Frenchie (1950) Poster

(1950)

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7/10
Frenchie's back in town
banse4 November 2001
"Frenchie" (1950) is based loosely on the western classic "Destry Rides Again" only this time featuring a woman as the heroine. In her prime the shapely and gorgeous Shelley Winters as Frenchie Fontaine returns to her town and opens a saloon ,as a front, to avenge her fathers murder. Besides the usual gun play there is an old fashioned saloon fight when Frenchie tangles with another woman which is a hoot. Rounding out the cast of this technicolor co-feature are Joel McCrea, John Russell, Paul Kelly, Elsa Lanchester, John Emery and the ever dependable Marie Windsor.
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7/10
Shelly's wide hips fills the screen!
gkhege19 August 2019
Great little film. Shelly Winters is smooth, sexy and Mae West funny.The story line is typical of all westerns of the era. Revenge and broken hearts among all. John Russel makes it all work as the protector of Frenchie. No cursing or nudity
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5/10
enjoyable fluff
planktonrules4 January 2011
Despite a few gritty story elements, "Frenchie" is clearly a western that never takes itself all too seriously. Because of this, although you may not love the film, it is enjoyable and fun.

Frenchie (Shelly Winters) is a professional gambler and has just moved into a sleepy western town. Soon after buying the dying local bar, she is able to make a huge success of it--turning it into a gambling parlor. This irks some of the locals who want to keep the town clean and trouble-free, though they don't realize that she has ulterior motives. It seems her father was murdered many years earlier and the trail has led to this and an adjacent town. In the meantime, inexplicably romance blossoms between her and the Sheriff--a guy who wants to shut down the gambling establishment. There's more to it than this (including a murder) but frankly none of it ever seemed very serious. It was like the actors did it all with a wink in their eyes and by the end the viewer is left somewhat satisfied but not bowled over.

Strengths of the film include some nice acting, a crazy girl-fight and an unusual plot. The biggest deficit is the homespun comments that come flying from Joel McCrea. If I never heard another "I knew a man once who...." comment from him, I'd be a happy man!
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6/10
Self-consciously cute and winking, but still fun...
moonspinner5522 September 2010
Light western has New Orleans saloon queen Shelley Winters returning to her rustic hometown of Bottleneck to find the varmints who killed her father 15 years earlier--trouble is, she doesn't know who they are, and so opens a new saloon as a cover while she solves the mystery. Friendly enough, yet awfully silly second-feature with a plot that doesn't quite hang together. Still, Winters (with a devil in her eyes) fires off some fresh lines while utilizing her feminine wiles to charm the pants off the male residents. Joel McCrea is a bit sleepy as the story-tellin', wood-whittlin' sheriff, but the supporting cast is solid, particularly Elsa Lanchester as gal-pal the Countess. The Technicolor photography is bright and handsome, but the production (a jumbled mix of studio sets and location shots) is visually insecure. Nothing at all to take seriously, but enjoyable while it lasts. **1/2 from ****
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7/10
One Brassy Lassie
bkoganbing20 July 2010
Although most film historians rate Frenchie as at least a partial remake of Destry Rides Again, you look on the film credits and you will see nary a mention of Max Brand and his western novel on which the famous James Stewart-Marlene Dietrich classic is based. It gives someone by the name of Oscar Brodney credit for an 'original story and screenplay. The estate of Max Brand could have sued.

But other than the name of the town of Bottleneck and the name of Shelley Winters title character a whole lot has changed. Joel McCrea is the Destry character renamed Tom Banning who cleaned up the bad elements in Bottleneck, but then left after his girlfriend Marie Windsor decided to marry John Emery the banker. He's coming back now.

But also coming to town is Shelley Winters who as a little girl saw her father murdered by his two partners, one of them Paul Kelly the other a silent partner. She's the notorious Frenchie Fairmount of New Orleans, owner and operator of the most posh gambling palace in that town and she's now come to Bottleneck to take the trade from Paul Kelly who owns a rival palace in nearby Chuck-a-luck. Winters arrives with able assistants Elsa Lanchester and John Russell.

Separate things bring McCrea and Winters back to Bottleneck, but soon they find they've a lot in common. McCrea has the Destry character down pretty good, albeit he's a little older than when Jimmy Stewart and later Audie Murphy played him.

As for Shelley Winters, she's one brassy lassie and she holds her own in the chick fight that Destry is so famous for. Her's is with Marie Windsor.

