Pardon My Gun (1930) Poster

(1930)

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2/10
Pardon My Movie
stevehaynie27 March 2005
Pardon My Gun is an example of how not to make a movie. Thinking about it in the context of 1930, the singing cowboy in movies was still developing, but the proper way to make a movie had been figured out for years. This movie was wrong in every way.

There is supposed to be a plot, but it is pushed aside for what would normally be filler. There is supposed to be a hero and a heroine, but they are pushed aside for what would normally be filler. Let me explain...

The plot is supposed to be about Ted Duncan (Tom Keene) saving Mary Martin (Sally Starr) from having to marry the villain, Cooper (Harry Woods), to settle her father's gambling debts. That is simple enough. The problem is that if I were to use a stopwatch to log the time Tom Keene is on screen it would probably total less than five minutes out of the hour long film. Heroines usually have little screen time, but Sally Starr could have filmed all of her dialogue in half an hour including set changes.

Pardon My Gun starts off kind of slow then works to a dead stop. The scene where Peggy (Mona Ray) arrives never seems to end. Peggy is a 20's flapper who would normally be out of place in a western, but this was hardly a western. The characters keep talking to one another, but nothing is said that pushes the story along. Watching Lightnin' (Stompie) talk to his frog, Fuzzy, over and over does nothing for the plot. The big barn dance scene takes a great deal of time with music, dance, and comedy performances. The redeeming value to the scene is that it gives a glimpse of what vaudeville acts were like. For what it was, it should have been left for film shorts rather than part of what should have been a movie. As much as we would like to have the hero on screen all the time, those scenes with playful interaction among the minor characters can add to the charm of the movie. In this case that is all there is! The charm wore off immediately.

Yes, there is an exciting horse race, a fight scene, some shots, and some cowboy hats. It would have been nice to have more than a few minutes of western action. The MacFarlane brothers apparently worked the rodeos because they did roping and singing for this movie in flashy western outfits. They are the closest thing to the wild west of anyone in the cast. Abe Lyman was popular on radio in the 1930's. Seeing his band in cowboy outfits is fun, but hardly western in the context of music for cowboy movies.

I have seen silent movies with much more cohesive stories than Pardon My Gun. I have seen early Bob Steele and Ken Maynard films with much more heroic action. There were better films made before, during, and of course, after the time Pardon My Gun was made. I am certain that movie-goers of 1930 felt the same way.
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2/10
I'll pardon your gun, but not the fact this is a terrible movie
dbborroughs27 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Western comedy musical kids film mess. The main plot basically is about the hero trying to save the heroine from a foul villain. the trouble is that the people you think are the lead characters have almost no screen time. the rest of the film deals with either musical number or none sense with girl named Peggy who shows up and runs about with some kids, getting into trouble and such. Peggy was played by the 25 year old Mona Ray and until I looked it up on IMDb I wasn't sure how old she was since she plays and falls into that weird Hollywood kid/adult no age category. They seem both too old and too young for what ever age they are playing. She's not bad, but I don't know what she's doing as the lead. Actually I don't know what was really going on with this film since it seemed to bounce from pillar to post from thing to thing is a completely random and untethered way. I really had no patience.
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1/10
Um, Just Who Is the Leading Lady?
silentmoviefan19 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Mona Ray isn't the leading lady of this film.

At least she isn't supposed to be. However, she gets most of the screen time. She might have been considered cute then, but I don't think she was really.

You look at the title "Pardon My Gun" and you think it's a Western, but it really isn't.

The band dressed in cowboy clothes wasn't a cowboy band. I read somewhere that it was a regular band that competed with the Paul Whiteman band for supremacy.

Mona shows up fairly early in the film and dominates action from then on. She even sings a song that I guess is supposed to be a vamp song. I don't feel vamped.

A fair amount of this movie is a show at a dance in the barn. The dance, incidentally, is in honor of Mona Ray's character, Peggy.

Another thing about this movie I didn't like was how the cook was treated. He gets picked in just about every scene. He also has a pet frog that has several little frogs in the final scene of the film. That's how it ends.

Tom Keene, the leading man of the film is rescued by Peggy and two boys. That's not really leading man material in my opinion. He was still known as George Duryea then.

A year before this, he was in a Cecile B. DeMille film "The Godless Girl". See that one instead of this one. It's a much better movie!
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8/10
Not really a western, except barely, it's a musical and rodeo picture
morrisonhimself23 July 2015
"Fuzzy" as a name for a frog was funny, and was pretty darned clever, especially in a movie the "humor" of which was dismal. (Remember the dragon in Harry Potter named "Fluffy"?)

And perhaps the movie seems even worse than it really is because the print is miserable. At least the one I saw at YouTube is.

