Steamboat Round the Bend (1935) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
16 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
"I Ain't Even Seen the Old Moses!"
vpadgett14 January 2007
Steamboat Round the Bend is one of 3 collaborations between director John Ford and actor Will Rogers, and was shot in 6 weeks in the Sacramento River Delta.

The commentary by Scott Eyman, on the 2006 DVD, is worth having apart from the film. Eyman is author of two books on director John Ford: Print the Legend, and John Ford: The Complete Films. His commentary is among the very best I have ever heard.

Standout scenes: An exquisite wedding ceremony brings tears even to Will Rogers's eyes, and he is not acting. Anne Shirley as Fleety Belle is stunning in her delicate beauty throughout. The "New Moses," Berton Churchill, is memorable in his role as a full-of-himself blowhard, as he was playing the prosecuting attorney in the 1934 "Judge Priest," another Ford-Rogers collaboration. Another reprise from Judge Priest is John Ford's brother Francis, again playing a drunk with amazing aim when he spits. A final highlight is supercharging the Claremore Queen firebox with the Pocahontas Remedy.

Some viewers are disturbed by Lincoln Perry's (Stepin Fetchit) character, but more disturbing to me was the lassoing of Moses! Scott Eyman gives a superb analysis of the dull and slow character played by Stepin Fetchit—transcending the kneejerk politically-correct reaction of today, and placing Fetchit's characterization (and that of Hattie McDaniel in other films) in a larger context. He says "might I offer a modest proposal: Is it not now time to look past the stereotypes these actors portrayed-- and look at the art, and the warmth, with which they played them." Two other films with Rogers have the same charm and image of 19th Century American values; one is the Ford– Rogers collaboration Judge Priest, and the other, also released in 1935, is In Old Kentucky.

Commentator Eyman says "taken together, the 3 Ford-Rogers films (Judge Priest, Dr. Boles, and Steamboat) rank with Ford's finest achievements." After Rogers's tragic death, 50,000 people filed by his closed casket, and 12,000 movie theaters went dark for two minutes.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Steamboats are a comin'.
bkoganbing18 January 2014
The actual last film that Will Rogers shot was this one, Steamboat Round The Bend. Doubting Thomas and In Old Kentucky which were released afterward were actually shot earlier. This is also the third and last film in which John Ford directed Will Rogers.

In this film Rogers is pure and simple a medicine show conman who has a floating museum on the Mississippi. That's just to lure the customers in, his money is made selling his particular brand of snake oil guaranteed to cure everything under the sun and where it doesn't shine.

Rogers has a nephew however whom he loves dearly and said nephew John McGuire loves a mountain girl Anne Shirley. In fact he killed a man who tried to take her away and there's only one witness, a crazy old revivalist Berton Churchill.

John Ford loved using Berton Churchill when he could and his most famous use of him was in Stagecoach as the banker Gatewood skipping town with the bank's assets. He's so different here decked out in a bedsheet with a long beard and calling himself 'the New Moses'. But this guy is the only one who can get McGuire off as he's the only witness to the homicide and the only one who can swear it was self defense. So Rogers is hunting up and down the river for him.

Which brings him into a steamboat race with a bunch of other captains and particularly a rival of Rogers, Irvin S. Cobb. Ford indulges in a little inside joke with Cobb who was a country humorist like Rogers himself. Will's steamboat is the Claremore Queen and Cobb has the Pride Of Paducah. Claremore, Oklahoma and Paducah, Kentucky were where both men hailed from respectively.

The Rogers films and also films like Young Mr. Lincoln are John Ford at his best. Early Americana was a period Ford loved and a lot of loving care went into Steamboat Round The Bend.

By the way that snake oil that Rogers peddles proves to have some real value after all. More I can't say.

