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Broncho Billy Puts One Over (1914) Online

Broncho Billy Puts One Over (1914) Online
Original Title :
Broncho Billy Puts One Over
Genre :
Movie / Short / Western
Year :
1914
Directror :
Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson
Cast :
Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson,Marguerite Clayton,Carl Stockdale
Type :
Movie
Rating :
6.3/10

Broncho Billy is a foreman on Roger Newman's ranch and is in love with his daughter, Mae. Newman finds this out, discharges Broncho Billy and sends Mae to visit her brother in the east. ... See full summary

Broncho Billy Puts One Over (1914) Online

Broncho Billy is a foreman on Roger Newman's ranch and is in love with his daughter, Mae. Newman finds this out, discharges Broncho Billy and sends Mae to visit her brother in the east. Broncho Billy kidnaps Mae from the stage coach and they marry, squatting on Newman's land. Newman finds this out, not that Broncho has married Mae, but that he has squatted on his land. He intends to get even, so takes Mae's pony and puts it in Broncho Billy's corral. He then accuses Broncho Billy of horse stealing, but is nonplussed when he finds that Mae and Broncho Billy are married. Mae saying, "And, besides, father, a man wouldn't steal his own wife's horse." Newman forgives them and the story ends happily.
Cast overview:
Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson - Broncho Billy
Marguerite Clayton Marguerite Clayton - Mae Newman
Carl Stockdale Carl Stockdale - Roger Newman
Evelyn Selbie Evelyn Selbie


User reviews

Shak

Shak

This is an exceptionally good example of the Broncho Billy series. It pictures Marguerite's thirteenth birthday, though she must have been a little older to marry so speedily thereafter. The story is a pretty one and contains much good humor. Carl Stockdale rises to the occasion by giving us a thoroughly amusing and absolutely convincing picture of an irate male parent. He really infuses new life into this stock character; more of these carefully studied renditions are needed on the screen. A good ranch comedy number. - The Moving Picture World, August 1, 1914