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Trailer Synopsis Cast Keywords

Autry and his buddies have a horse selling business which is threatened by a tractor company which claims horses are out of date.

Gene Autry as  Gene Autry
Smiley Burnette as  Frog Millhouse
Joan Valerie as  Sally Dawson
Ivan Miller as  Mr. Thornton
Earl Dwire as  Clem Handley
Roy Rogers as  Singer
Hooper Atchley as  Maxwell
Ray Bennett as  Henchman Buck
Carleton Young as  Peabody
Earle Hodgins as  Terwilliger

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Reviews

HarlowMGM
1938/01/29

Slight Gene Autry vehicle will be a disappointment to those hoping by the time it's a full-fledged country-western musical along the lines of similar "b" movies from the period. Gene stars as a cowboy who sells wild horses in auctions with his group from town to town, singing and entertaining the crowds to get their attention. A young woman whose father owns a small town radio station tries to hire him to help out her failing station as a tractor seller wants an act for him to purchase radio time. Gene is not interested, given tractors are competition for his horses, but the girl tricks Roy into signing a contract just to appear on the radio but not letting him know his slot is sponsored by the tractor salesman. Of course the tractor salesman is also a crooked sort who signs the locals to contracts they can't make payments for and the locals blame Gene (WTH?) and go to whup him, of course they can't but good guy Gene tries to right the wrong done in his name.Gene has some good western numbers but this is a kind of silly story and the leading lady's actions seem as mercenary as the bad guy. The ending is surprising violent with at least one corpse and in Gene's action scenes toward the end are rather brazenly done by a stuntman who scarcely resembles him.

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dougdoepke
1938/01/30

Good compact screenplay that manages to coordinate songs, action, and radio-station plot in fairly smooth fashion. Okay, so maybe a tractor can do the work of 5 horses, but can a tractor run down a bad-guy in a car by going overland. Gene shows how a horse can (before Champion). Besides, a tractor can't be stroked or nuzzle like a buddy like a horse can. Actually, the movie somewhat mirrors Depression era conditions (1938)—the farmers owe more on the tractors than they can pay, so they may lose their farms. Trouble is they're the victims of a crooked scheme that involves the unwitting Autry, who then has to make things right. I like the radio programming from behind a bale of hay—a whole new concept in broadcasting. In fact, mobile broadcasting plays an important role in the story. Of course, Frog (Burnette) gets to do his bit, and by playing a musical instrument that looks like it's from Mars. All in all, it's a good little Autry programmer, Gene's last for Republic studios, who soon hired Roy Rogers to replace him. Oh well, I still like horses best.

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classicsoncall
1938/01/31

Like a lot of Gene Autry's pictures, this one opens with Gene on horseback, singing along with his backup musicians (this time the Colorado Hillbillies) and Smiley Burnette alongside. Though Autry always portrayed the hero in his pictures, the passage of decades since he was a major star often reveal that he was sometimes on the wrong side of progress as well. This time, Gene's a horse trader up against a new fangled contraption called a tractor, as villain Thornton's (Ivan Miller) Farming Equipment Company uses the old foreclosure scheme to call in it's loans against local farmers.For a picture that comes in under an hour, there sure are quite a few musical interludes along the way with a whole host of singing groups. Besides the Hillbillies, there's also The Stafford Sisters and a comical looking group called the Maple City Four. Personally, I got a kick out of the singer on banjo sporting the Beatles haircut some twenty five years before the Fab Four hit the scene.Storywise, Gene's put in an awkward position when his voice is broadcast on Radio KLD making it look like he's promoting the Mammoth Tractor Company. When the area farmers start to get their late payment notices, it looks like Gene had a hand in backing the crooked finance company in cahoots with Thornton. This will all get set right by the end of the story, with Gene even overlooking the fact that Miss Sally Dawson (Helen Valkis) played him for a chump, even if unknowingly.As a Western movie fan, I had to do a double take when I saw the name Dick Weston in the opening credits. Try as I might, it was difficult to pick him out in one of the singing groups, but I think I finally got a glimpse of him. Right after this picture, Republic gave him the name Roy Rogers in his very first starring role, "Under Western Stars".Say, keep your eyes peeled in an early scene for a gas pump with a Mobilgas logo and a picture of the Texaco flying horse. That was kind of cool and it hung around on screen for a while making me wonder if it was an example of early product placement in film. Another noteworthy visual occurred later on in the picture when a series of over-sized posters came into view, one of which featured another cowboy film star, Johnny Mack Brown.

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kentbartholomew
1938/02/01

Pretty standard early Gene Autry. Horse Traders, Gene and sidekick Smiley, find themselves suckered into a tractor peddling scheme, designed to swindle the local landowners, by unsuspecting radio station saleslady Sally Dawson (Joan Valerie). When the town blames them Gene and Smiley must prove their innocence and bring the bad guys to justice.Gene cranks out a fair amount of tunes and Smiley contributes more than a fair share of comic relief in an average oater. This one is really more of a Musical with appearances by Walt Shrum and his Colorado Hillbillies and the Stafford Sisters.The Old Barn Dance is also notable because it gave rise to bit player "Dick Weston" AKA Roy Rogers who would soon become Republics number one Singing Cowboy.

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