5/10
Bland film with a few okay moments
29 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this film when I was a kid when television stations would use these type of films as fillers rather than the horrible infomercials they have today.

I thought I'd never see this film again until I was lucky (?) enough to purchase a DVD copy of it. The copy I got was in very poor shape, but since the film was so plodding it didn't really matter. I only wanted to see it for Gene Lockhart's role.

Bob Burns (known to radio as "The Arkansas Traveler"-sort of a Will Rogers type) is a mule owner named Sweeney Bliss (the name "Sweeney Todd" kept floating through my head every time someone said his name.) who somehow goes over to England to sell mules. Gene Lockhart plays a tractor company owner named Porgie Rowe who is trying to get the British to buy his tractors instead. Anyway, Sweeny goes over to England to convince them that mules have more power than tractors. With him he brings his annoying, social climbing wife Julie (Gladys George) and Julie's sister who has her hometown boyfriend and an Englishman fighting for her affections.

Based on Sweeney's claim that Great Britain would buy the mules, Sweeney's hometown sends every mule in town to England and it's up to Sweeney to convince them to buy them. After about 40 minutes into the film, I stopped caring why or how. Anyway, in the end, a British Marquis saves the day and the mules are sold and everyone lives happily ever after.

Bob Burns tries his best Will Rogers impersonation but is way too bland in comparison. Not enough Gene Lockhart and too much of Gladys George's annoying character. It's a shame they made a good character actress as Ms. George so unsympathetic. You spend the whole film wishing that Sweeney Bliss was REALLY Sweeney Todd.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed