Man from Music Mountain (1938) Poster

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6/10
Plenty of riding, roping, and shooting in this Gene Autry oater
krorie10 February 2006
Gene sings a song called "Man from Music Mountain" near the beginning of the movie when Frog tells him that he needs to pep things up. The song is about as close as the story gets to the title of this action-filled shoot-'em-up. It seems that an eastern pair of shysters is getting rich selling shares in a worthless gold mine located near a ghost town. The crooks are also selling realty in the deserted mining town telling the buyers that the government is going to reopen the area by pumping water and electricity their way as a result of Boulder Dam. The only problem is the government is by-passing the area so the land is virtually worthless. In rides Gene and his cowhands to try to thwart the efforts of the bad guys. Gene even grub stacks the new arrivals until he figures out a way to get their money back and run the swindlers out of the country.

The film opens with a homage to President Roosevelt's New Deal, showing the magnificent "Eighth Wonder of the World," Boulder Dam. Hollywood continually championed the New Deal during the 1930's, helping Roosevelt in his attempt to strangle Ol' Man Depression. It's doubtful if any other American President has been so favored by the mass media as Roosevelt throughout his twelve years in the White House.

There's more than the usual amount of music in this Gene Autry outing. Most of it written by Gene, Frog (Smiley Burnette), and an up and comer Fred Rose, who would later discover Hank Williams, Sr, and help found the huge conglomerate, the Roy Acuff, Fred Rose Publishing Company in Nashville. Rose and Smiley were two of the best song writers around so expect some fine tunes. Smiley was a consummate musician, much better in that category than in the humor department, although in "Music Mountain" he does have some funny parts. One standout routine is "She Works Third Tub At The Laundry" with really raunchy lyrics for 1938 with a few sexual innuendos thrown in for good measure. Toward the end of the film Gene, who began his singing career imitating the great country blues singer Jimmie Rodgers, does a song that is a reworking of Jimmie's old "Gambler's Blues," giving the viewer a feel of how Gene sounded in the beginning before he attempted to become a popular crooner. There's also a cute ditty called "Burning Love" that involves a fairly humorous scene between the men and the ladies played by the vivacious Carol Hughes and the cut-up Sally Payne.

Between the songs there's plenty of action culminating with a wild chase from the mine where an explosion opens a new vein of gold to the town to try to stop the crooks from horning in on the new riches. The chase involves Gene doing some fancy riding and roping. In most of Gene's movies there's a mixture of the Old West and the new west. So expect some modern inventions such as motor vehicles and electric gadgets. In fact, Frog wants to open an electric shop in town if electricity ever gets there.

A good one for Gene Autry fans. Not bad for those who like Saturday matinée cowboy shows.
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6/10
A B-plus oater
ofumalow7 August 2007
Not to be confused with the later Roy Rogers film (THE Man from Music Mountain), this is very much a Poverty Row assembly-line oater, yet it's also better than most by far. For one thing, Autrey's foe isn't so much a villainous individual as a corporate usurper trying to suck the lifeblood by duplicitous means from an already-impoverished mining town that might or might not have a still-unmined gold reservoir. FDR would approve! For another, the musical sequences are frequent and often humorously eccentric. (I loved the number partially played on sleigh bells.) The whole thing is pretty tongue-in-cheek, with more singin' and yappin' than ridin' and shootin' until the last reel. I saw fhis on a cheap DVD collection (50 Gunslinger Classics) and it looked fine. I need to fill ten lines, right? Kerfuffle. Kablooey.
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5/10
Boulder Dam Scam
bkoganbing2 June 2009
This Gene Autry western, Man From Music Mountain uses the opening of Boulder Dam, later renamed Hoover Dam as the springboard for the story of this B film. The dam will now provide electric power for the residents of three states and some sharp operators are going to take advantage.

As this film is set in the modern west, it's a 20th century plot we're dealing with. Ivan Miller is the chief villain and he's selling real estate, lots in a ghost town to be precise. But the scam he's working is that with Boulder Dam in operation there will be power lines coming soon and there is a gold mine nearby. Oh, Miller's selling shares in that as well.

As Gene and Smiley Burnette have dealt with Miller before, they smell a rat. But in trying to outsmart him, they nearly outsmart themselves. You'll have to see Man From Music Mountain to know what I mean.