Rogers is at his folksy best, but I did love Berton Churchill as the 'New Moses' who's also running his own con game. Steamboat Round The Bend is a wonderful introduction to Will Rogers. We've never seen his like again and who knows if we ever will.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Will Rogers' swan song is Americana with a Dixie flavor
wmorrow5913 April 2002
This movie was shown recently as part of a major comedy retrospective at Film Forum in New York, but it seemed somewhat out of place alongside the likes of the Marx Brothers and Mae West. Steamboat Round the Bend is an interesting and unusual film with occasional comic touches, but it's primarily a serious tale with elements of melodrama. The story is set in the 1890s, and rich period atmosphere is one of the film's strongest assets. Although it's not based on a Mark Twain story director John Ford captures that Old Times on the Mississippi flavor better than a lot of movies based on Twain's books. Ultimately, this is a rich slice of Americana with a distinct Southern bias. That's all well and good if you have an interest in American history as depicted in Hollywood films of this period, but viewers expecting non-stop laughs will be disappointed. Those of us who grew up watching TV in the '60s might find that Steamboat Round the Bend is reminiscent of The Andy Griffith Show: it has the same relaxed tempo, presents a similarly benign view of Southern life (with the stark exception of one sequence, which I'll discuss in a moment), and has as its leading man a very low-key guy.

Here, as in his other talkies, Will Rogers ambles through the proceedings in a seemingly casual fashion. He was unlike any other star of his time -- or since, really -- and viewers who've never seen one of his movies might find him a little odd at first. Like his friend W.C. Fields, Rogers refused to rehearse his scenes and insisted on doing a minimal number of takes, even if he fluffed his lines, which he often did. His acting is so offhand, and so unlike the polished Hollywood performance style of his day, a first-time viewer might mistake him for an amateur who somehow wandered onto the set. Once you adjust to his naturalistic style, however, Rogers' special talent becomes obvious, and it's the other actors who start looking theatrical and phony. Aside from the lead the most memorable performances in this film are given by the growly-voiced Eugene Palette, who gets most of the laughs, and bright-eyed Anne Shirley, who holds her own with Rogers in their scenes together.

Steamboat Round the Bend is probably best remembered as Will Rogers' swan song, the last project he finished before his death in a plane crash, but like much of his work it never had a legitimate video release in the VHS era, most likely because of the presence of the notorious African-American comedian Stepin Fetchit. When several Rogers movies were released on video a few years back the ones featuring Fetchit were skipped, probably because modern day audiences are uncomfortable with the his "comedy relief," and for good reason: watching Stepin Fetchit can be very discomfiting. Anyone who seeks proof of Hollywood racism need look no further than films of the '30s in which he was featured. For those who haven't seen him, it might help to explain that despite the sound of his name and what it implies, Stepin Fetchit was Hollywood's favorite lazy simpleton, a woozy scamp with a slow-as-molasses delivery that's difficult to decipher. He comes off as heavily sedated, or even mentally retarded. Who could laugh at this sort of thing today? In recent years a few film critics and historians (including some African-American ones) have taken a more sympathetic view of Fetchit's career, and have made positive assertions about what he was able to accomplish within the confines of the demeaning roles he was given. Well, whatever. Where this movie is concerned I'll note simply that Fetchit's screen time is mercifully limited, and that the film has only a minimal amount of racial humor. In fact, about halfway through there is a remarkable sequence in which attitudes of the Old South are satirized in a surprising fashion.

To set the scene: Rogers (playing Dr. John), with the help of Anne Shirley (Fleety Belle) is attempting to raise money to pay legal fees to save his nephew from the gallows. They are sailing up and down the Mississippi in his old steamboat with a small crew (including Fetchit as Jonah), carrying what's left of the dummies from a defunct wax museum, charging riverfront locals to come look at the statues. When they reach one particular backwoods village, a mob of men advance carrying torches, pitchforks, axes, and a vat of tar, determined to destroy the boat and punish the wicked theater folk who have brought sinful playacting to their community. Dr. John is slow to recognize the danger, so much so that our credulity is strained, but it's striking to note that Jonah appreciates the danger instantly: he knows a lynch mob when he sees one. Dr. John is eventually able to pacify the mob when he invites the men onto his boat, and convinces them that the wax figures are "educational." This impressive word plus the sight of the dummies in their tatty costumes reduces the locals to a state of slack-jawed submission. The punchline comes when Dr. John gives the signal to raise a curtain, revealing a moth-eaten statue of Robert E. Lee astride his horse. At another command, the figure salutes stiffly, and the now-awed rednecks salute in return. For the finale, Jonah, sitting at the calliope, plays "Dixie" and sings along raggedly in a screechy, off-key voice as the scene fades out. It's a startling sequence, bitingly satirical in a way we don't expect, and perhaps not in the way the filmmakers intended. At any rate, this film is well worth a look for viewers who are historically-minded, curious about Will Rogers, or interested in the mass media's presentation of race relations.

