Very Cool!!!
A Disappointing Continuation
Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.
View MoreIt's a mild crowd pleaser for people who are exhausted by blockbusters.
View MoreA turn of the (20th) century Western, set in Oklahoma, with several well known actors including James Craig, Donna Reed, Marjorie Main, Harry Morgan, Paul Langton, and Barton MacLane. Morris Ankrum and Noah Beery also appear. It's a better than average B movie that was directed by Andrew Marton with a screenplay by Lawrence Hazard that was based on a novel by MacKinlay Kantor.Three persons wearing sugar sacks with eye-holes rob a train of its bounty. Though the robbery is a success, brothers Cotton (Morgan) & Violet (Langton) Goss, and a third person thought to be an Indian, scorch much of the money when they blow the safe. Because there was mail on the train, U.S. Marshall Lloyd Richland (Craig) is in charge of catching the criminals. Richland doesn't trust the local Sheriff Tatum (MacLane), so he goes to town incognito, as a bum hitching a free ride on the train. Tatum, with his deputy (Ankrum), decides not to charge Rich Williams, the name Richland assumes, and releases him. In the local saloon/restaurant, Rich meets Violet and a high strung waitress Mary (Reed). A dispute between Tatum and Violet, also in the restaurant, leads to a fight in which Rich intervenes to keep the deputy from shooting Violet. Cotton enters and the three men (the Goss brothers & Rich) exit together with their guns drawn and backs to the door. Mary's had enough, so she quits and the four of them become fast friends. The Goss brothers invite Rich & Mary back to their ranch to spend the night.The Goss family matriarch is the title character, Annie (Main), who's also referred to as "Mud" or "Muddie" by her boys. She's a rough, but loving woman from the South who believes that stealing from a Northerner is O.K., though she's unawares that her sons robbed the train. Otherwise, she has raised her boys well: they're polite, respectful, giving, and will do anything to please their "Mud". She says what she really wants is to get back to Missouri, where they used to live. So, she and the boys haven't really put down roots, worked the farm much, or anything else to establish themselves in the community. Mary tells Annie she wants to get back to St. Louis (which is ironic, given that Main was in the film Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)), the same year as this one ... and it too is a turn of the century story), which endears her to Annie, who tells Mary she can stay as long as she wants. Rich takes all this in and doesn't want to believe that the Goss brothers are the ones who robbed the train, though he finds some evidence that they did. He helps the brothers run some unknown people (the Sheriff & his deputy) off their ranch that evening, and has earned their trust and friendship. Plus, a relationship develops between Rich and Mary, who also suspects the guilt of their hosts.There isn't much more to the film besides further development of the relationships between the characters. Tatum is shown to be corrupt, or at least of less than sterling character, while Rich wrestles with his fondness for the Goss family and his responsibilities, while falling in love with Mary. When the Goss brothers invite Rich to join him in robbing a train and show him the money from the previous job, he has no choice but to take them in. But, they get the drop on him until the three of them are needed to battle the greater foe, Tatum, who's just shot Annie.In the ensuing shootout, Violet is killed, as are the Sheriff and his deputy. The last scenes involve Rich putting Cotton on a train to be arraigned, promising to do his best to help him get a reduced sentence, and Mary deciding not to return to St. Louis, but instead stay with Rich.
View MoreMarjorie Main brings her Ma Kettle characterization to this film about a southern woman who settles in the west with her two sons after the Civil War. However her two sons in Gentle Annie, in this case Harry Morgan and Paul Langton, are more like the James Brothers than the rustic Kettle clan.The story line of Gentle Annie is similar to the 20th Century Fox film Jesse James with Tyrone Power and Henry Fonda. In fact since this took place well after the Civil War, the Goss brothers could easily have taken the James boys as role models. Morgan and Langton are outlaws who ostensibly are just trying to earn enough money to get back to the old homestead in Missouri, they never can get quite enough though. Main's wish is enough to justify a criminal career.James Craig plays the marshal out to get the folks who are doing the robbing. And since they're robbing trains with the US mail that makes it a federal offense and Craig's jurisdiction. Craig's undercover however and sets his sights on Main's kids and works his way into their confidence. He has to because the local law enforcement is as corrupt as it gets under sheriff Barton MacLane. MacLane's a northerner who doesn't like the ex-rebel Goss family on general principles.Donna Reed plays a stranded woman who the Gosses take in and who Craig falls for. All in all Gentle Annie is a nicely done B western from MGM, a studio that normally didn't put out that kind of product.
View MoreMarjorie Main is the title character. This is a Western, basically. But with Main as the lead, it doesn't really feel like one. We already know her as the proprietor of the dude ranch in "The Women" -- hardly a Western -- and (though it came later) as Ma Kettle.I liked Westerns when I was a child but don't care for them now. Many still do. I think this movie would please the two camps about equally.It's psychologically quite odd, if watered-down: Main's two sons adore her. And one of them is named Violet. OK.James Craig is an outsider in town and a central figure in the plot. He was a handsome an underrated actor of this period. I sometimes wonder why certain careers, such as his, didn't take off.Donna Reed, too, is an outsider. She was very appealing in movies of the 1940s. This one is no exception.Who knows if it was intentional but the movie is, looking at it now, a little campy. We have the son named Violet. And Main's dog is named Belle. True, she is a daughter of the Confederacy. But it's kind of a grand name for a rancher to give her mongrel dog.
View MoreThis movie is in the same category as 'The Big Country', But not in the same league. 'Big Country', is one of the best movies ever for getting good messages across to the audience. 'Gentle Annie' does the same thing and also in an entertaining way that doesn't insult your intelligence. Worth seeing again. Stellar performances by Donna Reed and Marjorie Main.
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