One thing Frenchie does miss is the sure comedy touch of George Marshall from the 1939 version. Still this one holds up quite nicely and McCrea and Winters and the rest of the cast do just fine.
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6/10
The Scarlet Angel!
hitchcockthelegend6 November 2019
Frenchie is directed by Louis King and written by Oscar Brodney. It stars Joel McCrea, Shelley Winters, Paul Kelly, Elsa Lanchester, Marie Windsor and John Russell. Music is by Hans Salter and cinematography by Maury Gertsman.

Frenchie Fontaine (Winters) has sold her successful business in New Orleans and has come West to prosper further - or does she have an ulterior motive?

In spite of some on line sources proclaiming this to be a remake of "Destry", which is a considerably better film as it happens, it really isn't a copy. The similarities are for sure there, but it is its own entity and deserves to at least be judged as such.

We have a wonderful tried and trusted Western genre narrative thread where someone is out for revenge, only in this instance it's a foxy lady. Male suitors get in a tizzy about garnering her attentions, the bad guys potter about trying to avert suspicion - but do so badly, and there's some moral outrage from townsfolk who object to Frenchie's forthright money making success. While of course there's some truths to be born out - can open and worms everywhere type of thing.

It's not very strong on the page, that's for sure, but there's plenty in the production to enjoy regardless. Cast are good value for the roles as written, not that there's any great chemistry between Winters and McCrea, but as she snake hips her way around town, and he fronts up with cool as a cucumber swagger, it's easy to just buy into the frothery of it all. The dialogue is often deliciously suggestive, the costuming is high quality (Yvonne Wood), and when action decides to make an appearance it's competently staged.

Yet it's the cinematography that is the pic's best aspect. Maury Gertsman (Comanche Territory) is not a name that jumps off the page for cinematography notices, he definitely was a better purveyor in monochrome, but his Technicolor filters are excellent here. Then there's the gorgeous locales, where Buttermilk Country/Inyo National Forest please the eyes so much you wonder why these weren't used more often through the Western genre heydays?

As a serious Western genre fan I wouldn't be comfortable putting this forward as a must see for like minded souls. However, for McCrea and Winters fans - and actually John Russell ones as well - this is no waste of time. 6/10
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7/10
Shelley is adorable
HotToastyRag8 April 2024
If you (like the rest of the world) think of Shelley Winters as an overweight, frumpy, whiny old lady, rent Frenchie. I'm in the minority, I realize, but this is how I think of Shelley winters. She's cute as a button, has a fun and flirtatious personality, and believe it or not, she has a figure. Frenchie is a western with a thin plot, but it doesn't matter. Shelley is trying to find the murderer of her father, and Joel McCrea is the sheriff. Joel warns her with a story of a girl he knew who rode a wild horse for too long and got into trouble. "Don't worry about me, Sherriff. Anything I can get on. . ." she says tauntingly as she fixes his bow tie, "I can get off." How did that get past the censors? Perhaps the members of the Hays board were too distracted with Shelley's adorableness and glamorous saloon costumes to notice what was coming out of her mouth. What a figure (she used to share clothes with her roommate, Marilyn Monroe)! It's no wonder all eyes in the saloon leave the can-can dancers when she walks into the room.

Seriously, folks. I know Shelley Winters isn't a glamour queen. I realize no one remembers her as a great beauty or sex symbol. But I always think of her as she was in Frenchie. She's a bundle of fun, and I would have loved to have been her friend.
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10/10
Gary Cooper , Horse Operas & Westerns
OldieMovieFan28 December 2022
For just about all of his adult life, Gary Cooper counted Ernest Hemingway and Joel McCrea among his best friends. They were, one and all, serious ranchers and serious outdoorsmen. Cooper was fiercely competitive about his status in Hollywood, so much so that even though he and Clark Gable loved the outdoors, hunting and fishing, and got along famously, there was always a bit of a distance. As a writer, Hemingway wasn't competition; in acting, McCrea was so modest, even self-effacing, that Cooper apparently didn't feel "threatened." In numerous interviews over many decades, McCrea said that Cooper was by far his biggest influence and that he learned to "act small" for the camera by watching Gary Cooper.

Whether this study led to Joel's famously deadpan acting style is an open question; it is true that his style is immensely more effective on the big screen than it is on a tv or the modern technology screens - the difference is much more pronounced than for most other actors. Joel's wife Frances Dee said that her rancher husband believed John Wayne was the greatest film cowboy but Cooper was the greatest film actor of them all. Wayne isn't exactly deadpan, and Cooper mugs a lot so it's an interesting question about McCrea. His style seems much closer to that other longtime leading lady favorite, George Brent, than to Gary Cooper.

