Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen ranch foreman Roy learns the new ranch owner Dorothy Bryant and her friends are arriving, he directs them to Gabby's rundown ranch. He figures they will be discouraged and return East. ... Tout lireWhen ranch foreman Roy learns the new ranch owner Dorothy Bryant and her friends are arriving, he directs them to Gabby's rundown ranch. He figures they will be discouraged and return East. But the plan backfires when Dorothy, thinking her ranch worthless, sells the real ranch at... Tout lireWhen ranch foreman Roy learns the new ranch owner Dorothy Bryant and her friends are arriving, he directs them to Gabby's rundown ranch. He figures they will be discouraged and return East. But the plan backfires when Dorothy, thinking her ranch worthless, sells the real ranch at a fraction of it's value.
- Wanda
- (as Beverly Loyd)
- Dancer
- (uncredited)
- Man
- (uncredited)
- Dancer
- (uncredited)
- Station Agent
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
This one doesn't rate as high as most of the Roy Rogers-Dale Evans movies, and I can see why. The musical numbers run the gamut from the usual western numbers by the Sons of the Pioneers -- who play Miss Evans' cow hands -- to southern numbers, to blues. I thought it was a well-produced movie, with some nice twists in the plot, and lots of good humor. See if you can spot Richard Farnsworth among the stunt men.
Roy Rogers, Gabby Hayes and the Sons of the Pioneers work on her ranch. They know that if she decides to sell it, a local sheep farmer will buy it immediately and the land will become overrun with sheep. (This is the 2nd western I've watched this month built around the animosity between sheep farmers and cattle ranchers.) Rogers develops the not-very-smart plan of lying to Evans and telling her that Hayes' dilapidated shack is her ranch. This naturally makes her MORE eager to dump it and crooked real estate dealer Grant Withers is more than willing to help her sell it for 1/20 of it's real value.
This isn't a bad Rogers western, but it's not very good either. The plot really requires him to be dumb and dishonest, and then ties everything up with some completely arbitrary plotting that sort of makes him out to be the hero anyway. It's not very convincing.
These movies are all delightfully weird anyway. Rogers, Evans and the Sons of the Pioneers find a LOT of opportunities to sing in the barely-over-an-hour running time, Hayes spends the entire film complaining about how terrible women are, and the whole thing ends in a huge musical number that's literally on a stage where the whole cast plus a flock of sheep re-enact the film you just watched.
Dale's the absentee owner of the Bar X ranch in Utah which Roy runs and sends her a monthly check while she pursues a show business career. That aspect of the plot is actually close to the life of the real Dale Evans who wanted to star in musical comedy. She's starring in a review ready to open when the backer pulls out. Dale needs money fast so she decides to sell the old Utah homestead.
Well she can't do that decide Roy and Gabby because the guy that wants to buy is a no good sheepherder who will be violating the unwritten code of the west and not sticking to his side of the valley with his sheep. Not to mention the fact that these two will have to go out and look for other jobs.
For reasons I still can't figure out they pretend Gabby's little shack is the headquarters for Dale's ranch and she and her showgirl friends get put there. A little joke which gets turned on them when she decides to sell what she thinks is worthless.
Not that Roy's westerns at Republic resembled Hamlet or MacBeth or even High Noon, but this one was too ridiculous. Even at the beginning when villains Grant Withers and Hal Taliaferro decide to ambush Roy when he goes to meet Dale's train. Roy and Gabby are NOT armed. Roy pretends to fall off Trigger and the two bad guys see Trigger emerge apparently riderless, but it's really Roy hanging on the side. Then still unarmed he and Gabby go to confront them and the villains who are armed run. I am still trying to figure that one out.
Obviously Herbert J. Yates must have had his mind on the latest big budget spectacular with Vera Hruba Ralston or he might have noticed something. Utah doesn't even have any really good musical numbers. The only one is at the finale where Roy, Gabby, and the Sons of the Pioneers help Dale and her friends with their show.
I'm not sure Roy and Dale's best fans liked this one.
Le saviez-vous
- Citations
[first lines]
Dorothy Bryant: [singing] Now, way down upon the Swanee River, / Folks keep jivin' all the day long; / 'Cause that's where I'm gonna stay forever / With a gate who'll make my life a song. / So honey chile, on that day, / When you come my way, / I'll say, "Thank Dixie for me!"
[runs backstage]
Dorothy Bryant: How'd it look, Stel?
- ConnexionsFeatured in Golden Saddles, Silver Spurs (2000)
Meilleurs choix
- Is this available on DVD?
Détails
- Durée1 heure 17 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1