Across the Rio Grande (1949) Poster

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5/10
Pleasant low-budget western fare ......
revdrcac23 June 2006
Jimmy Wakely was a cowboy crooner that was promoted to his own series. He co-stars here with the busy comic sidekick Dub "Cannonball" Taylor (Was he in EVERY western ever made ????). This was a fun movie, but had no really memorable moments.

The budget and action here are average, but the film is notable for its cast, which included a young Polly Bergen, who remains active in the industry today. The songs are fun, but routine.......

Wakely was never a box-office champ, but he did have decent run and even got his own comic book series ! This film was typical of those 1940's films that padded the matinée schedules of the day ...
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6/10
Steve Blaine Charged With The Murder Of Tom Sloan!
hitchcockthelegend17 September 2013
Across the Rio Grande is directed by Oliver Drake and written by Ronald Davidson. It stars Jimmy Wakely, Dub Taylor, Reno Browne, Riley Hill and Dennis Moore. Music is by Edward Kay and cinematography by Harry Neumann.

Running at just under an hour, Across the Rio Grande is pretty much a quintessential "B" Western for the decade it was made. It crams as much as it can into the story and has no ideas above its station. Plot finds amiable Jimmy Wakely and his amusing side-kick Cannonball Taylor in amongst silver smugglers, murder, kidnapping, jail breaks and of course shoot-outs and fist-fights. There's even time for a couple of songs and a magic trick! and a gun phobia angle and also a cheeky locked room murder that adds some meat to the frothy stew.

Production value is low and the fights are the kind where the thrown punches miss by about a mile, but this is a pleasant way to spend an hour if your a Western fan purely seeking some time filling light entertainment. 6/10
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Polly Bergen's first screen role
frontrowkid200223 November 2007
Across the Rio Grande featured the musical talents of a young Polly Bergen who had just started in films. She does a duet with Wakely in the saloon, where she's working as a musician (this was a kid' western, we didn't know about ladies like Miss Kitty). Playing the guitar, she sings the title song. In a letter to me, she said that this was the film that got her a Guild card. I think she was on for about 15 minutes. Her duet is included in the original trailer for the film, which is available in several groups of B western trailers. While Wakely may not have been a big star in westerns, he was influential in getting several performers their start in show business and wrote many songs. He and his family did a nightclub act in Harrah's in Las Vegas for years.
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3/10
Dire Cross-Genre Western
Theo Robertson23 June 2013
This was broadcast on TCM and pressing the info button on the remote we're informed that " A young man becomes the captive of silver-ore smugglers while investigating the murder of his father " You can forgiven for thinking that despite the Hays Code being heavily enforced there is a good chance of a gritty tale being told where the upstanding hero is at the mercy of cruel and sadistic villains similar to the later Western WILL PENNY . That's not how this film pans out

From the outset before a line of dialogue is spoken the tone of the film is set by having a musical soundtrack that borders on the frivolous and this sums up the film which is very silly , unlikely and despite incorporating several genres does none of them effectively . We get comedy scenes , a musical number and the plot proper involves an innocent man facing the gallows and the good guys trying to get to the bottom of a mystery . It has all the hallmarks of a B movie churned out by a film studio to be shown just before the main feature and no matter what the main feature was it couldn't have been any worse than this one
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3/10
So filled with flaws that the audience this was made for (10 year old boys!) would spend the hour pointing them out!
mark.waltz16 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
If there was a milk drinking game for pre-teens in the late 1940's and early 50's for films like this, the boys would have such healthy bones by the time this one was over, they'd never have to drink milk again. It's an enjoyable time passer, but considering the generic title, it's easy to figure out that this was a paint by numbers script where the one real bit of interest is the presence of a future star, Polly Bergen, in a small part as a saloon singer. She gets to sing with the film's star, Jimmy Wakeley, but it would take being paired with Martin and Lewis to get her an acting role. No wonder she never mentioned this one, and considered "At War With The Army" her film debut!

Wakeley is around when a coach transporting sister and brother Reno Browne and Riley Hill is held up. It's one of the most awkward Stagecoach robberies I've ever seen in a western, and later, when Hill is having a conversation with one of the local town elders, the man is shot to death and the actor barely even reacts to getting a bullet in his back. Hill escapes from the law, and Wakeley chases him, punching him when he gets caught up with him and says that he wants to help clear him. Another eye roll.

For comedy, there is Dub Taylor who is apparently assistant to the sheriff, but doesn't add him when Hill gets control of the sheriff's gun and locked him in the cell, later aided by Wakely. Taylor acts like a big old kid himself, so obviously he was appealing to matinee movie audiences who weren't even close to puberty. One interesting detail has Hill determined never to shoot a gun ever again, have it accidentally killed his best friend as a kid, leaving sister Brown to be the Calamity Jane in the family. It's fast-moving enough with plenty of action, comedy, music, and even a little bit of romance (which isn't convincing), so it isn't an entirely painful way to spend an hour.
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