P.S. Summer 2006: I'm pleased to add that this film is now available on DVD, in a box-set with three other movies Will Rogers made during the last year of his life.
24 out of 28 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Ford's Last Film with Will Rogers is Worth Checking Out
Kalaman4 December 2003
Warning: Spoilers
Possible Spoiler.

1935 was a great year for John Ford. He made three successful and well-made pictures: "The Informer", "The Whole Town's Talking" and "Steamboat Round the Bend". Today "The Informer", the film that gave Ford an overwhelming critical acclaim at that time, is badly dated while both "Whole Town's Talking" and "Steamboat Round the Bend" have emerged as two of the director's unjustly neglected and loveliest classics.

Of the two, "Steamboat", Ford's last film with Will Rogers, is the most exciting, a sublime & enjoyable Americana set in the 1890s, written by two of Ford's frequent collaborators, Dudley Nichols and Lamar Trotti, based on the novel by Ben Lucien Burman. Rogers plays Doctor John Pearly who sells a high-proof concoction called "Pocahontas Remedies" along the Mississippi River. He is also the captain of the broken-down riverboat "ClareMore Queen", piloted by his nephew Duke (John McGuire). One day, Duke seeks the help of his uncle when he finds himself in trouble with the law. He has been accused of killing the man who attempted to rape his girl Fleety Belle (Anne Shirley), a swamp-girl who has run off from her family. Duke is sentenced to hang and John exhibits an abandoned wax museum along the river in order to raise the appeal. When the appeal fails, John carries his boat along the river in search of New Moses (Berton Churchill), the only person who allegedly witnessed the scene. John finds his way blocked by a great steamboat race and must enter the race to get down the river. All kinds of crazy things happen as the steamboat, with all its gusto, rushes to save Duke from hanging. And the great supporting players Stepin Fetchit, Francis Ford, Eugene Pallette, and Irving Cobb are all superbly cast in this exhilarating adventure.

There is a memorable near-lynching that anticipates the one in "Young Mr. Lincoln", where John stops a lynch mob and invites them to his wax museum which features figures that range from John the Baptist to Napolean to Old King Abraham.

As critic Andrew Sarris has aptly noted, "If 'Judge Priest' represented Ford in a state of transition in 1934, 'Steamboat' represented Ford in a state of fruition...Ford and Rogers had finally attained a marvelous rapport between their respective styles, thus achieving a mature exuberance virtually unique in the American cinema."

Sadly, Rogers died in a plane crash before the film was released. "Steamboat" remains to my mind, second only to "Judge Priest", their greatest film together.
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
This River Runs Deeper Than You'd Expect
LynxMatthews16 November 2004
It's funny to think that when this film was made, it was about a time in the early 1890's, only 35 years earlier than it's production. Now we are looking back almost 75 years at the film itself. I expected a light wacky comedy, but there is definitely a well-rounded plot here revolving around murder in self-defense. Will Rogers gives a very skilled and sympathetic performance, but some of the more hilarious gags in this are gifts from the writers.

The sheriff/preacher's wedding speech goes right up there with Donald Sutherland's in "Little Murders" for sheer comic value.

A great throwaway gag involves the search for the New Moses, when they accidentally run into the New Elijah instead!

Steppin Fetchit, while no great symbol for African Americans, actually plays against his lazy type in this, and his hard work and quick thinking actually save the day on a couple occasions.

A great (and uncommon) saw-playing musical interlude!

To me, the only major weakness was Ms. Shirley as the ingenue. She was quite likable, but did not seem to have lived as hard as her character was supposed to have.

All told, a winner of a film for fans of the 1930's view of the 1890's.
9 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Quite enjoyable and one of your last chances to see Willl Rogers...
planktonrules18 September 2010
This film debuted just after Will Rogers was tragically killed in a plane crash. Because of this, "Steamboat Round The Bend" is one of the last chances anyone had to see him in film. While it's not among his best films, it's pretty good and well worth seeing.

