Streets of Laredo
Streets of Laredo
NR | 27 May 1949 (USA)
Streets of Laredo Trailers

Texas, 1878: cheerful outlaw-buddies Jim, Lorn and Wahoo rescue spunky orphan Rannie Carter from rustling racketeers, then are forced to separate. Lorn goes on to bigger and better robberies, while Jim and Wahoo are (at first reluctantly) maneuvered into joining the Texas Rangers. For friendship's sake, the three try to keep out of direct conflict, but a showdown begins to look inevitable. And Rannie, now grown into lovely young womanhood, must choose between Lorn and Jim

Reviews
alexandre michel liberman (tmwest)

Color made a big difference in the forties, it would become essential for most of the A westerns that would be made in the fifties. Streets of Laredo has color going for it, it also has two of the ideal actors for westerns, William Holden and Macdonald Carey. Mona Freeman has the looks, but is very stiff in her role. The famous Victor Young does the musical score and the song "Streets of Laredo" is only played by the orchestra as background music, although another song by the same name is performed by a woman. The story is the same as "The Texas Rangers"(1936), about three outlaws, two of which become by circumstances Texas Rangers. Thy go through quite a conflict of loyalties between the rangers and their outlaw friend.(MacDonald Carey). Even though I liked the 1936 version I prefer this one, mainly because of Holden and Carey, and also for the fact the colors and the action scenes are excellent. A good western that can still be watched today with great pleasure.

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moonspinner55

Paramount's remake of their own 1936 western "The Texas Rangers" has three small-time stagecoach robbers separated after tangling with a sniveling extortionist and his cohorts in 1879 Texas; two of the men inadvertently join the Texas Rangers and find that working for the right side of the law really suits them, while the third man becomes a notorious outlaw. Despite some confusion in the character motivations and loyalties, this is an astute, absorbing drama with beautiful photography and solid performances. Who would've ever guessed Macdonald Carey could be a worthy opponent for William Holden? Dressed all in black, with a smug expression and heavy-lidded eyes, Carey is a surprisingly formidable villain. Holden, despite several sigh-heavy movie star close-ups, is very convincing with a gun and a horse; his character's playing both sides, while also falling for tomboyish Mona Freeman, provides the heart of the story, and Holden is never less than exciting to watch. Extremely well-directed by Leslie Fenton, with fine supporting work by William Bendix and a bouncy score by Victor Young. *** from ****

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classicsoncall

A reasonable enough entry to be included as part of AMC's Saturday morning Western lineup, the film brings together the somewhat unlikely trio of William Holden, MacDonald Carey and William Bendix in a tale of villains and Texas Rangers. The boys start out as amiable bad guys who get separated following one of their adventures, with Jim Dawkins (Holden) and Wahoo Jones (Bendix) eventually joining the Rangers, while their amigo Lorn (Carey) schemes to replace Charley Calico (Alfonso Bedoya) as the main desperado in the vicinity of Laredo. As formulaic as Westerns can be, I can't say that I've seen another quite like it before, especially when Lorn Reming does a Han Solo like bushwhack on his former ally Wahoo later in the picture. Even though Wahoo was planning to turn in his ex-buddy, the vicious turn of Carey's character was a sit up and take notice moment.The story offers a few other novelties as well. Alfonso Bedoya gets a bit more screen time here than he did as 'Gold Hat' in "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre", though he'll never have as great a line as the one about those 'steenking badges' from that movie. I was really caught off guard to see Ray Teal as Calico's henchman Cantrel, virtually any time you see him in a Western he's playing a sheriff.I don't want to forget mentioning Mona Freeman as the story's romantic interest, first intrigued with Lorn Reming, and then when his true nature reveals itself, casting an eye for Jim Dawkins. Because the story spans a couple of years, her character Rannie Carter advances from a cute teenage cowgirl to a mature frontier woman. Bendix' character had a great line when they first met - "You're mighty pretty if you're a her".Though the Texas Rangers as an entity are part of the story, the film doesn't necessarily rely on that connection to work. However it does offer a convenient way for Jim and Wahoo to go straight while their partnership with Lorn falls apart. Of course the ending does submit to a fairly standard formula, but perhaps not in the manner in which it's carried out. For that though, you'll have to keep your eyes peeled for your local cable listings, as I'm unaware of the movie's availability elsewhere.

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morales_zoraida

This stars MacDonald Carey and William Holden. I grew up always watching McDonald Carey as Dr. Horton on Days Of Our Lives but I had never seen what he looked like when he was so young before. He was very handsome. He played an outlaw who helped rescue the main woman in the movie when she was just a girl. Also in this movie is Alfonso Bedoya. I saw him in the very first film I saw at film class in college, The Treasure of The Sierra Madre -- also a very good Western. Anyway, what I liked about this one is how the two friends who rescued the main woman when she was a girl were enemies now on account of how McDonald Carey was now an outlaw but William Holden was now a Sheriff and William Bendix, who was very funny, played his deputy, Wahoo. So, there was lots of tension back and forth, and the ending really surprised me. I liked this Western a lot.

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