Red Garters (film) explained

Red Garters
Director:George Marshall
Producer:Pat Duggan
Music:Joseph J. Lilley
Cinematography:Arthur Arling
Editing:Arthur P. Schmidt
Color Process:Technicolor
Distributor:Paramount Pictures
Runtime:91 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Gross:$1.3 million[1]

Red Garters is a 1954 American musical western film starring Rosemary Clooney, Jack Carson, Guy Mitchell. It is a musical spoof of Westerns. The director was George Marshall.

The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction (Hal Pereira, Roland Anderson, Samuel M. Comer, Ray Moyer).[2]

"[''Red Garters''] is a costume piece, a roguish, cheeky musical western in which anything goes. All the cliches of every western ever made are examined with humor and high spirits. [...] Red Garters has no settings in the ordinary sense; houses, trees, windows and the like are merely suggested, as on a musical stage."[3]

It has been distributed on VHS, Laserdisc, and DVD.

Plot

A stranger in town meets pretty young Susan Martinez De La Cruz and accompanies her to a barbecue, where wealthy Jason Carberry is saying a few words for the recently departed Robin Randall, a citizen who got shot.

Jason objects to the stranger's presence, being Susan's guardian and protective of her. He challenges him to a shootout, but the stranger pulls his pistol before Jason's can even clear the holster. Calaveras Kate, a saloon singer who's in love with Jason, is relieved when the stranger declines to pull the trigger.

Rafael Moreno suddenly rides into town and picks a fight with the stranger. Their brawl continues until the arrival of Judge Wallace Wintrop and his niece, Sheila, who have come to town from back East and deplore all this random violence out West.

The stranger is recognized as Reb Randall, the dead man's brother. He is looking for the killer, who could be Rafael, or could be Jason, or could even be Billy Buckett, the coward of the county. The women hold their breath to see if the men they love will survive.

Cast

Songs

The songs were written by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans — a team that won three Academy Awards. The soundtrack on Columbia Records was released as a ten-inch Lp combining soundtrack recordings with studio re-creations conducted by Percy Faith and Mitch Miller.[4]

Selections include:

After being out-of-print for more than 40 years, Collectables re-released the album on CD paired with Clooney's ten-inch album of songs from White Christmas.

Notes and References

  1. 1954 Box Office Champs. Variety Weekly. January 5, 1955. 59. - figures are rentals in the US and Canada
  2. Web site: NY Times: Red Garters . https://web.archive.org/web/20121018095637/http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/40683/Red-Garters/details . dead . 2012-10-18 . Movies & TV Dept. . . 2012 . 2008-12-21.
  3. Red Garters LP record, Columbia Records, Inc. CL6282
  4. Web site: Red Garters » Film Soundtrack . CastAlbums.org . 2001-06-12 . 2011-08-01.