Very disappointed :(
... View MoreLoad of rubbish!!
... View MoreLack of good storyline.
... View MoreThere's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.
... View MoreI'm guessing that not a whole lot of thought went into putting the story together for this picture. There are just so many disparate elements to it that if you're paying close attention you'll just wind up scratching your head. It starts off right away when Gene and Frog find they don't have enough money to book passage on a ship to California from New York, so they wind up driving. Now why would they want to do that anyway, huh?It continues from there when a young teenager schooled in London hooks up with the boys to join his father, not knowing that the San Quentin he's looking for is a state penitentiary and not a ranch. June Storey's character is on the run from one wedding ceremony and eloping to another with Smith Bellew, who doesn't even say 'Hi' to her when she arrives with Gene later on!! See what I mean?Now don't get me wrong, if you like Gene's pictures this one's as entertaining as any of them, offering a whole host of musical numbers and a couple of cute young ladies (June Storey and Mary Lee) to complement the action, but at times it almost feels like an Abbott and Costello flick with all the zany stuff going on. Somehow the Gaucho Serenade of the title is shoe-horned into the story when the whole gang finds themselves at a Mexican cantina after getting a flat tire, and the only way Gene can come up with the dough to have it fixed is to win a talent show. But the grand prize is the equivalent of twenty five dollars in groceries, so they have to rely on Frog's second place showing - he wins a used tire!! so they can replace the flat!!Well it goes on like this to an eventual satisfactory conclusion with youngster Ronnie Willoughby (Clifford Severn) reuniting with his Dad and the villains put in their place, but it all came together in rather haphazard fashion. I'll say this though, and I never really thought about if before, but Duncan Renaldo came up with a clever translation for Frog Millhouse's name in Spanish - Rana Casa Molino! Now there's a trivia question that will get you bonus points.
... View MoreYou can't go too wrong with a singing straight-arrow cowboy. Gene Autry and his sidekick Frog Milhouse(Smiley Burnett)are heading home from New York City via automobile with Gene's horse, Champion, in a horse trailer. Westward and onward Gene and Frog find a young man named Ronnie Willoughby(Clifford Severn Jr.)trying to hitch a ride. The boy joins the two thinking they were sent by his father to pick him up and take him to his father's ranch. Well there isn't such; because Mr. Willoughby is in San Quentin Prison after being framed by a big packing company. To keep the elder Willoughby from testifying against the company, it is thought a good idea to kidnap young Ronnie. Plenty of action and reasons to belt out a tune or two; cause now filling out the movie is a runaway bride played by Joyce Halloway with a precocious younger sister(Mary Lee). Other cast members: Joseph Crehan, Smith Ballew, Wade Boteler, William Ruhl and Duncan Renaldo. A few of the tunes in this 66 minute Republic Pictures feature: "The Singing Hills", "Wide Open Spaces", "A Song of Sunset", "Keep Rollin" and of course the "Gaucho Serenade".
... View MoreWhat a fine Autry outing, just what the country needed trying to come out of the depression in 1940 right prior to WWII. Mary Lee, a very underrated singer from the era was only about 16 in this film and what a fine voice, as another user said a western Judy Garland. The young boy, played by Clifford Severn sort of reminded me of Freddie Bartholemew in his acting style. June Storey fine as usual in these B westerns; Duncan Renaldo later the Cisco Kid played Guacho Don Jose. Smiley Burnette, well what can we say?; the guy was fantastic. The on location shooting was wonderful, maybe Big Bear Lake area of California. The songs were fine in this film and was one of Autry's finest endeavours; not seen as often some others and deserves more airplay. The restored print aired on Encore Westerns is perfect.
... View MoreOne of Gene Autry's most amusing films, all the better for taking the star out of his familiar horse opera surroundings. Of course, Autry is accompanied on his journey by usual sidekicks Smiley Burnette and Champion "The Wonder Horse," but the fact is that it takes him across the country with a pair of engaging girls. One of them (Mary Lee, I think) is sort of a country-western version of Judy Garland and the other plays an engaging young heiress on the lam from marriage. There's also a boy running from mobsters who try to kidnap him to blackmail his father into not testifying against their boss. There's a lot of funny situations, of course some fast riding and straight shooting, plus lots of pretty good songs. Pure escape and worth the trip.
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