Destry Rides Again
Destry Rides Again

Destry Rides Again (1939)

7.2 ? Nov 30, 1939 1h 34m

Overview

Tom Destry, son of a legendary frontier peacekeeper, doesn’t believe in gunplay. Thus he becomes the object of widespread ridicule when he rides into the wide-open town of Bottleneck, the personal fiefdom of the crooked Kent.

Genres

Western Comedy

Release Date

November 30, 1939

Rating

7.2 /10

Runtime

1h 34m

Official Trailer from YouTube

James Stewart

James Stewart

Tom Destry Jr.

Marlene Dietrich

Marlene Dietrich

Frenchy

Mischa Auer

Mischa Auer

Boris

Charles Winninger

Charles Winninger

Washington Dimsdale

Brian Donlevy

Brian Donlevy

Kent

Allen Jenkins

Allen Jenkins

Gyp Watson

Warren Hymer

Warren Hymer

Bugs Watson

Irene Hervey

Irene Hervey

Janice Tyndall

Una Merkel

Una Merkel

Lily Belle

Billy Gilbert

Billy Gilbert

Loupgerou

Samuel S. Hinds

Samuel S. Hinds

Judge Slade

Jack Carson

Jack Carson

Jack Tyndall

Tom Fadden

Tom Fadden

Lem Claggett

Virginia Brissac

Virginia Brissac

Sophie Claggett

Edmund MacDonald

Edmund MacDonald

Rockwell (as Edmund Macdonald)

Lillian Yarbo

Lillian Yarbo

Clara

Joe King

Joe King

Sheriff Keogh

Dickie Jones

Dickie Jones

Claggett Boy

Ann E. Todd

Ann E. Todd

Claggett Girl

Richard Alexander

Richard Alexander

Cowboy (uncredited)

John Chard avatar

John Chard

8.0/10

Aug 28, 2014

Welcome to Bottleneck. Deputy Tom Destry Jr. (James Stewart) rides in to Bottleneck and sets about ridding the town of its riff-raff elements - without guns! Based on the novel by Max Brand, Destry Rides Again simultaneously spoofed the Western genre whilst reinvigorating Marlene Dietrich's flagging career. At first glance it seemed an odd casting choice to choose Dietrich as the bawdy saloon chanteuse, Frenchy, especially since Paulette Goddard was originally cast for the role. But it really comes off, where Dietrich's loud and brusque portrayal perfectly plays off of Jimmy Stewart's laid back and gentle mannered Destry performance. The role of Destry is tailor made for Stewart, his everyman charm sits perfect for a character who is at first painted as a wimp, he drinks milk - he carries no guns, but who better than Stewart to fully realise a character that uses brains over brawn to great effect? A film of this type, though, is only as good as its villain, and thankfully Brian Donlevy steps up to the plate with a suitable grumpy sneer, it's a fine performance from a very undervalued performer. Directed by the highly experienced George Marshall, Destry Rides Again is chock full of the elements that make a good family film even better than it should be, jokes a plenty, goodies and baddies, songs and quality slices of drama, all combine here to make this a very entertaining and rewarding picture indeed. While for those into girl power really need to check out the ending of this picture for sure. Little Joe, Little Joe... 8/10

Read full review
T

talisencrw

9.0/10

Jul 31, 2016

This was very interesting and I enjoyed it significantly. It's weird watching very early James Stewart--he's not what one would consider a conventional romantic male lead--and this is a very bizarre Western/comedy/musical. Anything starring Dietrich of this vintage is priceless, no doubt. Very weird, especially considering America's ever-present right-to-bear-arms controversy, watching a film like this, too. A purely magical film that's essential to own and re-watch for any Stewart, Dietrich or Western enthusiasts--and a strong reason why 1939 was the greatest year ever for American cinema.

Read full review
CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

7.0/10

Jun 26, 2022

Brian Donlevy ("Kent") and Malrene Dietrich ("Frenchy") pretty much run the town of Bottle Neck. Everyone comes to their saloon where they blow off steam and where she regularly serenades them with some toe-tappers. Upstairs, "Kent" runs a crooked poker game and together they fleece gullible old "Claggett" out of his ranch. He goes to the sheriff who promises to intercede, and pretty soon the town drunk has a new job! This new sheriff "Dimsdale" (Charles Winninger) worked for the original "Destry" back in the day, so determined to clean up the town for good, he sends for his son "Tom" (James Stewart). Nobody is prepared for the rather dapper gent who disembarks from the stage without a gun. Everyone assumes he is going to be a bit of a washout, but of course there is more than one way to skin a cat - as we are about to discover. Stewart is on good form in this much more subtle and enjoyable western. He plays a perfect foil to the undoubted star in Marlene Dietrich whose face just lights up the screen, and whose voice with "See what the boys in the backroom..." and "Little Joe" has that legendary tone to it that has this raucous crowd eating out of her hand. There is a solid and entertaining supporting cast, and though the conclusion is maybe a bit rushed, it all ends the only way it can and Emmeline Pankhurst would have been proud.

Read full review

Comments

Please login to post comments

FWAnime

Premium Anime Streaming

Watch thousands of anime episodes with premium quality and no ads!

Visit Now
s