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Streets of Laredo Poster

Streets of Laredo

RIDE TO WILD ADVENTURE...With The Texas Rangers And Their "Blonde Bobcat"!
1949 | 93m | English

(845 votes)

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Popularity: 0.5 (history)

Details

Texas, 1878: cheerful outlaw-buddies Jim, Lorn and Wahoo rescue spunky orphan Rannie Carter from rustling racketeers, then are forced to separate. Lorn goes on to bigger and better robberies, while Jim and Wahoo are (at first reluctantly) maneuvered into joining the Texas Rangers. For friendship's sake, the three try to keep out of direct conflict, but a showdown begins to look inevitable. And Rannie, now grown into lovely young womanhood, must choose between Lorn and Jim
Release Date: May 27, 1949
Director: Leslie Fenton
Writer: Charles Marquis Warren, Elizabeth Hill, Louis Stevens
Genres: Western
Keywords showdown, texas ranger
Production Companies Paramount Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024 (Update)
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
William Holden Jim Dawkins
Macdonald Carey Lorn Reming
Mona Freeman Rannie Carter
William Bendix Wahoo Jones
Stanley Ridges Major Bailey
Alfonso Bedoya Charley Calico
Ray Teal Cantrel
Clem Bevans Pop Lint
James Bell Ike
Dick Foote Pipes
Joe Dominguez Francisco
Grandon Rhodes Phil Jessup
Perry Ivins Mayor Towson
Hank Bell Texas Ranger Hank (uncredited)
Byron Foulger Artist Who Draws Reming (uncredited)
Robert Milasch Barfly (uncredited)
Name Job
Henry Bumstead Art Direction
Sam Comer Set Decoration
Natalie Kalmus Other
Leslie Fenton Director
Charles Marquis Warren Screenplay
Victor Young Original Music Composer
Wally Westmore Makeup Supervisor
Michael D. Moore Second Assistant Director
Archie Marshek Editor
Hans Dreier Art Direction
Bertram C. Granger Set Decoration
Elizabeth Hill Story
Farciot Edouart Visual Effects
Walter Oberst Sound Recordist
Louis Stevens Story
Ray Rennahan Director of Photography
Francisco Day Assistant Director
Mary Kay Dodson Costume Design
Harry Lindgren Sound Recordist
Monroe W. Burbank Other
Name Title
Robert Fellows Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

The Boys From Company D - Frontier Battalion. Streets of Laredo is directed by Leslie Fenton and adapted to screenplay by Charles Marquis Warren from a Louis Stevens and Elizabeth Hill story. It stars William Holden, Macdonald Carey, William Bendix and Mona Freeman. Music is by Victor Young and ... cinematography by Ray Rennahan. For fans of traditional Westerns this is as solid as a Brick Adobe Structure. A remake of The Texas Rangers (1936) of sorts, plot finds Holden, Bendix and Carey as three bad boys who get divided by circumstance, love and conscious. Two of them wind up in the Texas Rangers - the famed frontier law enforcement battalion - the other stays on the wrong side of the law. All roads lead to the day of reckoning... The production is the usual mixed bag of superlative location photography (Simi Valley/Gallup) and crude back projection so often seen in the 40s and 50s Oater releases, with Rennahan's Technicolor photography a treat for the eyes. Performances are assured because the three principal guy actors are given characterisations that suits them - Holden tough emotional anti-hero - Bendix a lovable and dopey toughie - Carey sly bad boy. Freeman is lovely but it's a dressage character, while Alfonso Bedoya is on hand for some stereotypical bandido villainy. At 90 minutes in length it feels a bit padded out until the two guys actually join the Rangers, so some patience is required during the first half. However, there is plenty of Western movie action within the story, some turns in plotting to grab the heart strings and a pleasing array of costumes and musical accompaniments to keep the senses perky. All told, it's just a thoroughly enjoyable Oater regardless of if you have happened to have seen the original version. 7/10

May 16, 2024