Robin Hood Of Texas
Robin Hood Of Texas
NR | 15 July 1947 (USA)
Robin Hood Of Texas Trailers

When the bank is robbed, Gene and the boys are singing nearby and the Chief arrests them as gang members but lets them go thinking they will lead them to the others.

Reviews
Sexyloutak Absolutely the worst movie.
Cleveronix A different way of telling a story
2freensel I saw this movie before reading any reviews, and I thought it was very funny. I was very surprised to see the overwhelmingly negative reviews this film received from critics.
Stephan Hammond It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
corporalko This is a different Gene Autry film, not featuring either a lot of music or a lot of action. That's why I gave it only an "8" instead of a "10." But the complaining some other reviewers did about "Where's Robin Hood?" was explained by the first review posted above. It was a phrase often used by Republic Pictures to identify a movie in which the hero has to defy the "powers that be" in order to catch the bad guys and return the working people's money that has been stolen -- as Gene does in this film about a bank robbery in which he and his partners, the Cass County Boys, are accused (unfairly) of being "accomplices." A series of coincidences leads Autry and the Cass County Boys to a dude ranch they set up on property inherited by one of the Boys. The "bad guys" who robbed the bank, one by one show up there, thinking the money they stole has been hidden on the ranch, and so does an undercover police officer who still believes Gene and the Boys were somehow "in cahoots" with the crooks.While there is not very much action in the film as a whole, the climactic scene involves a hell-for-leather pursuit of the two remaining bad guys by Gene on Champ, and a fist fight among the three aboard a barreling, two-up farm wagon.An element not mentioned by any other review I've read is the amoral evil of the bank robbers -- attractive men (and one woman), well-dressed, but with absolutely no compunction about killing each other off in order to make off with the entire load of swag.All in all, a good, and different, Gene Autry flick. Sometimes "different," IS good.
dougdoepke There's a slam-bang finale with-- surprise, surprise-- some good rear-projection. Usually, a matinée production's got the rear-projection going one speed while the horse or buckboard goes another. Not here. Anyhow, Gene and crew start up a dude ranch, even while the cops think they've robbed a bank. Meanwhile, the real baddies show up, except they're even meaner to each other than to Gene. It's a more complex screenplay than usual, playing more like a modern crime drama than an oater. Frankly, too much so for my liking, plus too much time is spent indoors rather than out. Nonetheless, the bad guys really are a convincing lot, while there're two eye-candy girls instead of just one. Holloway does comic relief, but in a less annoying way than usual. On the whole, it's a rather odd Autry oater, his last for Republic. His new studio, Columbia, would provide a big production boost. Good!A "5" on the matinée scale.
classicsoncall With no sidekick to speak of, Gene Autry teams up with the Cass County Boys in a fairly standard oater where they're arrested as accomplices in a bank robbery, but are then let off the hook, presumably to lead the authorities to the rest of their gang. They head off to Serenity, Texas and nearby Hidden Valley, where Cass County member Jerry (Jerry Scoggins) has inherited a ranch along with his sister Virginia (Lynne Roberts). With little money and bills coming due, Gene hits on the idea of turning the spread into the Serenity Rest Ranch, a place where harried city folk can go to find some peace and quiet.What passes for the comedy relief in the picture is handled by Sterling Holloway doing a hypochondriac gimmick. His character Droopy Haynes gets entirely flustered if he's overdue a medication or misses ten o'clock bedtime by more than a minute. For some reason I always liked seeing Holloway in these stories when I was a kid, so catching him in this one today on Encore Westerns was a welcome treat.What's somewhat different about this picture is that once the story focuses on the bad guys, they wind up having a fall out over the hundred grand they robbed to open the picture. Duke Mantel (James Cardwell) robs his partners at gunpoint, and wouldn't you know it, heads for Hidden Valley for his own version of rest and relaxation. When the rest of the outlaws catch up with him, it's curtains for Duke, while the remaining hoods continue to battle it out among themselves.By my count there were only four songs in this Western, unusual for an Autry flick where he often got in as many as nine tunes between himself and his supporting cast. Except for serenading Miss Virginia once, all the rest were done with the Cass County Boys providing backup. The one thing I kept thinking about while watching this one was the name of that villain Duke Mantel. I wondered if it might have been inspired at all by Humphrey Bogart's character in the 1936 film "The Petrified Forest". Bogey was a bank robber in that one, and he went by the name of Duke Mantee.
funkyfry Basically your regular Autry picture. Judging by this one and the other Autry pics I've seen from just after the War, it looks like here Republic was trying to depart with each film from standard oater locations. In the case of this one, though, when they decided to add big-city bank robbers, a search for the stolen money, and a noir-esque gun moll to the Autry brew, they did little to thicken the stew. Diverting, but standard. And........ where is Robin Hood?
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