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Montana Moon
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Directed by Malcolm St. Clair
Joan Crawford and Johnny Mack Brown star in this high budget horse opera from M-G-M. She is Joan Prescott, a spoiled debutante en route to the family ranch in Montana and he is the cowboy she meets and marries after impulsively departing the train at a whistle stop. Surprising everyone, Papa Prescott (Lloyd Ingraham) is only too willing to welcome Larry Carrigan (Mack Brown) into the family, Larry being exactly the opposite of the slick society swells that Joan usually dates. But our Joan just can't help cutting the rug with old beau Jeff Pelham (Ricardo Cortez) and a jealous Larry slugs him. An angry Joan hops the next train back to New York but suddenly finds herself a victim of a gang of outlaws. A gang that seems mighty familiar! Co-written by executive producer Irving Thalberg's sister Sylvia, Montana Moon comes complete with songs by house composers Arthur Freed, Nacio Herb Brown and Herbert Stothart, including "The Moon is Low", "Happy Cowboy" and "Let Me Give You Love". ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Joan Crawford sings in Montana Moon, a fact that has offered detractors plenty of ammunition through the years. But although she obviously isn't a trained chanteuse, Crawford's warbling is not nearly as bad as all that. The early sound system doesn't help, needless to say, but Joan, as always, gives everything she's got and then some. The real problem with Montana Moon today is the so-called "comedy relief," tedious bits of nonsensical humor from the likes of Cliff Edwards and Benny Rubin, whose popularity in the early days of sound remains rather baffling to a modern audience. Rubin, especially, is hard to take, his kind of borscht-belt humor having gone the way of vaudeville. All in all, Montana Moon is an interesting museum piece notably mainly for the loving way William Daniels photographs the very young Joan Crawford. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
 

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