Ride, Tenderfoot, Ride (1940) Poster

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7/10
Unexpectedly deft and charming musical comedy.
martylee13045burlsink34210 February 2004
Many miles removed from the courtly, stodgy, and synthetic quasi-cowboy epics normally associated with Gene Autry. Spry and amusing script must have been snuck into Republic via some crew member's lunchbox (even the studio's trotting out their complete library of ancient stock footage for an obligatory stampede climax plays as DELIBERATE high comedy). Add a delightful score, an excellent supporting cast, and a young and almost relaxed looking performance from the star and you come up with a very rare package: an Autry that even an audience allergic to cowboy camp can enjoy. All in all a small delight.
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8/10
Kitschy, yes, but also earnestly fun
I_Ailurophile14 December 2022
Watching Singing Cowboy movies in 2022 requires a distinct level of open-mindedness. These flicks are infused with significant kitsch, and not just in any breaking out of song; we get plenty of antiquated values and hokey dialogue and character interactions, the kind that today are associated most with sitcoms of the 1950s, especially when it comes to any interactions between men and women (or simply how women are written). However, provided one can abide such curiosities, one can also trust that the films of Gene Autry are consistently well-made and entertaining. At their best they can claim some good stunts and action sequences - and even more so in this case, some earnest, clever humor. It's still decidedly ham-handed, but arguably a little less cheesily old-fashioned than some of its kin. It's hard to fathom saying 'Ride, tenderfoot, ride' is perfect, but against all odds, it's pretty fun!

Autry has a great singing voice, and perhaps more importantly swell comedic timing. This goes just as well for regular costar Smiley Burnette, and in this instance, also June Storey and Mary Lee. Factor in plentiful charm to lay atop Winston Miller's screenplay, and just enough meaningful measure of heart, and the result is reliably enjoyable. Why, to Miller's credit (and also story writers Betty Burbridge and Connie Lee), this is even a tad smarter than some similar fare: it seems fully self-aware of the social attitudes in which it's couched, and cheekily takes advantage by playing off them for the sake of the narrative and the comedy. Even for as enjoyable as Autry's features may be, this is a degree of wit I wouldn't anticipate. It's still true that this reflects "simpler entertainment for a simpler time," but sometimes fleeting lighthearted amusement is all that a picture needs to be, and if there is anything more to grasp onto, then all the better.

Saving all the major "heroics" and dramatic music for the climax this time around, it's still duly exciting, and in all the length before that more of a good time that I had frankly assumed. Considered in the broad strokes the plot is nothing super extraordinary, but it's put together well, with strong scene writing and dialogue, and some fine thematic content. No matter the specific flavors of a given moment, director Frank McDonald executes everything with a welcome even-handedness, maintaining balance such that the feature never teeters over the edge of being overbearing, too quickly paced, or excessive in any way. Truth be told I'm kind of impressed; this is substantially better, and more actively engaging, than I ever would have expected of such a title. Even at its most outmoded there's a love of film-making, storytelling, and entertaining that bursts through, and a minor tongue-in-cheek sensibility that only bolsters the sincerity. It remains the case that anyone who has difficulty with older movies, particularly the Singing Cowboy variety of western, won't find anything here to change their mind, yet for abject cinephiles and those otherwise receptive to all the wide possibilities of the medium, there's underappreciated worth here. Don't feel like you need to go out of your way for 'Ride, tenderfoot, ride,' but if you happen to come across it - and perhaps for those who are curious about the genre but only want to dip their toes in - then this is actually an excellent film, deserving of one's time.
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7/10
Some Real Fun In This One
boblipton21 August 2023
Gene Autry inherits a packing company. The main competition is owned by sisters June Storey and Mary Lee. Miss Storey's fiance, Warren Hull, wants to buy out Autry. He is agreeable, but when it turns out all the employees will be fired, he fights back for contracts with ranchers by talking to them as cattleman. When Miss Storey plays on her femininity, it escalates into parades and musical acts.

Director Frank MacDonald plays it for laughs, and the singing is well up to par, with Gene and Miss Lee singing a duet of "The Cuckoo" and Gene and Smiley Burnette offering a very appropriate "Eleven More Months and Ten More Days". With Joe Frisco as a haberdasher selling Burnette clothes that don't fit him, and Si Jenks as a grouchy sheriff, this is my favorite of all the Autry westerns I've seen.
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7/10
Yet another B-western with an inexplicably angry leading lady.
planktonrules6 April 2023
Back in the 1930s-40s, one cliche that was familiar in B-westerns was the inexplicably angry woman. They appeared most frequently in Gene Autry films, though Roy Rogers and other screen cowboys also used this overused plot device. I say overused because these characters were difficult to believe and seemed to say that the liberated women of the day were actually in need of a strong man to show them the error of their ways! Feminists watching the films today might just have a heart attack if they watch the movies with this plot!! As for me, I just hated the characters because they were more caricatures than believable women.

Shortly after the movie begins, the woman who owns a ranch meets Gene and is incredibly angry and hates him...even though she just met him. Well, it turns out she owns the ranch for which Gene works and with little provocation, she fires him. This is a mistake, as she soon finds out that Gene is the inheritor of a packing company wants to buy...and her boorish behavior makes this purchase seem very, very unlikely.

In addition to this plot, a kooky teenager who is a runaway from a girls school is telling people she's Mrs. Autry...Gene's wife!! Now considering that the actress (Mary Lee) was 16 and looked about 13 or 14, this is pretty creepy! Oh, and did I mention that this kooky teen is the sister of the woman who was so insulting towards Gene earlier in the movie?!

Despite the disturbing infatuation the teen had on Gene as well as the very stereotypical angry sister, this film managed to overcome its deficits. Much of it is because the story itself is very good and the characters quite likable....albeit creepy!
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5/10
"You know, I think it was fate that brought us together like this."
classicsoncall30 September 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Oh boy, where to start! For a cowboy hero, Gene Autry sure takes part in some questionable and seriously folks, unethical behavior, in this Republic oater, in the interest of saving his inherited meat packing company. I don't know which was worse actually, faking a marriage to a fourteen year old girl, or beating the tar out of an opposing company's lawyer to get back an already signed contract selling his business! Can you picture him running the California Angels using those kinds of tactics? You've really got to chalk this one up to being a product of simpler times, way, way simpler, when movie viewers didn't put too much thought into their pictures.

Helping keep things in a lighter perspective, Smiley Burnette's up to his old tricks as Frog Millhouse, but I think he might have been upstaged in the comedy relief department by that glib suit salesman (Joe Frisco). The guy was so smooth I think he used double talk that I was able to understand, and that's pretty smooth. Smiley walks away with an armful of haberdashery and I don't think he had a clue. But you know, Smiley earns his nickname when he takes that hop into the swimming pool at the Randolph party; he actually looked like a frog!

I also got a kick out of Autry's save on that runaway dynamite wagon, keep an eye on that scene and you'll see it takes place on two different terrains, mountainside and desert. That Gene sure knew how to steer!

I was a little curious going in about the film's title, but it had nothing to do with Gene as a cowboy, but with his being a novice as a businessman. He gets to sing the title song while riding on horseback with the Randolphs, and I'd really like to believe the setting of the movie was somewhere in Texas. That would make sense; if you listen closely to the scene at poolside during the Randolph party, you'll hear Ann Randolph (June Storey) call out to Mr. Bush!!!
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