» » After the Round-Up (1929)

After the Round-Up (1929) Online

After the Round-Up (1929) Online
Original Title :
After the Round-Up
Genre :
Movie / Short / Comedy / Music
Year :
1929
Directror :
Doc Salomon
Cast :
The Rangers,Raymond Boole,Kenneth Casey
Type :
Movie
Time :
8min
Rating :
6.5/10
After the Round-Up (1929) Online

Credited cast:
The Rangers The Rangers - Themselves
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Raymond Boole Raymond Boole - Himself - One of The Rangers
Kenneth Casey Kenneth Casey - Himself - One of the Rangers
Walter Dupre Walter Dupre - Himself - One of the Rangers
J.L. Forstner J.L. Forstner - Himself - One of the Rangers
Harry Furney Harry Furney - Himself - One of the Rangers
Delos Jewkes Delos Jewkes - Himself - One of the Rangers (as J.D. Jewkes)
P.H. Ricketts P.H. Ricketts - Himself - One of the Rangers
Stanley Vermilyea Stanley Vermilyea - Himself - One of the Rangers

Vitaphone production reel #2900.

Debut of Delos Jewkes and first of two that Jewkes was credited. The other was The Andy Griffith Show: The Song Festers (1964). There are thirty five shows and films that Delos Jewkes was uncredited, totaling 37, overall.


User reviews

Maridor

Maridor

After the Round-Up (1929)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

The Rounders, an 11-man band, are the act here as they perform three stars in a gimmick that is meant to have them as cowboys who are gathered around after a hard days work to cut loose and sing some songs. First up is "West of the Great Divide," which sounds pretty good in terms of the music, although the vocals are a bit strange. "Rose of Monterey" and "My Pony Boy" follow and are pretty catchy, although I'm sure some will find all three songs a tad bit too slow. For the most part I enjoyed this short, which at just 8-minutes is easy to get through and I think The Rounders were at least entertaining. I think less would have been much more throughout the entire picture and this includes having the band members dressed up the way they are. The Western outfits seem a bit much including some that appear to have been extras or at least spoofed in Mel Brooks' BLAZING SADDLES. Fans of Vitaphone shorts are certainly going to want to check this one out. While it's no masterpiece it's at least worth sitting through once.