Carolina Moon
Carolina Moon
NR | 14 July 1940 (USA)
Carolina Moon Trailers

A singing cowboy and his sidekick encounter misunderstandings and rodeo havoc as they try and save a man and daughter from con men.

Reviews
JohnHowardReid

I don't like westerns in a contemporary setting. Smiley Burnette and Gene Autry have little opportunity to wear their six-guns. And Smiley's routines consist mainly of a very familiar and so-so running gag (daughter is pursuing him, accompanied by her dad who is threatening Smiley with a shot-gun). Even the climax — which in an Autry western can usually be relied upon to provide some excitement — is very tame indeed. The Autry formula also provides a sequence in which the star's double gallops after a runaway, but that too is most lethargically handled here.At its best, Frank McDonald's direction might merely be designated thoroughly routine. But in Carolina Moon, Mr. McDonald's efforts could occasionally be described as downright incompetent. Photography, as usual, looks flat and appears washed out. Production values stack up less than average. Fortunately, the tedium is relieved by a few songs (though not as many or as lively as we've come to expect).Long on talk, short on action. Long on stock footage, short on genuine excitement. Long on hammy acting, very short on personable performances. Long on static, one-dimensional, cardboard characterizations, pitifully short on solid plotting. Long on doomed-to-fail attempts at comedy relief, culpably short on production values. Carolina Moon (despite its attractive title song) is one Autry vehicle which even the star's most devoted fans will be thankful to miss.

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dougdoepke

This Autry-Republic entry is more plot-heavy than most. Basically, however, it's the standard matinée premise of baddies trying to swindle land from honest owners. Here, however, the conflict is transferred to southern plantation owners, plus a thoroughbred (Champion) whose ownership keeps changing hands. Nonetheless, Republic works in some good rodeo footage, plus a steeplechase race, of all things. No fast shooting or much hard riding for action fans. Still, there's the big fists and clubs battle at the end. Lots of good songs, especially the Stephen Foster "Old Folks at Home" sung traditional style by a Black folk chorus. Some good bits by Frog Burnette without being buffoonish, and I really like spunky little Mary Lee who's also something of a delightful songbird. All in all, it's excellent Autry entertainment, despite the Negro stereotypes of the time.A "7" on the matinée rating scale.

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Michael O'Keefe

Gene Autry travels to the deep south. Colonel Stanhope(Eddy Waller)enters his daughter Caroline's(June Storey)horse in a rodeo in hopes of winning enough money to satisfy the evil Henry Wheeler(Hardie Albright), who has big plans on cheating folks like Stanhope out of their plantations. Gene and his sidekick Frog Millhouse(Smiley Burnette)help convince the landowners into cutting and selling their once thought worthless timber to save their plantations. There is time for such tunes as "Dreaming Dreams That Won't Come True", "At The Rodeo" and "Carolina Moon". Other players include: Mary Lee, Robert Fiske, Paul White and Etta McDaniel.

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Spondonman

It's another excellent Gene Autry western, with Smiley ("Frog") Burnette and June ("nice legs, ma'am") Storey in tow who could ask for anything more? Also with that nice early '40's Republic atmosphere and a whole bunch of nice songs too.The IMDb plot outline virtually gives the whole story away, but essentially Gene and Frog come to the rescue of plantation damsel in distress and her still Rebel grandfather. Do our heroes manage to save them from the clutches of the land-grabbing baddies out to buy up the entire countryside to augment their capitalist greed? June of course is at her wits end, but it doesn't stop her smiling along and duetting with Gene, especially the dreamy Dreaming Dreams (walking in the moonlight, with Champion too) and Say Si Si (at the piano at her plantation). Gene's solo highlight came with a too short version of the title song, whilst the Old Folks At Home got a spirited rendition from the plantation Negroes in a scene guaranteed to disturb any modern serious person brought up only on modern serious endless gratuitous sex and violence in films. For all of our sakes then I hope none of them ever see this!Gene is wonderfully imperturbable, Smiley has his usual farcical subplot going off throughout, there's some witty smart-ass one liners thrown in. And June even has the last word - in short, although there's many of his films I've never seen it's one of my favourite Autry's.

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