IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
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.A good-natured saddle tramp traveling with his sidekick is mistaken for a ruthless outlaw with a price on his head.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Ernie Adams
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Erville Alderson
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
Jack Baxley
- Rancher on Street
- (uncredited)
Hank Bell
- Posse Rider
- (uncredited)
Paul E. Burns
- Small Man
- (uncredited)
Horace B. Carpenter
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A good premise runs out of ideas and becomes a talkfest, even getting a little mean spirited near the end. Cooper is good as Melody Jones, an amiable but inept cowpoke mistaken for a surly killer named Monte Jarrad played suitably well by one of the greatest movie villains of all-time, Dan Duryea. The first 20 minutes of the story has real promise but this is one of those movies which somehow didn't get developed beyond its first draft. Some good dialogue and a great cast get kind of squandered as the muddled plot thickens. Would have succeeded better with less talk and characters and more gags and action. A miss but worthy of a look. Not Cooper's worst by any means.
I liked it a lot. A movie that didn't get the recognition it deserves. Typical Gary Cooper, terse and insightful in the fashion of the times. I will never forget the song he sang that goes on and on. I was a kid when I saw this and memorized about 20 verses of "Old Joe Clark" back then. Loretta played a good part and her role should be emulated by the fairer gender today. Dan Durey played his usual tough guy role, but did a credible job. I would like to see it come out again or perhaps a remake, however, I don't know anyone in Hollywood that can imitate Cooper. Just for grins this was the movie we watched in Denver when we were inducted in the Army. Black and white is a medium that should live forever.
Right off the bat, you have to accept that Gary Cooper and Dan Duryea look alike, which of course they don't, but supposedly almost everyone in the film who knows the bad guy (Duryea) hasn't seen him in several years, and they mistake Cooper for him. I might have given the film a rating of 8 or even 9, had it not been for that. But, okay, get past that, and you have an entertaining and very different western...and I say that as a person who has grown so tired of westerns. But this plot is very different than most any western you've seen before, and it will hold your attention. Cooper and Loretta Young are very engaging in this film...downright delightful. But I kept thinking what a wonderful character actor William Demarest was; I've often underrated his versatility. The other notable thing about this film is the quality of the cinematography. Stunning -- or as they sometimes say -- glorious in black and white. However, the few scenes where they are filming with a backdrop screen sort of ruin that effect...the one aspect that was done on the cheap. I highly recommend this film if you like westerns, or Gary Cooper, or Loretta Young, or William Demarest, or quirky plots. Hey, I guess you can't go wrong here!
Gary Cooper, along with very few others in Hollywood (at the time this movie was made, 1945) had the ability of so many facial and physical nuances of comic dimensions as Coop did. Being old enough to have seen this movie on it's original release (and I did) you might say, this was an early satire of what characters of the old west were really like. The cast was very well selected for the time, and very well performed. Also, the fact that Coop himself produced, and as America was definitely needing a belly laugh, I felt this to be an excellent vehicle for all involved and a welcome film of comedic entertainment. Concerning the poorly made studio riding sequences, how else to get the point across on a limited budget. Thanks for listening.
Has anyone considered that the cheesy "back projection" in the riding scenes may have been on purpose ? And another thing... could it be that Cooper's melodious "Melody Jones" (who sang his own songs) was a jab at John Wayne's "Singing Sandy" (all dubbed, all the time, and badly too). I liked the inclusion of a top-break revolver, also... there was lots of interesting weaponry back then, not all of it made by Colt. The graphic gore was unusual for a time when the newly departed would either throw their hands up, or clutch their clean shirts, and flop over. Did you notice that when Cherry aimed and fired at Melody's hat, she had such control that the bullet went in the front and STAYED IN THE HAT ! An intelligent side-kick, a powerful woman, and a humorous script. I liked it.
Did you know
- TriviaLoretta Young was pregnant with her son Christopher Lewis during shooting and was told by her doctor to take it easy because of all the horseback riding she had to do.
- GoofsWhen 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.
- Quotes
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.
- ConnectionsFeatured in John Wayne Made Me Cry: Our Western Heros (2002)
- How long is Along Came Jones?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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