The gang heads to the old west to redeem Louie's honor, find a gold mine and a bald baby, and right an old wrong.The gang heads to the old west to redeem Louie's honor, find a gold mine and a bald baby, and right an old wrong.The gang heads to the old west to redeem Louie's honor, find a gold mine and a bald baby, and right an old wrong.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
- Whitey
- (as Billy Benedict)
- Blackjack
- (as Jack Norman)
- Chief Hi-Octane
- (as Chief Yowlachi)
- Big Moose
- (as Billy Wilkerson)
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Featured reviews
It's a little much for the sheriff to ride a horse in New York City. The Bowery Boys do an old western. I get the idea but there are other ways to make them fish out of water. The funniest bit is the Indians being not as backwards as the Boys thought. They could do that for the whole western idea. Instead, the town is right out of the old west. I don't mind it but it's not as funny. Most franchises have a go-western episode. This one is not the best but it does have Iron Eyes Cody.
IT IS PERHAPS one of the greatest of contradictions in Film History that a very serious and socially conscious a Stage Play and resulting adaptation to the movie version of DEAD END should have sired, not a greater understanding of juvenile delinquency, but rather years and tears of comedy. It doesn't matter what the name of the group (although the earlier movies were a little more serious than farcical), there was always a great resemblance to the rest of the other series films.
SO IT WAS that The Dead End Kids begot The Little Tough Guys, the East Side Kids Followed and the terminus of the family tree was the now grown-up, not kids or teens, but young men known as the Bowery Boys. These have proved to be particularly durable and popular over the years. There were four Bowery Boys movies released during this Baby Boomer's childhood in the 1950's and we saw many of them at either the Ogden or the Hi-Way theatres here o Chicago's Southside ("the Baddest Part of town")
IN THE EARLY 1960's, the series came to television and we recall their being shown every Wednesday afternoon over ABC Channel 7, WBKB (now WLS).
AS FOR THIS entry that we are reviewing today, BOWERY BUCKAROOS, we do remember it well from TV and have always considered it to be one of the best of the series; as ell as a favourite. There are several reasons for such honors.
FIRST OF ALL, it is generally a rule of thumb that earlier entries in a series, be that TV or "B" movies, are usually the better and more meticulously crafted and more expensive looking installments. This assertion is certainly evident in this 1947 production. There are larger casts., more and varied sets & locations.
FURTHERMORE, WHEN ONE views an earlier edition of the series, you have more of the original "Kids" from DEAD END in the cast. BOWERY BUCKAROOS has the talents of both Bobby Jordan and Gabriel Dell in addition to the two featured players, Leo Gorcey (Slip) and Huntz Hall (Sach). David Gorcey and Billy Benedict round out the cast.
IN ADDITION TO the above mentioned reasons, this movie adds the elements of a dream sequence as well as a lively spoof of the Western "Cowboy" picture. Although we really enjoyed most of the entries into this now venerable series and they did run the table in subjects to spoof (Jungle pictures, War pictures, Detective & Cops, Boxing & Wrestling, etc.), they never did it so well and enjoyably.
IT WOULD BE a grave injustice to close out our dissertation without mentioning the movie's one very unique bit of musical contribution to the Bowery Boys series. No Schultz, we're not talking about any of the incidental music (probably stock),nor the series latter day appropriation of "Hail, Hail The Gang's All Here" as its theme.
INSTEAD WE WANTED to draw one's attention to the opening solo performance of "Louie the Lout" as performed by the Sweet Shop proprietor. Louie Dombrowski It's both entertaining and functional; as it adds to the story, provides us with some exposition and brings one to the threshold of being ready to be entertained. That's precisely why we watch a Bowery Boys movie to begin with.
AND FOR THOSE not already aware, Bernard Gorcey (Louie), veteran actor of the legitimate theater, was the real life father of real life brothers, Leo & David Gorcey; being Slip and Chuck respectively.
