In Old Missouri (1940) Poster

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6/10
The Weaver Brothers and Elviry
boblipton3 March 2013
Republic Pictures specialized in the shrinking but still important rural market. This meant they produced a lot of westerns and when country music began its rise in the early 1940s (by 1945 Western Swing was the best-selling musical genre on records) they knew how to take advantage: not only with singing cowboys and Judy Canova, but with the Weaver Brothers and Elviry, a musical novelty act. They appeared in about fifteen movies from 1938 until 1942. This looks to be pretty typical.

The Weavers play poor sharecroppers who, tired of working hard all year for a net return of $18, head off to talk to the people who own the land and company store in the person of Thurston Hall -- and he signs everything over to them. If it isn't always to my taste, it's done surprisingly well, with underrated director Frank MacDonald keeping things moving along briskly, particularly in the sight gag department. Cinematographer Ernest Miller does his usual impeccable job. In short, if you have a taste for this sort of movie, this is a very good example of the genre.
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6/10
Corn is sweet and buttery, and makes this movie pop fresh every kernel.
mark.waltz29 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The Weaver family had me both rolling my eyes and laughing hysterically at the same time, enjoying every dated bit of comedy especially the musical specialties. The story focuses on the Weaver family confronting wealthy Thurston Hall who owns the farm they've been sharecropping for years, not realizing that he's in debt because of how the people involved in his business and his own family are spending his money.

Wife Marjorie Gateson spends more on fashion each month then she has ruined her closet for, and son Alan Ladd has brought over a bunch of French chorus girls in hopes of opening a nightclub. None of which that Hall can afford. So he disappears, leaving everything including his mansion to the Weaver's, and soon, there's an auction featuring live entertainment to pay off the bills.

There are lots of laughs coming from the pet duck and squirrel (that duck quacks more than Daffy and Donald combined), and the Weaver's (particularly the matriarch, Elviry, who highly resembles Margaret Hamilton) are genuinely funny, resembling the Beverly Hillbillies when they move into Hall's mansion and get a taste of high fallutin' livin'. An upbeat version of "When You Wore a Tulip" is the musical highlight. Silly, harmless fun, with the handsome young Ladd on the verge of stardom and Hall and Gateson an early version of the Howell's from "Gilligan's Island", especially considering Hall's first name.
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