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The Fighting Kentuckian (1949)
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Overview
Release Date:
15 September 1949 (USA) moreTagline:
ROUGHER, TOUGHER, MORE ROMANTIC THAT EVER! (original and reissue posters)Plot:
In Alabama in 1818, Kentucky militiaman John Breen falls in love with a French exile and discovers a... more | add synopsisPlot Keywords:
Father Daughter Relationship
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U.S. Congress
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Male Female Relationship
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Historical Fiction
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Mother Daughter Relationship
more
User Comments:
The Alabama French moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| John Wayne | ... | John Breen | |
| Vera Ralston | ... | Fleurette De Marchand | |
| Philip Dorn | ... | Col. Georges Geraud | |
| Oliver Hardy | ... | Willie Paine | |
| Marie Windsor | ... | Ann Logan | |
| John Howard | ... | Blake Randolph | |
| Hugo Haas | ... | Gen. Paul De Marchand | |
| Grant Withers | ... | George Hayden | |
| Odette Myrtil | ... | Madame De Marchand | |
| Paul Fix | ... | Beau Merritt | |
| Mae Marsh | ... | Sister Hattie | |
| Jack Pennick | ... | Capt. Dan Carroll | |
| Mickey Simpson | ... | Jacques | |
| Fred Graham | ... | Carter Ward | |
| Mabelle Koenig | ... | Marie |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
100 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Mono (RCA Sound System)Certification:
West Germany:16 (nf) (original rating) | Germany:6 (re-rating) (2006) | USA:Approved (PCA #13803) | UK:U | Finland:K-12 | Sweden:15Filming Locations:
Republic Studios/CBS Studio Center - 4024 Radford Avenue, Studio City, Los Angeles, California, USAMOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Although Oliver Hardy was a good friend of John Wayne's, he initially balked at acting in this movie, for fear that it would make people think that he and Stan Laurel had broken up as a team. When Laurel insisted that Hardy take the role, he acquiesced. moreGoofs:
Anachronisms: After Oliver Hardy sits down on and flattens his trumpet making it useless, the final scene shows him walking away with the rest of the happy group and a brand new trumpet on his back. Where did he get it? moreSoundtrack:
Kentucky Marching Song moreFAQ
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In The Fighting Kentuckian John Wayne steps back a couple of generations on the American Frontier from where he usually has his movie roles to play a frontier soldier. He's one of the Kentucky riflemen who saw action in the Indian wars and the Battle of New Orleans with Andrew Jackson. His company is going home to Kentucky to be de-mobilized. But in a town in Alabama called Demopolis, Wayne gets a bit sidetracked by the lovely Vera Hruba Ralston.
Ralston is the daughter of Hugo Haas who plays one of Napoleon's former generals who is now leading a party of French exile settlers who have settled on land granted to them in Demopolis. The problem is that the French settlers are being set up for a big con game by a quartet of villains, Marie Windsor, Paul Fix, John Howard, and Grant Withers. Because of Wayne's growing involvement with Ralston he and sidekick Oliver Hardy get drawn into the problems of the settlers.
That's right I did say Oliver Hardy. While partner Stan Laurel was having health problems Hardy did this film with John Wayne and another, Riding High, with Bing Crosby. It's a different Ollie we see in The Fighting Kentuckian, not the know it all forever getting hoisted on his own petard by his bumbling partner Laurel. For most of the film he's a traditional sidekick to Wayne in the Gabby Hayes tradition. However there is one scene where Ollie gets to use the Duke as a substitute Stan Laurel. Wayne and Hardy sneak into a party given by Haas as musicians, fiddlers to be precise. Hardy actually plays, but Wayne is going to fake it. That is until the piece they're playing calls for a solo. As each musician does his bit, the expressions on Wayne's face are pure Stan Laurel. Ollie who was never the creative one in their partnership had to have coached Wayne on this. He does all the traditional Stan Laurel shtick, but cry. It's very funny, totally not what you would expect from John Wayne. It's the highlight of the film for me.
On the negative side the film is a bit overplotted. The quartet of villains mentioned above are all not quite working in tandem. Each one has his own agenda and it makes the film a bit hard to follow.
Still I believe the Duke's fans will enjoy a somewhat different John Wayne and Laurel and Hardy fans would appreciate Wayne's attempts at a salute to Stan. I think Ollie worked better with the Duke than he did with Harry Langdon in Zenobia.