Along Came Jones
Along Came Jones

Along Came Jones (1945)

5.6 ? Jul 19, 1945 1h 30m

Overview

An easy-going cowboy is mistaken by the townsfolk for a notorious gunman. The cowboy decides it would be best to leave town, until he meets the gunman's girlfriend.

Genres

Western Comedy

Release Date

July 19, 1945

Rating

5.6 /10

Runtime

1h 30m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Gary Cooper

Gary Cooper

Melody Jones

Loretta Young

Loretta Young

Cherry de Longpre

William Demarest

William Demarest

George Fury

Dan Duryea

Dan Duryea

Monte Jarrad

Frank Sully

Frank Sully

Avery de Longpre

Don Costello

Don Costello

Leo Gledhill

Walter Sande

Walter Sande

Ira Waggoner

Russell Simpson

Russell Simpson

Pop de Longpre

Arthur Loft

Arthur Loft

Sheriff

Willard Robertson

Willard Robertson

Luke Packard

Ray Teal

Ray Teal

Kriendler

Lane Chandler

Lane Chandler

Boone

Ernie Adams

Ernie Adams

Townsman (uncredited)

Erville Alderson

Erville Alderson

Bartender (uncredited)

Silver Tip Baker

Poker Player (uncredited)

Jack Baxley

Rancher on Street (uncredited)

Hank Bell

Hank Bell

Posse Rider (uncredited)

Paul E. Burns

Paul E. Burns

Small Man (uncredited)

Horace B. Carpenter

Horace B. Carpenter

Old Barfly (uncredited)

Tommy Coats

Stagecoach Passenger (uncredited)

John Chard avatar

John Chard

6.0/10

Dec 09, 2018

Like I told your friend, never turn your back on anything... especially a girl! Along Came Jones is directed by Stuart Heisler and adapted to screenplay by Nunnally Johnson from the Alan Le May novel The Useless Cowboy. It stars Gary Cooper, Loretta Young, Dan Duryea and William Demarest. Music is by Arthur Lange and cinematography by Milton R. Krasner. Mild mannered Melody Jones (Cooper) and his friend George Fury (Demarest) wander into the town of Payneville. Because of the saddle on his horse having the initials M J, Jones is mistaken for being wanted outlaw Monte Jarrad (Duryea), something which brings him into conflict with the townsfolk - and Jarrad himself! Monte Jarrad. Tall and skinny, mean tempered and extra fast with a gun - travels with half-wit uncle called Uncle Roscoe something. Cooper for the first time enters the realm of producer and delivers a sly spoof of the Western genre that served him so well. Cooper as Jones is happy to laugh at himself, portraying him as an amiable buffoon. Initially it's not easy to accept such a laconic and mighty presence as being such a character, but Cooper quickly draws you in. Cooper is aided by professional turns from Young, Duryea and Demarest, who in turn get a sprightly script of fun dialogue to work from - which in a film of much chatter is crucial to make it work. Elsewhere, what action scenes are forthcoming are moderately staged and Krasner's black and white photography is gorgeous in print form, but the locales and set designs just sort of sit there waiting to be elevated. The budget restriction in place is annoying, where we should have sweep and out of studio airiness, we instead have cheap tricks and crude back projection, this cast deserves better production value. Plotting is also thin and formulaic, the screenplay and Heisler's direction playing safe and not doing justice to the satirical beats trying to be heard. It's fun and charming enough to be worth time spent on viewing, and Cooper and co are good company, but it should have been better and had better care afforded it from a technical standpoint. 6/10

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