Rogers plays a 'snake oil' salesman (a guy who sells fake cure-all medicines) has been saving for some time to buy a dilapidated old steamboat. His plan is to run it with his nephew, Duke. However, when Duke arrives, he tells his Uncle that he's just killed a man in self-defense and has brought a woman from the swamps with him. Uncharacteristically, Rogers' character is nasty and voices a strong prejudice against swamp people (no, not the comic book character but people who live in the swamplands). Considering what a nice guy he was in his other films AND his famous quote ("I never met a man I didn't like"), this prejudiced attitude DID seem pretty strange--as did his playing a bit of a swindler.

Fortunately, his character DID improve as the film progressed. Later, instead of hating this girl (Anne Shirley), he felt sorry for her and cared for her when her beloved was jailed for this killing. However, what is Rogers to do--as the Nephew is due to be hung AND he's made a bet to beat a rival captain in the big race? tune in and see for yourself in this gentle slice of Americana.

As I said above, Rogers' character wasn't nearly as sweet as he'd been in other movies. But he was likable enough AND the rest of the cast did a good job--as too often in the past the film was all on Rogers' shoulders--here it's a nice ensemble cast. Berton Churchill (in the weirdest role of his career), Eugene Palette and Steppin Fetchit are on hand to provide some nice support--and Fetchit's a little easier to take as his horrible stereotypical act isn't as obvious and offensive as usual. Overall, well worth seeing.
8 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
No matter how silly the story, a Will Rogers film is always a fine time!
mark.waltz26 September 2011
Warning: Spoilers
The story of "Steamboat Round the Bend" mixes both comedy and melodrama in a package so entertaining, it is an added sadness to know that this was the last film the legendary Will Rogers would ever make.

After a dramatic opening where Rogers' nephew (John McGuire) confesses to murder and Rogers takes in young Ann Shirley after she manages to avoid an arranged marriage by her nasty father (Charles Middleton), the film moves into a parade of Rogers' legendary witticisms while Rogers and Shirley rush to save McGuire from the gallows. In the meantime, Rogers promotes his museum ship while getting ready for a race with rival ship's captain (Irving Cobb). A lot happens in 80 minutes, but what is always best in a Will Rogers film is waiting for his next sardonic comment on society and the action surrounding him. Almost 80 years after his death, he is still the epitome of the "every man", as evidenced by the success of the Broadway musical "Will Rogers' Follies" which devoted itself to sustaining his legend.

Young Anne Shirley, just 17 at the time this film was released, shows a maturity beyond her years. This moved her past "Anne of Green Gables" towards playing Barbara Stanwyck's daughter in "Stella Dallas" and into a string of entertaining RKO programmers. The romantic story between Shirley and McGuire is never as interesting as Rogers shuffling around the various dummies to organize his museum, but that is a minor quibble. Some people may have a major quibble with the presence of Stepin Fetchit as a stereotypical slow-moving servant, but he still comes off quite likable in spite of being used as the butt of a lot of tactless jokes. The film wraps up its two plots a bit quickly, but what happens before makes the film overall worthwhile, particularly the lovable personality of the legendary Will Rogers who must be making God laugh to this day.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
"There's mighty fine people in the swamps"
Steffi_P29 June 2011
Will Rogers was typical of popular 1930s stars, in that he wasn't a magnificent actor, but he was a great character. No-one wanted pure realism or chameleonic talent from someone like Rogers, just that he be himself in whatever role he assumed. Looking at a selection of his movies, you can see he took on a variety of parts, never literally playing the same person twice. But whether he was a country farmer, a small town doctor or, as here, a steamboat captain, he was always the same Will Rogers; an earthy, warm and trustworthy father figure, gently overseeing the lives and loves of the younger generation with the eye of experience. Such was the strength of his personality that he was able to break out of the character actor bracket and carry a movie on his own as an unconventional but well-loved lead man.