Fun work from Bernard Gorcey as Louie in the beginning of the movie, including singing an adorable song called "Louie the Lout." The guest stars include Iron Eyes Cody, Russell Simpson, Minerva Urecal, and Julie Gibson. The Boys themselves (Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Bobby Jordan, Gabriel Dell, William Benedict, David Gorcey) are all good. This is the last Bowery Boys film for Bobby Jordan, who had been with the team since their Dead End beginnings. He grew tired of being a background player while Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall got the lion's share of the funny material (and profits). After this he did mostly TV work for the rest of his career before dying of cirrhosis at the age of 42. A sad end for an underrated talent. Ironically, it was Jordan introducing the boys to Jan Grippo that got the Bowery Boys series started. Grippo would act as producer on the first 23 Bowery Boys films. Anyway, as Slip Mahoney would say, "trivial trigonometries aside" this is a fun entry in the series with the Boys doing their shtick in a different setting than New York.
The New York City group meet up with Cowboys and Native American Indians, in an old-fashioned western setting. Bowery chum Gabriel Dell (as Gabe) arrives in the town ("Hangman's Hollow"), undercover as "The Klondike Kid", to help the "Bowery Buckaroos" clear "Louie" and locate a gold mine. This is one of the cleverest movies in the "Bowery Boys" series. Gorcey delivers some of his best "malaprops" (a nude baby picture is "Exhibition A"); and the rest of the cast is uniformly smooth. The story is very nicely plotted, with Mr. Hall figuring prominently. "Marshall" Minerva Urecal and "Indian" Iron Eyes Cody are terrific. Regulars Bernard Gorcey and Gabriel Dell have good roles, too.
And, this is the last appearance of Bobby Jordan, who was in the originally named "Dead End" (1937) group. In the early 1940s, Mr. Jordan was featured much more prominently in these films - the stories were often about his character - but, as the comic antics of Gorcey and Hall took center stage, Jordan was derailed by both "Uncle Sam" and injury. In "Bowery Buckaroos", Jordan leads the secondary "Bowery Boys" in making the most out of their supporting roles. It's a shame the producers couldn't work Jordan into more stories, perhaps in spin-offs with Mr. Benedict's "Whitey" character (they have some good "bits" herein). In future films, Jordan will be missed.
******* Bowery Buckaroos (10/8/47) William Beaudine ~ Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Bobby Jordan
Did you know
- TriviaFinal appearance of Bobby Jordan in a Bowery Boys movie.
- GoofsAbout 40 minutes into the film, when Slip enters the saloon firing his pistols into the air, a cut to the cover shot shows a saloon gal and cowboy with black hat, oblivious to the gunfire, moving around a table and to our left. Cut back to Slip firing a few more rounds and then back to the cover shot which shows the same sequence of the cowboy and the gal walking around the table.
- Quotes
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: I had a dream, a beautiful dream. Fellas, we was all out west. Louie, you was a free man, and you guys, you got $5,000 reward. Gabe, you had a girl, a beautiful girl - Katherine - and you was gonna kiss her. You, Slip, you had gold, piles of gold, and I was a hero.
Louie, aka Louie the Lout: I was a free man?
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: Yep.
Whitey, Chuck, Bobby: And we had $5,000?
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: Yep.
Gabe, aka The Klondike Kid: And I had a beautiful girl?
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: Mm-hm.
Slip' Mahoney, aka 'Dead-Eye Dan McGurke: And I had a pile of gold?
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: Yep. I have beautiful dreams, don't I?
Slip' Mahoney, aka 'Dead-Eye Dan McGurke: Oh, you coitainly do!
[hits Sach hard with his hat]
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: Oop! Whadda ya hittin' ME for?
Slip' Mahoney, aka 'Dead-Eye Dan McGurke: For waking up! Go back to sleep!
- ConnectionsFollowed by Angels' Alley (1948)
- SoundtracksLouie, the Lout
Music and lyrics by Eddie Cherkose
Played on a banjo and sung by Bernard Gorcey (uncredited)
Details
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- Also known as
- En busca del tesoro
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- Runtime
- 1h 6m(66 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1