The Cowboy and the Lady
The Cowboy and the Lady

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- 66/100 based on 1,733 votes

Poor Mary Smith can't go night-clubbing or have any other fun because any hint of scandal could damage her father's political career. She decides to rebel and convinces her two maids to let her go along with them on a blind date with some rodeo performers. She tells her date, Stretch, that she's a parlor maid and that she left home because her father beat her. The two fall in love and elope. Now Mary has a double dilemma: continuing her charade with Stretch and keeping her ma... (Full plot summary below)

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Full Plot Details

Poor Mary Smith can't go night-clubbing or have any other fun because any hint of scandal could damage her father's political career. She decides to rebel and convinces her two maids to let her go along with them on a blind date with some rodeo performers. She tells her date, Stretch, that she's a parlor maid and that she left home because her father beat her. The two fall in love and elope. Now Mary has a double dilemma: continuing her charade with Stretch and keeping her marriage a secret from her father.

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Movie Reviews

EmanuelLevy.Com - 9/10 by Emanuel LevyThis high-concept western comedy of 1938, starring Gary Cooper and Merle Oberon, is compromised due to the fact that half a dozen writers worked on the script, including S.N. Behrman, Dorothy Parker, and Anita Loos.
Ozus' World Movie Reviews - 9/10 by Dennis SchwartzCoop underwhelms with too much rube charm and drawling.
User Review - 10/10 by Elsy MI would advise you to get off your high horse and stop talking down to people, and the same goes for your smart aleck friends here . In the first place I don't see where you get off picking for President when you haven't the decency to treat a person like a human being, instead of asking people to sit down your table so that you can laugh at them, may be you ought to go out and find out what they think and feel, and what their needs are, and what you can do to help them. That's all that's going to count in the long run. If Judge Smith there wants to be President, he isn't going very far looking down his nose at people and thinking he is better than they are. Abraham Lincoln didn't have to do that. He turned out to be a pretty good President.
User Review - 10/10 by Paul DAnother of my favorite Gary Cooper movies! He is simply adorable!
User Review - 8/10 by Eric OWhat an amazing performance by Merle Oberon. Nice to have a strong female lead in a 1930s film. The character of Uncle Hannibal Smith (Harry Davenport) was a real surprise. This was my first Gary Cooper film.
User Review - 6/10 by Edith NDid Gary Cooper Ever Have Chemistry With Anyone? Wacky fish-out-of-water pairings have been a staple of comedy probably as long as there has been comedy. You take two characters with as little in common as possible and shove them together. Starting them out as hating one another is a popular choice, though they seem to have opted out of that one here. Actually, they toned things down a lot in this movie from how bad it could have been. Each person only gets one wacky instance of not knowing what's going on, and for the most part, they understand what the other person's life looks like. For one thing, maybe they've seen examples of it in the movies. After all, while dishwashers were still pretty uncommon in 1938, almost everything else in a rich person's house would have been familiar from escapist Hollywood comedies not unlike the one Our Heroes have found themselves in to begin with. Mary Smith (Merle Oberon) is the remarkably sheltered daughter of Judge Horace Smith (Henry Kolker), who has been planning for years to run for President. To that end, he has kept his daughter from the eyes of the press--and from having any kind of normal life, I'd add. As would her uncle Hannibal (Harry Davenport), who takes her out dancing. At a gambling den. So her father sends her to Palm Beach. One night, Mary sneaks out with the maids, Katie (Patsy Kelly) and Elly (Mabel Todd), to the rodeo, where they all hook up with guys. Mary encounters "Stretch" Willoughby (Gary Cooper). She lies and tells him that she's her own maid. They bicker a little, but mostly because she has a different attitude toward relationships than he, and then they run off and get married. Only the idea of his daughter in a runaway marriage does not bode well for the judge's chances for an important man's endorsement, and she's kind of told her husband that her father's a drunk and she supports her five sisters. A moment, please, to discuss Patsy Kelly. This is a moment longer than a vast majority of film buffs would take, of course, especially given that her last two movies were [i]Freaky Friday[/i] and [i]The North Avenue Irregulars[/i]. But after all, the one before that was [i]Rosemary's Baby[/i]. She was never a star; she seems to have played a lot of maids. However, she played maids with just the right amount of wackiness, maids stuck in ridiculous situations who couldn't give their opinion of the situation. (Except in [i]Freaky Friday[/i], where she gave her opinion all right.) She didn't mug for the camera the way a lot of movie maids--throughout the history of film--did; indeed, I might almost argue that she had the attitude expected of black maids at the time, not white ones. I think white ones were allowed to be more like equals to their mistresses. And it's certainly true that Mary would never have gone out on the town with a black maid. But Patsy Kelly? Just a good Irishwoman! The problem with the movie, of course, or at least the irreconcilable one, is that Gary Cooper and Merle Oberon do not seem inclined to run away together. She doesn't seem in the slightest interested in her, and while he gets a lovably goofy scene where he's playing house in the framework of his new home, the imaginary woman he's playing with shares more chemistry with him than the real Merle Oberon. My understanding is that, offscreen, Gary Cooper was a notorious ladies' man, but onscreen, he never seems much interested in anyone. He's perfectly content to be out on the plains with his horse. Similarly, Merle Oberon doesn't seem much pleased with her life, but she doesn't seem as though she'd be any happier running off with Gary Cooper. It rather seems as though it would just be a different kind of isolation. She's never become her own person, though, so I suppose it's possible that she won't be any more out of sorts in Galveston than she was in Palm Beach. Gary Cooper gets some kind of speech about how the politicians ought to stop patronizing him and get to know the Common Man for real, but I don't think most of what he took to be people laughing at him actually was. I think they were mostly just stupid. A little too stupid, honestly; it doesn't ring true that someone involved in national politics would be unaware that Montana was the Big Sky Country, not the Lone Star State. Anyway, not someone who wanted to stay in national politics long. It's generally taken as given in this kind of story that the rich are completely out of touch with the Real World. In some cases, this may even be true. Certainly it's reasonable to assume that Mary would be, all things considered. But I think there's only so dumb you can be in such a media-rich world. And there's certainly only so dumb you can be if you want people to vote for you. People get upset if you don't understand regional foods; failing to understand the difference between the Lone Star State and the Big Sky Country can cost you the race.
User Review - 6/10 by James HAMUSING ROMANTIC/COMEDY/WESTERN. ODD PAIRING OF JOHN WAYNE AND MERLE OBERON ALMOST WORKS. VERY ROUTINE, STARS DON'T CLICK. THEY SEEM UNCOMFORTABLE WITH EACH OTHER.
User Review - 6/10 by Sara FThe only thing that was really attractive about this film was Merle Oberon, probably one of the hottest actresses in the 30's-40's era. That and her skills as an actress, which are pretty damn good I would say. Other than that, it was a pretty cheesy and pretentious flick. Oberon saved it I guess.

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