Under Western Skies (1945) Poster

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6/10
How Do They Think Of These Titles?
boblipton16 June 2021
Leon Errol's vaudeville show comes to a small town where Irving Bacon is the heroic sheriff, and where school teacher Noah Beery Jr. And bandit Leo Carrillo compete for Errol;s daughter, singer Martha O'Driscoll.

One of at least eight movies with the same name, this 57-minute musical comedy western is more interested in showing us Shaw & Lee doing one of their stage acts, and Dorothy Granger singing one of the movie' three songs. It's unassuming, and director Jean Yarborough doesn't stand in the way of the silliness.
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5/10
Not your ordinary B western.
mark.waltz28 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This is actually a bright, fast moving musical comedy that just happened to be set in a small western town, filmed nicely on the Universal lot on their standing western town set. It surrounds corruption in that town and the hypocrisy of the townsfolk who want to keep a traveling theatrical troop from appearing at their music hall. Martha O'Driscoll is their singing star who befriends schoolteacher Noah Beery in spite of the overly moral female elders of the town, too stuck in their ways to even attend a rehearsal.

O'Driscoll's father is played by the legendary rubber legged Leon Errol who really doesn't get much to do. The troop's vaudeville numbers are rather bizarre but O'Driscoll's songs are well performed although she has a rather modern way of singing her ballads. There's also Ian Keith as the Shakespeare quoting member of the troop, Leo Carrillo as a typical Latin bandit and Irving Bacon as the town's sheriff who finally has enough and stands up to the town prigs to get the show on the road. Not bad for a B western programmer although I'd have liked more of Errol's antics.
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5/10
Interesting B Western
tpguess9 August 2019
Leo Carillo before TV... and playing laughably the most dangerous hand in the West. But to old film buffs the most incredible scene is the run away stage scene, early on in the movie.. where they film right through a terrible Horse stumble and fall and use the un edited footage
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Minor oater with incidental reminders of Ford's work
FilmFlaneur1 July 2001
This undemanding B-western contains genial performances from Noah Beery Junior, Leon Erroll and Leo Carrillo (the latter best remembered from his work alongside Wallace Beery, in some of his underrated Westerns of the early 40's). What makes the film of more than average interest is the incidental relationship some of the elements bare to the work of John Ford: for instance, the ham Shakespeare actor recalls John Carradine's similar, albeit much more rounded and expanded, role alongside Fonda and Mature in ‘My Darling Clementine'. Not unexpectedly, Ford elevates such a character to pathos. Here the effect is one of parody. More intriguing is the plot device whereby the seven members of King's gang are killed by the school teacher (Beery), the credit for which is passed on to the infirm sheriff. Almost twenty years later, Ford was to use this device to far more significant ends in ‘The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence'. In the later film of the deception and it's reception serves to make judgement on the passing of the old West, the value of a printed legend over a secret history. In Yarbrough's film the tension created by the wrong assignation of merit is never resolved to any such poetic effect, but left as bald fact. Co--writer Bruckman (light years away here from his part in creating some of Buster Keaton's finest films) leaves everything unresolved, just as the implications of the plot might really take off. Beery rides off cheerfully to get married to the singer, and the ex-sherriff remains basking in his undeserved glory – a result that is somewhat unnerving, to say the least, given the lie upon which his respectabililty in built on.
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