And a Will Rogers picture was typically populated with a fine crop of colourful supporting players. Anne Shirley and John McGuire ostensibly play the romantic leads, but their performances seem drab amid the likes of Eugene Palette and Stepin Fetchit. A few of these co-stars are deserving of special mention. First is Irvin S. Cobb, actually an author with few acting credits, but his cartoonish face makes him a great pompous villain. Then there is Berton Churchill, who normally played rather stern authority figures, here giving us the brilliant creation of a top hat-wearing, cigar-chomping preacher. Churchill's every line and gesture is a hilarious send-up of the type, and his is surely the funniest performance here. And finally we have Francis Ford, brother of director John. Francis played numerous bit parts for his little brother, almost always as a comical drunkard, but this is probably his most prominent performance. Sadly an alcoholic in real life, he does one of the few truly funny drunk acts to be seen in classic Hollywood, and it's lovely to see him getting the chance to shine he deserves.

It's no wonder really that these cheeky character actors come to the fore in Steamboat Round the Bend, because as a director Ford Junior always gave a lot of weight to such smaller players. While he didn't tend to do much screen writing, would often allow the comic relief scenes to play out with adlibbing, or simply hold the camera on the comedy actors for that little bit longer, such as that great shot of Churchill sauntering off after his first meeting with Rogers. Meanwhile he would shoot the more plot-orientated scenes with the minimum of fuss, making them seem brief and hardly relevant. This is not to say that Ford is unable to bring out the deeper emotions of a story. His masterfully economic expression allowed him to keep the human story going during simple exposition. For example, as the McGuire character explains his unintentional killing of a man, Ford keeps Anne Shirley, mutely hunched forward, clear in the background. Another poignant Ford trademark is the heartfelt singsong, in this case "Home Sweet Home" sung by the inmates of a prison. Like the improvised comedy scenes, Ford was willing to linger over sequences like this for the sake of tone over story.

Steamboat Round the Bend is among the best of all Will Rogers pictures, although it is sadly one of the last. By the time it reached theatres the actor had been killed in a plane crash. Still, even if his life hadn't been cut short, the early-to-mid-thirties would probably have been his career peak. The public's love of homely, irregular movie stars that had flourished in the depression was soon to dwindle. The age of such lively character actors was soon coming to an end as well, as audiences wanted more realism and more focused story lines, as opposed to the variety-show style movies that characterised the early talkie era. Still, touches of this older style would continue to crop up, in the pictures of John Ford up until the 1950s, and even today in, say, the Coen Brothers' more oddball productions, and this is very encouraging to see. And yet, nothing can ever replicate the experience of going back to these old classics, an age when personalities ruled the screen.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Minor Ford.
MOscarbradley1 September 2020
Minor Ford at his most homespun and with Will Rogers in the lead they don't come much more homespun than this piece of Americana. Of course, minor Ford is still pretty good when set beside some of his rivals. This one is almost a companion piece to "Judge Priest" with Rogers' steamboat captain racing his boat against a rival while trying to clear his nephew from a charge of murder. Rogers is excellent and there's a fine supporting cast of Ford regulars but as the young lovers Anne Shirley and John McGuire are terrible. Still, it's richly atmospheric, at times verging on the poetic and if you think the scenes with Stepin Fetchit are more than a little racist try to remember when it was made and the period in which it is set and put it into some kind of historical perspective and be thankful we are living in more enlightened times. The race itself, (and it's a long time coming), is superb.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Historic, Nostalgic with Tenderness: genuine America
zootjim24 May 2006
I first saw this movie with my grandfather fifty years ago. Our small-town theater was having classic movie month and Will Rogers was my grandfather's favorite. For a ten-year old boy this movie made a lasting impression of the freedom and romance once available to us in America but now lost forever. Aside from the instantly believable story line about an uncle and his orphaned nephew going together to buy an aging Mississippi River steamboat the pathos applies superbly to this day. The young man meets a girl, gets in a fight over her and is in trouble with the law. The kind uncle moves heaven and earth to help his deceased sister's son. The characters are all period and realistic according to my grandfather who knew people just like that. America was a religious nation in those days, especially the South, so the use of religious terms in common speech is authentic. The thing to watch for in this film is the steamboat race. In 1935 the steamboat's day was already past, and to find that many operating steamboats to make the film must have been a task. Then...listen closely to the melodious whistles. Different pitches and echoes, made by live steam. Steam power built modern America, and the sound of a live steam whistle, once so common, is all but vanished now. I have to yield to my grandfather's opinion of the movie, not having lived in those times myself, and he said it was quite authentic, down to the use of pitch, kerosene or whatever was handy to get more speed out of the engines. The fact that a regular person felt he could go speak to a state governor in person is also part of our American heritage. There was not the class distinction (at least among whites) that there is today. This movie is a priceless treasure, and youngsters definitely need to see it. Anne Shirley, swamp girl, becomes sweet because she admits she is won over by the tenderness of Uncle John.
12 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
fun race deadly hanging
SnoopyStyle12 September 2020
Snake oil salesman Doctor John Pearly (Will Rogers) makes a bet with Captain Eli to race steamboats. He has to fix up an old steamboat. He hopes to have his nephew Duke as the pilot. Duke brings along swamp gal Fleety Belle who was abused by her family. He had killed a man. It's self-defense but the only witness is preacher The New Moses who has since gone away. Following John's advice, Duke turns himself in. He is set to hang unless the preacher is found.

