Go West, Young Lady
Go West, Young Lady
NR | 27 November 1941 (USA)
Go West, Young Lady Trailers

A young woman arrives in the western town of Headstone and helps the locals outsmart a gang of outlaws.

Reviews
MartinHafer

During the 1940s, Columbia Pictures made a ton of westerns...most of them B-movies lasting about an hour and featuring a variety of mostly small-time actors. However, occasionally they made a western that was just a bit better...and "Go West, Young Lady" is one of these. While it's about the length of many Bs, it has a better cast than usual. While Glenn Ford was not yet a top-tier actor, having him and many familiar faces in the film (Penny Singleton, Ann Miller, Charlie Ruggles and Allen Jenkins) give it a more sophisticated look than a B....making this sort of like a B+ picture!The star of the picture is Penny Singleton. She was a veteran of Bs...and in the middle of her Blondie and Dagwood series when she made this western. But she's certainly no typical western woman (at least the movie versions), as when bad guys strike, she's quick to shoot back and isn't the least bit a cowering lady! Glenn Ford is the male lead...but with such a dynamic lady starring in this one he's easily overshadowed!As for the plot, apart from Singleton's wild (and sometimes ditsy) character, it's pretty standard stuff. Some masked gunman named Killer Pete is terrorizing a town...killing sheriff after sheriff. His ultimate goal isn't robbery but to force folks to want to leave town...so he can then buy them out and become the big boss man...a very familiar western cliche.Watchable and a bit better than usual for the genre.

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bkoganbing

Columbia's western comedy Go West Young Lady owes the fact that it was made to Harry Cohn seeing how successful Destry Rides Again was over at Universal for Carl Laemmle. The resemblance of Glenn Ford's character to lean and lanky Jimmy Stewart is unmistakable.Ford and Penny Singleton arrive on the same stage to this frontier town where Penny is visiting her uncle Charlie Ruggles who owns the saloon and Ford has been appointed the new sheriff. Like the town of Bottleneck in Destry Rides Again the job of sheriff gives the owner a limited life expectancy.Specifically Ford is sent there to get a Mexican bandit, Killer Pete, who's been terrorizing the territory and he's got an alliance with the local Indians, a deadly combination if ever I saw one in a western. This bandit is one clever dude, he seems to just disappear with no trail after every job.Singleton is a western girl who can shoot like Annie Oakley, but she has a horrible sense of timing and hurts more than she helps poor Ford. Still it looks like love.Providing the saloon entertainment is Ann Miller, The Foursome, and Bob Wills Texas Playboys Band. There are quite a few musical numbers in this more than in Destry and Go West Young Lady is a shorter running time. There's a really cute one with Ann Miller and Allen Jenkins where Jenkins laments he doesn't have the voice to be a singing cowboy.And there's the obligatory chick fight between Singleton and Miller, not as good as the one involving Marlene Dietrich and Una Merkel, but it certainly can hold its own.Taking time off from the Blondie series for Penny Singleton definitely proved worthwhile. The film is a pleasant diversion and gave Glenn Ford the first opportunity on screen to show his comic talents. He takes a pie in the face as good as any Keystone Cop.

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F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

'Go West, Young Lady' is a surprisingly delightful little film that easily straddles at least three different genres: it's a comedy western with a couple of full-fledged musical numbers, but which never quite becomes a full-scale musical. This film features the only good comedy performance I've ever seen by Glenn Ford, who is usually a dead loss in comedies. (He ruined 'Pocketful of Miracles'.) I actively dislike Penny Singleton, partly because she's so annoying onscreen and largely because (in real life), as the inept president of Agva, she nearly drove that union into bankruptcy. But Singleton gives an enjoyable performance in this film. Even Ann Miller (whom I usually dislike) gives a fine performance as Lola, the dance-hall girl in the local saloon.Allen Jenkins, one of my favourite character actors, is hilarious (as usual) as sheriff Ford's deputy. A high point of this film is the 'Yip-Ay-Yay' number performed by Ann Miller and Jenkins. For possibly the only time in his prolific career, Jenkins sings onscreen! His gravelly voice (with his prole New York accent) is completely unsuited to carrying a tune, but Jenkins sings gamely (in both senses of the term) while Miller does a couple of simple tap steps (less elaborate than usual for her) alongside him.SLIGHT SPOILER. There's a very funny running gag, well executed. Ford keeps getting into brawls with various tough guys who are bigger and stronger than him. Each time this happens, Penny Singleton tries to help him by coshing the other man ... but she always misses him and beans Ford instead. The payoff comes when she tries this one more time. As Ford looks up in horror to see Singleton bearing down on him with a bottle, he shouts: 'Don't hit him! It'll be me!' Very funny indeed, and several other scenes in this movie are funny too. I'll rate this charming low-budget gem 9 points out of 10.

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dallen775

This is yet another movie that is not on video and few have heard of that's well worth the viewing if you can catch it on cable. It's enough of western and musical to hold the interest of fans of both, plus good comedy thrown in. It's not too much of either western or musical to make the other seem out of place. Good numbers, good acting, funny lines all in 70 minutes and a chance for those not familiar with Western Swing to catch what that is. Ironically, the two best fight scenes include women. I gave it a 7, it's well worth the watch, much better than some 7's, well deserving and fun.

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