The feminine leads are Carol Hughes and Sally Payne who have traveled west and bought those lots to open a beauty salon. It was nice that Republic Pictures thought of giving Smiley Burnette a girl as well for a change.

The title song is the only new song in the film that was not written by Gene Autry, but it's the best number in the film. It's not a bad B western with a topical event to center the plot around.
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Good Autry Package
dougdoepke12 December 2013
Really good early Autry, an expert mix of story, music and action. I also learned what a difference electricity made to rural communities. We tend to take electric power for granted, but the movie is set in 1938, soon after Boulder Dam was built, and the bad guy is using the promise of electrification to scam Depression era folks. It's really worked well into the plot, better than any A-movie I've seen, and even produces a good laugh.

Anyhow, Gene gets to do some hard riding in order to thwart their plans, along with an action-filled mine tunnel finale. Frog has a fairly straight role minus the usual clownish humor. What a fine versatile performer he was. There's also a did-I-really-see-that novelty act that beats out tunes on about everything but rocks. Include too a lovely Carol Hughes as eye-relief from all the ugly guys, and you've got a near perfect package of Autry entertainment.
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7/10
A pretty good B-western--though the plot is a bit familiar.
planktonrules14 September 2012
A group of scoundrels decide to sell worthless land to naive settlers with promises that the land would be electrified and they'd make tons of money with their businesses. Instead, they know the new dam won't bring electricity there and the mine they sell them is worthless. When Gene Autry discovers this, he tries to help--but no one believes him.

There were a ton of B-westerns made in the 40s and 50s, so it shouldn't be any surprise that the plot to 'Man From Music Mountain" was VERY familiar. In fact, it had been used a year earlier in "Gunsmoke Ranch" and a few years later in "Pioneers of the West"--both Three Mesquiteer films and all three films from Republic Pictures. Still, this Gene Autry outing is quite good and worth seeing.

In this installment, Gene is joined by Smiley Burnett--one of the few sidekicks who could and would often sing in the films as well as the leading man. Smiley's comic songs are nice and I was strangely intrigued by the couple who made music using bells--you just have to hear it for yourself. Additionally, Gene is in his element and it's hard not to enjoy yourself when watching this film.
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6/10
"Sooner or later, these people are gonna find out the truth."
classicsoncall30 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
If you see enough Gene Autry films, eventually you'll catch the same themes recycled from one picture to another. I don't know if the ghost town gold swindle was utilized in one of Gene's earlier films, but the idea was played out again in 1941's "Under Fiesta Stars" (using a silver mine), and then again in 1942's "Stardust on the Sage". No matter who the leading cowboy was, virtually all of these early oaters were written strictly to formula, and the fans loved it because they kept coming back for more.

This time out, villains Scanlon (Ivan Miller) and Brady (Ed Cassidy) look to make a quick buck by enticing investors in Gold River property with the promise of electricity and water provided by the recently built Boulder Dam. To help the hoodwinked land buyers, Gene and Smiley conspire to trick the baddies into believing that there's newly discovered gold in the once tapped out Betsy Lee mine nearby so that they'll offer to buy the land shares back. In a reversal of fortune, the mine really DOES have an undiscovered vein running through it, and it's a down to the wire race against time for Gene to make the save for the locals.

I have to say, I got a kick out of a cool move that I haven't seen done in a Western before. When a couple of Scanlon's henchmen light out after Gene, he makes his way up into a tree branch and lassos them both off their horses with a single rope! The odds against that have to be astronomical, but Gene's a pretty remarkable guy and he makes it look easy.

There's another interesting visual treat later on in the story when Smiley's sweetheart Patsy (Sally Payne) shows off a new electric powered washing machine. Right there in bold letters is the name of the manufacturer - Maytag! At this stage of the game, I don't think there was a repair man yet.