One rather funny scene was an almost direct steal from a Buster Keaton movie, and of course was much better done there, but here it still was cute.

And the next scene, when Ted kisses the diminutive Peggy, why it alone is almost worth the price of admission. Excellent. (Tom Keene, as I keep saying, is a very likable guy, even when he's named George Duryea.)

Although, I did write too soon: "Peggy" over-acted her response.

And the next bit of "humor," with a very good dancer, when she got to dancing, was just awful. It is the kind of stuff the previous reviewers were so negative about. With good reason.

Then "Peggy" sings. And does she make up for the silly bit earlier. Mona Ray is hardly a cowboy singer, but she is one heck of a night-club vocalist. She should have been in dozens of movies.

She's backed up by a pretty good band, the Abe Lyman Orchestra -- actually a VERY good band -- and, yes, all the musical numbers make this much more of a musical than a western, but let's judge it for what it is, an early musical in a sort-of western setting. Maybe a Western Swing setting.

There is more western-ness in some excellent rope tricks by the McFarlane brothers, who also impressed me with some equally excellent trick riding.

When we get to the denouement, we arrive with almost no violence, despite some villainy by the great Harry Woods, who had not yet achieved his plane as a fine actor.

Seriously, this is much better than most of those other reviews would lead you to believe. I suggest you relax and enjoy it for what it is, a rodeo-trick-riding-musical with a little western adventure and villainy thrown in.

The performers are generally very capable, even though the writers and director didn't give them much help.

Remember it's 1930, and sound movies were still young. Remember context, and I think you will actually enjoy the excellently titled "Pardon My Gun," even though there is not a gun, either.
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6/10
Al "Rubberlegs" Norman Does "Millenburg Joys"!!
kidboots2 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Sally Starr initially was called a pocket sized version of Clara Bow but she wasn't much of a threat to anyone - especially the night life, with her "early to bed, early to rise" mantra, "I'm going to make whoopee only when I'm a star" etc, needless to say that didn't happen. Even before "Pardon My Gun" Sally was classified as a fading juvenile.

This movie is a very early example (perhaps the first) of the musical western, none of the numbers being integrated into the very thin plot line which concerns the blossoming love between Mary (Starr) and ranch hand Ted (George Duryea who very soon would change his name to Tom Keene). All the songs are incorporated into a barn dance sequence (about half the film) which is really a showcase for Abe Lyman's Band who, next to Paul Whiteman's Orchestra, were the most popular band of the day and whose "Twelfth Street Rag" number provides solo spots for various musicians as well as Lyman himself on the drums.

Very bright spot in the movie is Mona Ray who as Mary's petite sister Peggy, arrives home from school to move things along. She seems to be a comedienne from the Winnie Lightner school and her funny clowning with horses and lassos in between an exciting horse relay race between Ted and villainous neighbour Cooper (boy, I wonder who will win??) is good. I also loved her jumper which features a football player at the front and a skull and crossbones at the back. Crazy!!! She also gets to sing a throbbing number "Deep Down South" for the barn dance and really belts it out. There is also a spirited tap dance from Ida May Chadwick, Al "Rubberlegs" Norman does his famous eccentric elastic dance (with a few variations) to "Millenburg Joys" no less and a dancer called "Stompie" adds pep to "St. Louis Blues". I'm surprised Sally, who did sing and dance in her few other films, wasn't asked to perform.

For an added extra there is also some fancy roping tricks and stunt riding by a couple of youngsters called the MacFarlane Brothers, probably the most entertaining people in the film.
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6/10
One for Mona Ray's legion of fans!
JohnHowardReid11 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
A remake of the short, Half Pint Polly, which director Robert De Lacey made earlier in the year 1930, with go-getting half-pint Mona Ray here repeating her role for an entirely new ensemble of players including Sally Starr and Tom Keene (here masquerading as George Duryea). Abe Lyman and his band and other musical turns are also prominently featured, as are two young kids, Hank and Tom Martin, who perform some amazing roping feats on horseback. Also to the fore is Harry Woods as the villain. All in all, it's a lively 67 minutes, and I must admit that I found all of it entertaining even though the director and the writers spend little time on the main plot but are constantly diverted down musical and other by-ways. I'll also admit that some of the by-ways are less interesting than others, and I'd also agree that Stompie's act with the frog is not only thoroughly boring but most definitely not welcome. On the other hand, Stompie is far, far less racially abusive than say, Mantan Moreland, let alone the nauseating Stepin Fetchit. True, too, this is Stompie's only movie, so his act does have a certain curiosity value. Both Pardon My Gun and Half Pint Polly are available on the one very good Alpha DVD.
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