There is a basic structural issue with the premise and the movie. The movie wants to be a fun, light-weight, silly steamboat race. On the other hand, nephew Duke is threatened with hanging and there is supposed to be danger. These two things often do not mix well together. For example, they need to find The New Moses who is often found on the river. One would expect John to be piloting his steamboat up and down the river spreading the word and looking for the preacher. Instead, he ends up spending his time racing and by happenstance run into the preacher. The race is plenty fun and then we're reminded that Duke is about to be hanged. It's a wacky hanging party.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Rogers' Last and One of His Best Movies!
JohnHowardReid6 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Copyright 6 September 1935 by 20th Century-Fox Film Corp. New York opening at the Radio City Music Hall: 19 September 1935. 7,350 feet. 81 minutes.

COMMENT: Presumably all the faults in the screenplay derive from the original novel in which the long hand of coincidence animates just about every turn of the plot, including the thrilling climax in which no less than five real steamboats engage in a truly spectacular race.

Fortunately, director Ford paces the action with such celerity, the audience has little time to ponder the implausibility of such a remarkable array of devious plot turns in which just about all the characters, except Hobart Bosworth, are periodically involved.

When not yielding center stage to the steamboats themselves, all eyes of course are focused on Will Rogers. This was his last film, rushed into release just a month or so after his death on 15 August 1935, when the private plane piloted by his friend, Wiley Post, crashed near Point Barrow, Alaska.

Rogers is great. So is the captivating Anne Shirley (never mind that she is far too refined for a swamp girl), while Eugene Palette heroically manages to bring credibility to a sheriff whose duty to his office is, to say the least, rather off-hand.

By way of contrast, John McGuire's dull hero signally lacks charisma, while colorful Berton Churchill tries far too hard; but, fortunately, despite their super-importance, their actual roles are small. It's primarily Rogers' movie. Only the movie's unstinting production values – led of course by the steamboats themselves – outclass him.

AVAILABLE on an excellent 20th Century Fox DVD.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Will Rogers Sure Seemed Nice Part III
davidmvining3 December 2021
Endings are important, and even in light comedies with adventure undertones, those endings end up helping to shape everything that came before it. I was a bit flustered by the first hour or so of John Ford's Steamboat Round the Bend, finding things to like but frustrated at the extraordinary loose nature of the telling, but the ending brought everything together in rip-roaring fashion. Will Rogers' final filmed role before his airplane crash that killed him ends up being a fancifully entertaining trip down the Mississippi.

Rogers plays Doctor John Pearly, a conman selling a tonic he says comes from a recipe by Pocahontas herself, but which is literally just rum, to people on the river as he makes his way up to find his own dilapidated riverboat, ready for him to refurbish and put back on the water. When he first arrives at his new home on the river his nephew Duke (John McGuire) arrives with a swamp woman in tow, Fleety Belle (Anne Shirley). Duke had killed Belle's father in an act of self-defense after they had been seeing each other secretly for some time, but the only witness to the events that could possibly clear his name is New Moses (Berton Churchill), a bearded temperance preacher who travels up and down the river, converting wayward souls. However, before anyone can find New Moses, the law arrests Duke, and John forces Belle's family away by lying and saying that Duke and Belle have married.

