The Paleface
Bob Hope stars in this laugh-packed wild west spoof co-starring Jane Russell as a sexy Calamity Jane, Hope is a meek frontier dentist, "Painless" Peter Potter, who finds himself gunslinging alongside the fearless Calamity as she fights off outlaws and Indians.
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- Cast:
- Bob Hope , Jane Russell , Robert Armstrong , Iris Adrian , Bobby Watson , Jackie Searl , Joseph Vitale
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Reviews
The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one
Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.
It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
Twice, Bob Hope's character('Painless' Peter Potter),forgets to hitch the horses to the wagon before cracking the whip, resulting in a 'drag race' for the person holding the reins.Jane Russell, as Calamity Jane, is busted out of jail by some agents of the governor, to hopefully round up some renegades who are selling rifles and explosives to the hostile Indians. If she succeeds, she will receive a full parson of her 10 year sentence. She's supposed to acquire a male partner, but finds him shot dead in his office. So, she runs into Hope, as a quack dentist, who makes merry with his patients: one of the comedic highlights. They soon marry and join a wagon train(not clear why?).Jane tries to make it look like Hope, not she, is a federal agent. She establishes his reputation as a dead eye gunslinger by secretly killing eleven Indians in a row, attributed to Hope, hiding behind a barrel. Also,secretly killed his opponent in a formal duel. I will stop here in my summary.Although it can hardly be considered a musical comedy, there are 2 notable songs. Hope sings "Buttons and Bows" while supposedly driving a wagon. It actually won the Academy Award for best original song! Then,saloon girl Iris Adrian sings "Meetcha 'Round the Corner". The sequel to this film: "Son of Paleface", is much more of a musical farce. It's generally rated as a more interesting film, and includes Roy Rogers and Trigger, as well as Hope and Jane.It's available at YouTube, in Technicolor.
Martha Jane Canary-Burke and Ernestine Jane Russell not only had the same middle name but also preferred to be known by it. It was therefore perhaps appropriate that one of them should have played the other in this comedy Western. Ms Canary-Burke was also portrayed in (among other films) "Calamity Jane" where she was played by Doris Day, but Ms Russell's interpretation is very different. Although the script of "Calamity Jane" tells us that the heroine is a tough frontierswoman she is played by the ultra-feminine Day (in a deliberate piece of miscasting for comic effect) as a sweet young thing who looks far more at home in a pretty dress than in her buckskins. Here she is certainly physically attractive (what character played by the fair Ernestine could ever be anything else?), but also rough and hard-bitten. The film opens with Calamity in jail, charged with some unspecified offence. She is offered her freedom if she can perform a task for the government, namely to discover who's been illegally selling guns to Indians. In this task she has the assistance of Peter "Painless" Potter who has been trying to earn a living out west as a dentist, despite an almost total lack of aptitude for that profession. (His self-awarded nickname is far from appropriate). Painless's professional incompetence is only equalled by his cowardice and general ineptitude, so he is perhaps not the most suitable companion for Jane in her mission. Nevertheless, Painless acquires the reputation of a crack shot and brave hero because Jane (who needs to keep her identity a secret) allows him to take the credit for her own deeds. For reasons too complex to go into here, Jane and Painless end up married to one another and (in the best romantic comedy tradition) they of course fall in love.As with most comedy Westerns, this one relies for a lot of its humour on its ability to send up classic Western situations. That duel between Painless and a local ruffian is a comic version of every Western in which a fearless lawman cleans up a lawless town, such as "Dodge City" and "My Darling Clementine" which had come out two years earlier. I am not particularly familiar with Bob Hope's work in the cinema, having previously seen only a handful of his films, but he was clearly a talented comic actor, and his sense of timing and his facial expressions both contribute a lot to the humour, making lines or scenes seem funny even when they would not seem very amusing on the printed page. He also receives good support from the lovely Jane Russell in only her third film. The film was made in Technicolor, but unlike many colour Westerns from this period and the following decade (such as, for example, "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon") it was not filmed on location but in a studio. As a comedy it has stood the test of time fairly well, except in one important respect. For a humorous film there is a surprisingly high death toll as Calamity ruthlessly guns down her enemies, with Painless taking the credit. With a few exceptions such as the aforementioned ruffian, most of the dead are Native Americans or, as they would have been referred to in 1948, Indians, who are mocked as comically savage villains, (and who can therefore safely be shot dead even in a comedy without anyone worrying). To say this is not anachronistic political correctness. By the late forties Hollywood's attitude towards Indians was starting to change, they were being portrayed with more respect and dignity (again "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" is a good example) and "Broken Arrow", that great pro-Indian Western, was only two years away. The way they are shown in this film is, to say the least, regrettable and the main reason I feel unable, despite some genuinely funny scenes, to give it a higher mark. 6/10
Bob Hope has a way with murder and mayhem. It just goes down extremely easy with the guy. Jane Russell is eye candy but is a one note actress if I've ever seen one. The villains are bowling pins to be knocked down and the movie doesn't have a racial tolerant bone in its body. Frank Tashlin understood how to stage his films with the most extreme cartoon-like aspects. Very broad but without depth. The final punch line, however, revealed a dark humor that was played out on the edges of the story. Whenever I look at a western these days I immediately try to imagine what David Milch could have done with it."What were you expecting? A happy ending?"
The first thing I noticed about this movie is that the plot is similar to that of The Shakiest Gun in the West, starring Don Knotts, which was made 20 years later. This worried me a little at first, because although I love The Shakiest Gun in the West, I didn't want to watch a movie that was almost exactly the same except that it starred a different person. However, I didn't let this stop me from watching the entire movie, and I was pleasantly surprised. Enough of the story was different that it didn't get boring, and of course Bob Hope lended his own acting style and sense of humor, so I ended up really enjoying it. In fact, in some ways I liked this movie better than The Shakiest Gun in the West. If you like Bob Hope movies, you'll probably enjoy this one. I know I sure did!