IMDb > Steamboat Round the Bend (1935)
Steamboat Round the Bend
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Steamboat Round the Bend (1935) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

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7.1/10   456 votes »
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Director:
Writers:
Dudley Nichols (screen play) and
Lamar Trotti (screen play) ...
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Contact:
View company contact information for Steamboat Round the Bend on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
6 September 1935 (USA) See more »
Genre:
Plot:
A Louisiana con man enters his steamboat into a winner-take-all race with a rival while trying to find a witness to free his nephew, about to be hung for murder. Full summary » | Add synopsis »
NewsDesk:
‘Steamboat Round the Bend’
 (From SoundOnSight. 5 January 2013, 10:13 AM, PST)

User Reviews:
Will Rogers' swan song is Americana with a Dixie flavor See more (9 total) »

Cast

  (in credits order) (verified as complete)

Will Rogers ... Doctor John Pearly

Anne Shirley ... Fleety Belle
Irvin S. Cobb ... Captain Eli

Eugene Pallette ... Sheriff Rufe Jeffers
John McGuire ... Duke
Berton Churchill ... New Moses
Francis Ford ... Efe
Roger Imhof ... Pappy
Raymond Hatton ... Matt Abel
Hobart Bosworth ... Chaplain
Stepin Fetchit ... Jonah
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
C.E. Anderson ... Jailer (uncredited)
Sam Baker ... Undetermined Role (uncredited)
William 'Billy' Benedict ... Breck (uncredited)
Heinie Conklin ... Jailbird (uncredited)
D'Arcy Corrigan ... Hangman (uncredited)
Luke Cosgrave ... Labor Boss (uncredited)
Grace Goodall ... Sheriff's Wife (uncredited)
Ben Hall ... Fleety Belle's Brother (uncredited)
Dell Henderson ... Salesman (uncredited)
Robert Homans ... Race Official (uncredited)
Si Jenks ... Farmer at Demonstrations (uncredited)
John Lester Johnson ... Uncle Jeff (uncredited)
Ed Jones ... New Elijah (uncredited)
Fred Kohler Jr. ... Ben - Fleety Belle's Fiance (uncredited)
James A. Marcus ... Warden (uncredited)
Louis Mason ... Boat Race Organizer (uncredited)

Charles Middleton ... Fleety Belle's Father (uncredited)
Ferdinand Munier ... Governor (uncredited)
Robert Parrish ... Boy (uncredited)
Vester Pegg ... Mink - Pride of Paducah Pilot (uncredited)
Jack Pennick ... River Man with Pappy (uncredited)
Otto Richards ... Prisoner (uncredited)
Ernest Shields ... Undetermined Role (uncredited)
Wingate Smith ... Undetermined Role (uncredited)
John Tyke ... Undetermined Role (uncredited)
Lois Verner ... Addie May (uncredited)
John Wallace ... Undetermined Role (uncredited)
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Directed by
John Ford 
 
Writing credits
Dudley Nichols (screen play) and
Lamar Trotti (screen play)

Ben Lucien Burman (from the novel by)

Produced by
Sol M. Wurtzel .... producer
 
Original Music by
Samuel Kaylin (uncredited)
 
Cinematography by
George Schneiderman (photography)
 
Film Editing by
Alfred DeGaetano (film editor) (as Al DeGaetano)
 
Casting by
Al Smith (uncredited)
 
Art Direction by
William S. Darling (art direction) (as William Darling)
Albert Hogsett (art direction)
 
Costume Design by
Sam Benson (uncredited)
 
Makeup Department
Irene Beshon .... hair stylist (uncredited)
Buddy King .... hair stylist (uncredited)
Vern Murdock .... makeup artist (uncredited)
Paul Stanhope .... makeup artist (uncredited)
 
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Edward O'Fearna .... assistant director (uncredited)
 
Art Department
Monroe Liebgold .... props (uncredited)
Dwight Thompson .... props (uncredited)
Joe Thompson .... props (uncredited)
 
Sound Department
Albert Protzman .... sound
Jack Lescoulie .... sound recordist (uncredited)
Hal Lombard .... assistant sound (uncredited)
 
Camera and Electrical Department
James Gordon .... camera operator (uncredited)
Paul Lockwood .... assistant camera (uncredited)
Cliff Maupin .... still photographer (uncredited)
Tom Ouellette .... set lighting foreman (uncredited)
Sy Rubin .... assistant to set lighting foreman (uncredited)
Vern Simmoirs .... grip (uncredited)
Cluitt Urtubes .... grip (uncredited)
 
Editorial Department
John Pommer .... assistant editor (uncredited)
 
Music Department
Samuel Kaylin .... musical director
Emil Gerstenberger .... orchestrator (uncredited)
 
Other crew
R.L. Hough .... business manager (uncredited)
L.C. Moore .... location manager (uncredited)
Stanley Scheuer .... script clerk (uncredited)
Henry Weinberger .... assistant business manager (uncredited)
 
Crew verified as complete


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Additional Details

Also Known As:
"Steamboat 'Round the Bend" - USA (DVD box title)
See more »
Runtime:
USA:81 min (FMC Library Print) | 82 min (copyright length)
Country:
Language:
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 See more »
Sound Mix:
Mono (Western Electric Noiseless Recording)
Certification:
Finland:K-8 | USA:Approved (PCA #1058) | USA:TV-G (TV rating)

Did You Know?

Trivia:
Rogers' boat, "Claremore Queen," was named after his home town of Claremore, Oklahoma.See more »
Quotes:
New Moses:I swear henceforth that liquor will never touch these lips.
Efe:Me too!
See more »
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Paper Moon (1973)See more »
Soundtrack:
A Hot Time in the Old TownSee more »

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
16 out of 19 people found the following review useful.
Will Rogers' swan song is Americana with a Dixie flavor, 13 April 2002
Author: wmorrow59 from Westchester County, NY

This movie was shown recently as part of a large-scale comedy retrospective at Film Forum in New York, but it seemed out of place there alongside the likes of the Marx Brothers and Mae West. STEAMBOAT ROUND THE BEND is an interesting and unusual film with occasional comic touches, but it's primarily a serious tale with strong elements of melodrama. The story is set in the 1890s, and rich period atmosphere is one of the film's strongest assets. Although it's not based on a Mark Twain story director John Ford captures that Old Times on the Mississippi flavor better than a lot of movies based on Twain's books. Ultimately this is a rich slice of Americana with a distinct Southern bias. That's all well and good if you have an interest in American history as depicted in Hollywood films of this period, but viewers expecting non-stop laughs will be disappointed. Baby boomers who grew up watching TV in the '60s might find that STEAMBOAT ROUND THE BEND reminds them of The Andy Griffith Show: it has the same relaxed tempo, presents a similarly benign view of Southern life (with the stark exception of one sequence, which I'll discuss in a moment), and has as its leading man a very low-key guy.

Here, as in his other talkies, Will Rogers ambles through the proceedings in a seemingly casual fashion. He was unlike any other star of his time-- or since, really --and viewers who've never seen one of his movies might find him a little odd at first. Like his friend W.C. Fields, Rogers refused to rehearse his scenes and insisted on doing a minimal number of takes even if he fluffed his lines, which he often did. His acting is so offhand, and so unlike the polished Hollywood performance style of his day, a first-time viewer might mistake him for an amateur who somehow wandered onto the set. Once you adjust to his naturalistic style, however, Rogers' special talent becomes obvious, and it's the other actors who start looking theatrical and phony. Aside from the lead the most memorable performances in this film are given by the growly-voiced Eugene Palette, who gets most of the laughs, and bright-eyed Anne Shirley, who holds her own with Rogers in their scenes together.

STEAMBOAT ROUND THE BEND is probably best known as Will Rogers' swan song, the last project he finished before his death in a plane crash, but like much of his work it never had a legitimate video release, most likely because of the presence of the notorious African-American comedian Stepin Fetchit. When several Rogers movies were released on video a few years back the ones featuring Fetchit were skipped, probably because modern day audiences are uncomfortable with the 'comedy relief' found therein, and for good reason: Stepin Fetchit is painful to watch. Anyone who seeks proof of Hollywood racism need look no further than films of the '30s in which he was featured. For those who haven't seen him, it might help to explain that despite the sound of his name and what it implies, Stepin Fetchit was Hollywood's favorite lazy simpleton, a woozy scamp with a slow-as-molasses delivery almost impossible to decipher. He comes off as heavily sedated, or even mentally retarded. Who could laugh at this sort of thing today? In recent years a few film critics and historians (including some African-American ones) have taken a more sympathetic view of Fetchit's career and have made positive assertions about what he was able to accomplish within the confines of the demeaning roles he was given. Well, whatever. Where this movie is concerned I'll note simply that Fetchit's screen time is mercifully limited and that the film has only a minimal amount of racial humor. In fact, about halfway through there is a remarkable sequence in which attitudes of the Old South are satirized in a surprising fashion.

To set the scene: Rogers (playing Dr. John), with the help of Anne Shirley (Fleety Belle) is attempting to raise money to pay legal fees to save his nephew from the gallows. They are sailing up and down the Mississippi in his old steamboat with a small crew (including Stepin Fetchit as Jonah), carrying what's left of the dummies from a defunct wax museum, charging riverfront locals to come look at the statues. When they reach one particular backwoods village, a mob of men advance carrying torches, pitchforks, axes, and a vat of tar, determined to destroy the boat and punish the wicked theater folk who have brought sinful playacting to their community. Dr. John is slow to recognize the danger, so much so that our credulity is strained, but it's striking to note that Jonah appreciates the danger instantly-- he knows a lynch mob when he sees one. Dr. John is eventually able to pacify the mob when he invites the men onto his boat and convinces them that the wax figures are "educational," and this impressive word plus the sight of the dummies in their tatty costumes reduces the locals to a state of slack-jawed submission. The punchline comes when Dr. John gives the signal to raise a curtain, revealing a moth-eaten statue of Robert E. Lee astride his horse. At another command, the figure salutes stiffly, and the now-awed rednecks salute in return. To top things off, Jonah, sitting at the calliope, plays "Dixie" and sings along raggedly in a screechy, off-key voice as the scene fades out. It's a startling sequence, bitingly satirical in a way we don't expect, and perhaps not in the way the filmmakers intended. At any rate, this film is well worth a look for viewers who are historically-minded, curious about Will Rogers, or interested in the mass media's presentation of race relations.

P.S. Summer 2006: I'm pleased to add that this film is now available on DVD, in a box-set with three other movies Will Rogers made during the last year of his life.

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