This was a strong start, and then the movie just kind of begins to flounder for a while. John takes Belle on his refurbished boat up and down the river nominally looking for Old Moses, but they take on a traveling museum of sorts, filling the hold with mannequins of famous historical figures with a lot of talk about how to Americanize the figures to help attract customers. Some small adventures, misunderstandings, and scrapes dominate the middle section of this film around the museum, and while most of it is very lightly amusing, it feels like the movie itself has gotten lost. There's suddenly no urgency about Duke or his plight. It's kind of odd.

After a brief marriage ceremony to make John's lie of Belle and Duke a reality, Duke gets taken down to Baton Rouge for execution. John ends up chasing after Duke and gets caught up in a riverboat race, forced to join as the only way to go further south on the Mississippi and developing a rivalry with Captain Eli (Irvin S. Cobb), pilot of another steamboat. It's here where the movie reclaims its focus and, more entertainingly, a strong sense of energy as the film becomes a race against the clock on two different fronts, the literal race against the other steamboats and the need to get to Baton Rouge before Duke's execution. They may not have much more of a plan than that, but they have to go. In swift order, though, they encounter New Moses preaching on the side of the river, rope him in (literally), and speed off, burning more and more of the riverboat's ephemera to fuel the engines from the lifeboats to, as the race becomes more desperate, the mannequins themselves. Watching New Moses in all of this is a treat, and when he discovers that John has a supply of the Pocahontas cure all on board, also that it's just rum, he has the idea of throwing them in to heat the engine and propel them faster. It's kind of wild stuff, and it's a very fun comedic crescendo for the whole picture.

The film was apparently cut down by about twenty minutes after Will Rogers' death, mostly in the ending, forcing a final shot of Rogers as John reclining on the deck of his boat. It's a nice moment for the character as well as the actor.

This is the first time that Rogers worked with Ford where it felt like Rogers was actually playing a character instead of just himself, and it's a nice change of pace. He doesn't dominate the film like he does in the other two films (Doctor Bull and Judge Priest) to varying degrees of success, allowing the story to play through without completely overrunning everything else. He's the central character for sure, but he allows space for Annie Shirley, as his primary counterpart, to shine in bright and cheerful fashion.

It really could have used a rewrite in its middle section, a section that dragged the film down a good bit, but that ending is really something else, a madcap race with real stakes and cut quickly for an all around good time. It really won me over by the end.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Steamboat rivalry
TheLittleSongbird23 July 2020
Really been an admirer of John Ford, have been for a decade or so now, whether the film in question is Western or not a Western (Ford was versatile and encompassed a lot of genres). The story did sound like it had the makings of an interesting film if done correctly. There is some great talent in the cast, Will Rogers was always watchable and Anne Shirley and Berton Churchill (who Western admirers will recognise from 'Stagecoach'). Have always been a non-fan of Stepin Fetchit and have yet to see anything of his to convert me.

'Steamboat Round the Bend' is very well done on the whole and has a lot of great things. Of the three Ford and Rogers films, the other two being 1933's 'Doctor Bull' and 1934's 'Judge Priest', this is the best. It's not one of Ford's very best but is one of his better and most interesting earlier films. 'Steamboat Round the Bend' is also quite moving with it being Rogers' last film before his tragic premature death after filming and before release.

Am going to start with the great things. is a well made film, with handsome scenery and the photography (as always for a Ford film) is beautifully crafted and with the right amount of atmosphere. The music also fits nicely, not going for the sweeping, syrupy approach but instead a lighter touch that gels with the film's tone well. Ford directs with ease, steel and delicacy. The script is gently light-hearted at times and tender without being cloying or too sweet, the intensity of some parts keeps that from happening without being tonally jarring.

The story lacks the edge that Ford would have in his later pictures but can be quite moving and has a sweet, elegiac quality at times. There is some grit that stops it from being over-sentimental, not easy to do for the subject 'Steamboat Round the Bend'. The action is great fun and thrills. Rogers is warm-hearted and likeable even if his character takes some getting used to. Shirley is fetching and affecting and Churchill is superb as the most interesting character after Rogers' Pearly.