As usual, there's a nice helping of musical offerings throughout the story, including a real catchy rendition of the title tune to open the picture. Then there's Smiley having some fun with a novelty song called 'She Works Third Tub at the Laundry'. However the one thing that caused me to rewind the film had to do with a line Gene delivered when Smiley questioned him about hydraulics. Smiley not knowing what the term could possibly mean, Gene offers this sage description - 'a shahoo with a hanalon bo-dan'. I couldn't have said it better myself.
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5/10
Weak Autry has too much music and not enough action
dbborroughs21 May 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Gene Autry takes on land speculators who use the promise of electricity from the then new Boulder Dam to lure people to an old ghost town promising them not only cheap land and cheap power but also a share in a gold mine. Less action and more songs than many other Autry films I've seen this is a rather bland affair. Frankly its one of the few films where it's the music that's the reason to watch since most of the drama involves Autry and others going in an out of offices and shops and such. Most of the battles are verbal with only a runaway wagon at the start and a shoot out at the end being anything of the physical sort. For me it's a take it or leave proposition, with the best way to see it is stumbling upon it rather than seeking it out.
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6/10
Lighter Touch And Lots Of Music
boblipton15 August 2023
Ivan Miller, having a played-out gold mine and the ghost town nearby on his hands, sells it off to people looking for a place to settle, claiming that the power company is going to be running a line from what looks like Hoover Dam. They're doing no such thing, so when Gene Autry wanders into town, he finds the people there desperate: no business, no money, and they're going to lose their land. So he subsidizes them with his own cash, and starts to fight Miller's swindles with his own, including a claim that a new vein has been struck in the gold mine.

There's not a tremendous amount of story here, but with a Gene Autry movie, that's no trouble. Just put in a few more songs and a xylophone solo! Polly Jenkins and Her Plowboys play an amusing medley, Smiley Burnette sings "She Works the Third Tub at the Laundry" and Autry contributes a few more serious tunes for a happy little effort. With Carol Hughes. Sally Payne, Lew Kelly, Dick Elliott, and, of course, Champion.
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5/10
Nasty Land Developers
StrictlyConfidential21 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"The Man From Music Mountain" was originally released back in 1938.

Anyway - As the story goes - Singing cowboy Gene Autry and his goofy sidekick Smiley Burnett star in this feature pitting cattle ranchers and real estate speculators. When it appears that there's gold on a ranch, a group of suspicious men begin selling claims in the local community. It takes Gene and Smiley to clear up the matter and save the day while also squeezing in a few songs, too.
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7/10
Autry fans like this one!
JohnHowardReid29 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"The Man from Music Mountain" (1938) is available on Platinum Disc in a rather dark print copied from 16mm TV. Athough Gene is prominently featured on ads and credits, the movie actually stars Smiley Burnette, who not only has a slightly larger role - he even partners Gene at the action climax - but the best of the musical numbers, namely "She Works Third Tub at the Laundry" (one of Smiley's own compositions).

What's worse for Autry fans is that Gene is very obviously doubled by a stunt expert zipping through the action at the start and at the finish. With all the songs and the comedy involving Smiley, Carol Hughes, Sally Payne, and a "cute" boy with buck teeth, the plot doesn't really get underway until ten minutes before the end title. At this breathless point, the heavies who have very cunningly presented themselves as Mr Nice Guys, suddenly fall out of character and commit a motiveless act of murder.

Not one of Gene's best Republic outings by any means, yet it's one that most people remember. You have only to say, "Boulder Dam", and people instantly recall the revived ghost town, where cashed-up but feeble-brained homesteaders buy worthless land plots from a sleazy duo of obvious confidence men, who promise a bonanza when electricity and water are connected from the Dam - in the never-never!
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4/10
The singing cowboy makes the ranchers happy.
michaelRokeefe7 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Gene Autry stars in this 1938 vintage musical western. Things get shady when crooked real estate developers 'hoodwink' poor honest cattle ranchers. Worthless mining stock is sold for the asking in a desert mining town. Gene and his sidekick Frog Millhouse(Smiley Burnette)put the kibosh on the white-wash, when word circulates that gold has been found. The guitar slinging cowpoke sings several tunes including "Love Burning Love" and "I'm Beginning To Care". Even Frog strains his vocal chords with "She Works Third Tub At The Laundry". Other cast members include: Carol Hughes, Ed Cassidy, Polly Jenkins, Ivan Miller and Sally Payne. All in all...the Autry movies are pretty much formulated.
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10/10
Gold In Gold River
frank412231 March 2020
Great songs by Gene and Ole Frog and a couple of beauty salon beauties in Carol Hughes and Sally Payne provide some great tunes of their own. Autry doing his best to slow down the scoundrels, well played by Ivan Miller and Ed Cassidy grub stakes the patsies until he can figure out what to do. Stalwart performer for Republic, Earle Dwire and some good stunt work make Man From Music Mountain a memorable Autry film.
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