7/10
Odd type of comic modern western - love story
31 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This odd film was shown at the dinner hour tonight. Odd because it works but it is quite disparate in it's plot lines.

Carleton Carpenter (who normally appeared in MGM musicals) is Harlan, a would - be rodeo cowboy, attending a rodeo in Las Vegas. He has been brought up in Kansas, and one of the girls he grew up with is Dixie (Jan Sterling). She is working in a gambling parlor run by Al (Keenan Wynn) but pretends that she is a potential dancer. When Harlan shows up for his rodeo he and Dixie reunite. Harlan leaves his gear at the gambling parlor (Al gives Harlan permission to do so). But what Harlan does not know is that Dixie has gotten involved with a fellow who is planning to rob the one armed bandits in the parlor. When this happens, Dixie is immediately suspected...and by extension Harlan. Instead of doing the sensible thing of confronting Al and the police and proving his innocence, Harlan decides to assist a panicking Dixie in fleeing Las Vegas and heading for the Utah border.

Sounds serious, doesn't it? But much of the film's charm works on the interaction of Harlan and Dixie on the road, and how they have conflicting viewpoints but find they have strong feelings for each other. At one point Dixie drives off in her jalopy leaving Harlan behind in a ghost town. She did not like his idea of returning to confront the police. But she returns to pick him up and get him to Utah. She finds him on the side of the road nursing his aching toes. Hardly romantic, but cute as she convinces him to trust her again.

It has nice desert scenery of some of the most isolated landscapes in America. And one of the worst to be stuck in. On the road to Utah the jalopy (with leaking radiator and threadbare spare tire put on the car) has to cross a rickety, condemned wooden bridge over a chasm. Later it has to be driven (with no break linings or working gears on the road) driving down a curving narrow mountain.

In the end he offers himself to her for a life of ranching. But is ranching what Dixie would be happy with, including feeding chickens and possibly slaughtering an occasional hog (and living in near isolation for most of the year)? We are aware that they really like each other, but can Dixie make the leap that Harlan wants her to make?

Wynn plays his role with more heart than one usually sees in his characters. So does someone else in the film, who really only has a small role here - Douglas Dumbrille as a rodeo official (with nothing up his sleeve like a secret agenda). On the whole the film is a sweet one, and if not an earth shaking piece of cinema worth a 90 minute viewing.
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