Having said that, as said Pearly is not easy to warm to to start with and maybe the pace could have been a little tighter to begin with.

Fetchit was the one big fly in the ointment though, he is used at minimum thankfully and is not as stereotypical as in his other films (with the approach to his character being more tasteful than it was in 'Judge Priest') but to me he was still out of place and annoying.

Overall though, very good. 8/10
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Steamboat Round the Bend(1935)
robfollower26 August 2020
D: John Ford. Will Rogers, Anne Shirley, Irvin S. Cobb, Eugene Pallette, Berton Churchill, John McGuire, Stepin Fetchit, Francis Ford, Pardner Jones, Charles Middleton. Enjoyable Ford/Rogers period piece of steamboat captain (Rogers) who pilots a ramshackle floating waxworks museum, from which he also dispenses highly alcoholic cure-all medicine. Shirley is particularly good as swamp girl taken in by Rogers. Churchill shines in comic role of river prophet "The New Moses." Climactic steamboat race is a gem. Released posthumously after Rogers' tragic death.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Last Film Will Rogers Acted In
springfieldrental12 June 2023
Movie actor, radio commentator and newspaper columnist Will Rogers made three movies with director John Ford. His droll wit and dry humor on people and worldly events were on full display for many years, making him one of the country's most popular observers of life. When he wrapped up filming September 1935's "Steamboat Round the Bend," it was sadly his final movie. A fatal aviation crash in Alaska ended Rogers' life at 55.

"I never met a man I didn't like," Rogers famously said. "I am so proud of that, I can hardly wait to die so it can be carved." His phrase became prophetic when Rogers decided to accompany fellow Oklahoman and veteran aviator Wiley Post on a whirlwind aerial tour of Alaska to write newspaper columns about the large United States territory. On August 15, attempting to navigate in bad weather flying into Barrow, Post's plane nosedived into the tundra, killing both Rogers and the pilot.

Ford was devastated by the news. The director had asked Rogers to join him on his sailboat to Hawaii departing California for a relaxing ocean voyage. Rogers respectfully declined, writing he needed fodder for his papers' columns. The newly-minted 20th Century-Fox was about to release Rogers' previously-filmed movie, "In Old Kentucky," when the news emerged on his death. The studio realized Ford's latest motion picture was much better, and decided to release "Steamboat Round the Bend" as a testimony to Rogers' greatness.

Roger's career in cinema was long. Beginning in 1918, he starred in 48 silent movies before transitioning to talkies, making 21 feature films. His homespun humor was perfect for sound, where multitudes lapped up his movies, including 1933's "State Fair" and the three Ford films, 1933 "Doctor Bill," 1934 "Judge Priest" and his last one, "Steamboat Round the Bend." Rogers was Hollywood's top box office star from 1933 until 1935, according to the Motion Picture Herald. Rogers bought the rights to Ben Burman's 1933's novel, 'Steamboat Round the Bend,' so he could play Doctor John Pearly, a huckster salesman for a cure-all drink whose ambition was to own a steamboat. Pearly realizes his dream alongside his nephew, Duke, but the young man killed someone while defending his girlfriend, Fleety Belle (Anne Shirley). Searching for the only witness to the killing to prove Duke's self-defense innocence, Pearly finds a preacher, New Moses (Benton Churchill), who vouches for the nephew's claim. Only a race on Dr. Pearly's steamboat to the site where Duke's hanging is about to take place can save the young lad.

In a 1968 BBC interview, Ford claimed Rogers ad-libbed much of his dialogue. "He'd read it and memorize the script and when the time would come he'd say it in his own words and they were much better than what a writer wrote because no one could write for Will Rogers. He was Will Rogers. He was more human than all the writers in the world, and it was said in his own way, which was good." Ford filmed Rogers waving to the camera at the concluding scene as written in the script. The studio felt the shot would be too emotional for viewers so soon after the actor's death. They substituted for one that abruptly ends, showing Rogers sitting on the deck of his steamboat looking in the distance.

Wiley Post's plane 'Winnie Mae,' the one the aviator set multiple records, belongs to the Smithsonian in Washington, D. C. at the National Air and Space Museum.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed