- (Unbestätigt)
- (Nicht genannt)
- Cattleman
- (Nicht genannt)
- Marcia
- (Nicht genannt)
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Shortly after the movie begins, the woman who owns a ranch meets Gene and is incredibly angry and hates him...even though she just met him. Well, it turns out she owns the ranch for which Gene works and with little provocation, she fires him. This is a mistake, as she soon finds out that Gene is the inheritor of a packing company wants to buy...and her boorish behavior makes this purchase seem very, very unlikely.
In addition to this plot, a kooky teenager who is a runaway from a girls school is telling people she's Mrs. Autry...Gene's wife!! Now considering that the actress (Mary Lee) was 16 and looked about 13 or 14, this is pretty creepy! Oh, and did I mention that this kooky teen is the sister of the woman who was so insulting towards Gene earlier in the movie?!
Despite the disturbing infatuation the teen had on Gene as well as the very stereotypical angry sister, this film managed to overcome its deficits. Much of it is because the story itself is very good and the characters quite likable....albeit creepy!
Director Frank MacDonald plays it for laughs, and the singing is well up to par, with Gene and Miss Lee singing a duet of "The Cuckoo" and Gene and Smiley Burnette offering a very appropriate "Eleven More Months and Ten More Days". With Joe Frisco as a haberdasher selling Burnette clothes that don't fit him, and Si Jenks as a grouchy sheriff, this is my favorite of all the Autry westerns I've seen.
Autry has a great singing voice, and perhaps more importantly swell comedic timing. This goes just as well for regular costar Smiley Burnette, and in this instance, also June Storey and Mary Lee. Factor in plentiful charm to lay atop Winston Miller's screenplay, and just enough meaningful measure of heart, and the result is reliably enjoyable. Why, to Miller's credit (and also story writers Betty Burbridge and Connie Lee), this is even a tad smarter than some similar fare: it seems fully self-aware of the social attitudes in which it's couched, and cheekily takes advantage by playing off them for the sake of the narrative and the comedy. Even for as enjoyable as Autry's features may be, this is a degree of wit I wouldn't anticipate. It's still true that this reflects "simpler entertainment for a simpler time," but sometimes fleeting lighthearted amusement is all that a picture needs to be, and if there is anything more to grasp onto, then all the better.
Saving all the major "heroics" and dramatic music for the climax this time around, it's still duly exciting, and in all the length before that more of a good time that I had frankly assumed. Considered in the broad strokes the plot is nothing super extraordinary, but it's put together well, with strong scene writing and dialogue, and some fine thematic content. No matter the specific flavors of a given moment, director Frank McDonald executes everything with a welcome even-handedness, maintaining balance such that the feature never teeters over the edge of being overbearing, too quickly paced, or excessive in any way. Truth be told I'm kind of impressed; this is substantially better, and more actively engaging, than I ever would have expected of such a title. Even at its most outmoded there's a love of film-making, storytelling, and entertaining that bursts through, and a minor tongue-in-cheek sensibility that only bolsters the sincerity. It remains the case that anyone who has difficulty with older movies, particularly the Singing Cowboy variety of western, won't find anything here to change their mind, yet for abject cinephiles and those otherwise receptive to all the wide possibilities of the medium, there's underappreciated worth here. Don't feel like you need to go out of your way for 'Ride, tenderfoot, ride,' but if you happen to come across it - and perhaps for those who are curious about the genre but only want to dip their toes in - then this is actually an excellent film, deserving of one's time.
Wusstest du schon
- PatzerPatsy is shown recording the song "Ride, Tenderfoot Ride" onto a record singing only the chorus to the song. At the end of her song, Ann Randolph and Don Gregory come in and begin talking. Later when Patsy's recording is played back, she is recorded as singing the whole song with Ann and Don interrupting her on the last chorus.
- Zitate
[Walker shows Gene and Frog their new executive offices]
Henry Walker: Well, boys, what do you think of it.
Gene Autry: I'd feel a lot more at home down in the stockyard.
Frog Milhouse: Well, me too. I-I don't like being cooped up. You're liable to get hydrophobia or something.
- VerbindungenFeatured in For Auld Lang Syne (1938)
- SoundtracksRide, Tenderfoot, Ride
(1938) (uncredited)
Music by Richard A. Whiting
Lyrics by Johnny Mercer
Played during the opening credits
Performed by Mary Lee, making a recording
Reprised by Gene Autry, Mary Lee and June Storey
Reprised again by Mary Lee from the recording
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 5 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1