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Mexicali Rose
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Directed by George Sherman.
Gene Autry goes up against a crooked oil company in this delightful music Western restored in 2001 by Gene Autry Entertainment. Carruthers (William Royle) of the so-called Alta Vista Oil Company is selling worthless stock from a non-existent well located on a Spanish land grant occupied by Padre Dominic (William Farnum) and his orphanage. At first, the padre's niece, Anita Loredo (Luana Walters), accuses radio entertainer Gene Autry of being in cahoots with Carruthers, but the crooner instead unmasks the oil company for the phony outfit it is. A defecting engineer, Blythe (LeRoy Mason), suspects that there really is oil in them thar hills and with the help of Mexican outlaw turned Robin Hood Valdez (Noah Beery), Gene tricks Carruthers and his equally crooked salesman McElroy (Roy Barcroft) into abandoning the well. A heroic Valdez is killed during the rescue of a couple of wayward orphans (Wally Albright and Kathy Frye) but the discovery of oil saves the orphanage from bankruptcy. In addition to the hit title song, Gene Autry performs "You're the Only Star in My Blue Heaven," "El Rancho Grande," and "Robin Hood" while comic sidekick Smiley Burnette takes care of "My Orchestra's Driving Me Crazy." ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Perhaps the quintessential Gene Autry Western, Mexicali Rose has just about everything, including a tuneful title song, unscrupulous blackguards, comic opera Mexican vaqueros, a gaggle of fairly tolerable child performers, and a typical crooked capitalists-versus-honest folks plot. It also delivers one of those key scenes that goes a long way to explain the Gene Autry phenomena: Gene and sidekick Frog Millhouse (Smiley Burnette) are kidnapped by gruff but lovable Mexican outlaw Noah Beery, who, it turns out, is a huge fan of Autry the recording artist and travels complete with a gramophone. But one of the vaqueros breaks a favorite recording of "Mexicali Rose" and the real, tied-up Gene takes over, the music accompaniment now apparently pouring out from the Heavens. That this potentially maudlin scene plays much better than it reads is to the enduring credit of Gene Autry himself. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
 



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