Regardless, McCrea is tremendously effective as a leading man. His style almost from the beginning of his career is that of a straight man, allowing scenes to be dominated by his leading lady. Yet McCrea had such a gigantic screen presence, and his delivery is so perfectly timed, that he is never overpowered. He never 'disappears.' Watch carefully his performance with Bogart in 1937's 'Dead End'; William Wyler is forced to resort to all sorts of camera tricks and stage sets to keep Bogie from being blown clear off the screen and the great director never does solve the problem.

No less actresses than Bette Davis, Ginger Rogers, and Katharine Hepburn - three of the greatest actresses of the Golden Age - spent many hours at the McCrea ranch, reading scripts with him while getting ready for various roles. All three considered McCrea to be one of the best actors they ever worked with. Many of his leading ladies, including 'Frenchie's' Shelly Winters, placed him high on their list.

It is an interesting fact that while McCrea never received any awards or much criticism beyond 'yeah good job,' over his career he had just as many box office hits as... Gary Cooper.

This film? It's a true 'horse opera,' in a way that 'The Searchers' or 'Ride the High Country' or 'The Wild Bunch' is not, but that 'El Dorado' is. And it's a 10, one of the greatest movies of its genre.

This 'horse opera' was done 3 times, at least, in a sort of theme and variations. Jimmy Stewart was magnificent as he mugged and gangly-ed through the role in the earlier version,'Destry Rides Again' also a 10 and one of the greatest movies of the genre. Not even Shelly Winters can compare to Marlene Dietrich at her most incendiary but, like McCrea, she doesn't bother with that splendid earlier performance. Instead she and McCrea completely reshape the characters and make them original and complete and brilliant.

Audie Murphy & Mari Blanchard, obviously lesser talents altogether than Stewart, Dietrich, McCrea and Winters, tried it again. While their version is clearly inferior and Audie & Mari don't have the ability to reshape the characters as McCrea & Winters abundantly do, it is a testament to the greatness of the story that even those B-movie actors could make an A film out of 1954's 'Destry.'
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6/10
Frenchie is Good Fun
daoldiges14 November 2023
Shelly Winters, Joel McCrea and Elsa Lanchester make for a solid and entertaining trio in this slight yet fun western/romance. Some of the scenery is beautiful, Winters looks lovely and most of the various colorful supporting characters all contribute something towards making this a generally fun and easy film to view and enjoy. The pacing is good and quick there's not a dull moment to be found. Sure, the story is slight but continually moving and the cat fight between Winters and Windsor is a hoot. Joel McCrea gives his usual understated performance and in the end loves wins out for Shelly and Elsa and all is good with the west again.
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5/10
Frenchie rides again....and again....and again......
mark.waltz22 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Until you get to see the catfight between the tough Shelley Winters in the title role and the lady-like Marie Windsor (cast against type), might think that this is a prequel to the classic western movie made twice already by Universal (best known for its Stewart/Dietrich 1939 version) and one that would be made again just a few years later under the name of "Destry". Indeed, this is told through narration of Frenchie's perspective, so hence the title change. There's no Tom Destry here, but he does appear with a different last name and not a newcomer to Bottle Neck. Winters' voice is heard in the beginning vowing revenge on the men who killed her father years before (with a chubby little curly haired girl seen in representation of her younger self), and years later, she returns as the companion to eccentric countess Elsa Lanchaster whom she once co-owned a successful saloon in New Orleans with. With the help of Lanchaster's pile of cash, Winters purchases Arthur Hunnicutt's saloon, and gets to meet the mastermind behind her father's death (Paul Kelly) whom she secretly intends to bring down.

Joel McCrea plays Tom Banning, the new sheriff in town, and Destry representation here, coming back to find old flame Marie Windsor now unhappily married to crooked John Emery, and determined to shut Winters' saloon down. This leads to the knock-down, drag out fight between Windsor and Winters, ending not with the famous bucket of water that Stewart threw on both women, but a clever substitution that ends quite differently than the Dietrich/Stewart fight in the 1939 remake. Winters doesn't get to sing in this version, but is pretty formidable in many other ways, and quite good, reminding the audience of her past as a movie vixen before she became a much talked about character actress who used weight gain to her benefit. The film is nice and colorful, filled with some great character performances (particularly Hunnicutt, Lanchaster and George Cleveland), but lacks the tense conclusion of the famous George Marshall film from just a decade before. But any movie based on the original source needs a formidable leading lady, and Winters fits that bill, making her a perfect replacement for Dietrich and outshining Mari Blanchard who played Frenchie just four years later.
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