The Cowboy Millionaire

1935 "CORNERED! This son of the West needed every fighting trick he knew to spring the trap set by gentleman-crooks!"
5.9| 1h5m| NR| en
Details

Englishwoman falls for dude ranch cowboy but goes back to England when she thinks he's only pretending. But he follows her to England.

Director

Producted By

Atherton Productions

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Reviews

GamerTab That was an excellent one.
Matialth Good concept, poorly executed.
Tedfoldol everything you have heard about this movie is true.
Sameer Callahan It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
boblipton This movie starts off pretty good. George O'Brien and Edgar Kennedy are working at a dude ranch to raise money so they can work their gold mine. The have enough... but Evalyn Bostock shows up and George is smitten; she is annoyed at his presumption, but every attempt to take him down a peg results in his being warm, masculine and masterful. While George is trying to make hay, news comes that the mine is a bonanza --but the telegram is read by con man Stephen Chase, who is trying to marry Evalyn for her money. He offers to pay Edgar $25,000 for their mine, which Edgar accepts, except they have to go to England for plot convenience.The first half of the movie is good, with some nice humor on display, thanks to director Eddie Cline, O'Brien's casual charm and Kennedy's patented slow burn. The last fifteen minutes, however, is all about rear projection shots of London and the inevitable fight between O'Brien and Chase and is pretty much standard.O'Brien was getting tired of being a western star. The following year, he would cut a deal with George Hirliman that would get him off a horse -- still in action movies that would require him to take off his shirt. That wouldn't last long. Eventually, RKO would buy his contract and put him back in the saddle.
Paularoc Any B western with George O'Brien is worth watching. He had the charisma, underlying sense of humor, good looks and athleticism that made him a joy to see perform and always entertaining. In this western, Bob (O'Brien) and his sidekick Persimmon (Kennedy) take a job at a luxury dude ranch in order to earn enough money to continue to continue working on their mining claim. Part of their duties are to greet incoming visitors at the train station and then take them to the ranch in a stagecoach. Along the way, they stage a mock holdup in order to evidently give visitors a thrill and a taste of the old West. In this case, the passengers are an English mother and her daughter Pamela (Bostok) and a smarmy hanger on manager. When the prank is revealed, the mother is amused, the manager livid and the daughter is insulted and in quite a snit. The two plot lines are the one-oneupmanship game played between Pamela and Bob and a con man trying to cheat Persimmon and Bob out of their valuable mining claim. Understandably, the con man works only with Persimmon who is naive and gullible. Bob becomes smitten with Pamela, but, still in a snit, she flits back to England. Bob pursues her there and they join forces in trying to catch the con man. O'Brien and Bostok work very well together and she holds her own in the acting and charisma even if she loses the one-oneupmanship battle. Edgar Kennedy is, well, the familiar Edgar Kennedy but this time in a Western. He is funny and one of the more entertaining obligatory sidekicks. Very enjoyable B Western.
mark.waltz This comedy western is a far different cry than other "B" westerns of the era. It is light-hearted and features humor that actually still comes off as funny. Sure, the jokes didn't really make me laugh as much as they made he smile, but overall, this was quite enjoyable. In the modern west, the old west is still celebrated, and for George O'Brien, his job is to provide entertainment for the wealthy guests of a lavish inn where the old west is revisited simply for their pleasure. Edgar Kennedy is the coachman whom society matron Maude Allen believes to be drunk when he begins to make a silly speech welcoming the newest guests to the area. On the way to the inn, they are ramshackled by O'Brien, posing as a bandit, and while Allen enjoys the gag, relative Evalyn Bostock does not. She's the snooty sort who considers herself above all of the phoniness, and O'Brien, instantly attracted to her, sets out to tame her, even to the point of making her walk back from a riding trip they take to see the open spaces around the inn.A minor plot point of this, usually the focus of similar westerns, has their fellow guest Stephen Chase trying to jip O'Brien and Kennedy out of their shares of a mine. This dominates most of the film's short-running second half, but doesn't distract from the comedy of Bostock hiding the fact that she's enjoying all of this, smiling with glee every time O'Brien outwits her, even though she makes a fool of herself walking into the inn after loosing her shoe when she fell out of the coach. Kennedy is hysterical with his usual slow-burn, looking on in frustration after an aggressive tree branch pulls him right out of the coach's seat, leaving Bostock and O'Brien at the mercy of the charging horses. Allen, who was much younger than she seems, had bit parts in dozens of films, but stands out here in a much larger part, reminding the audience that it isn't just animals and children who can steal scenes, but feisty old ladies as well.
kidboots Yet another novelty Western from the mid 1930s, this time with George O'Brien on location in merry England. Bob Walker (O'Brien) is employed as a "stage coach robber" - an entertainment designed to introduce visitors to the real West. He and his pal, "Persimmon", (Arthur Kennedy) are only waiting to save enough money so they can start up their gold mine. The movie descends to a battle of the sexes with Bob trying to woo snooty English girl Doris (played by a very snooty Evalyn Bostock who didn't make much of a splash in the movies) with displays of riding, tennis and swimming. But Doris is wealthy and one person who is not happy about things is Thornton, her other admirer. He is the "most wanted con man in the world" and is busy cooking up a scheme by offering the boys $20,000 for their gold mine when in reality it is worth millions. When the guests leave - Doris has learned about Bob's $20 bet (to do with whether he can ask her out before she leaves), Thornton is hoping to marry Doris but he hasn't reckoned with Bob who follows them half way across the world.The most interesting part of the movie is the last 10 minutes when Bob, like a fish out of water and complete with cowboy hat, wanders around London trying to find Persimmon before he signs the mine away. Oddly enough it is in London that he finds the most fighting action.