The Big Show In Hindi Movie Download

The Big Show In Hindi Movie Download

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The Big Show In Hindi Movie Download

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Movie cowboy Tom Ford, star of Mammouth Film Productions, goes on vacation before Wilson, studio publicity man, can notify him that he is to make a personal appearance at the 1936 Texas Centennial celebration in Dallas. Unable to locate Ford,the desperate Wilson substitutes Fords exact-double and stunt man,Gene Autry. Gene goes along only to help Wilson out but wants to reveal his true identity throughout the hoax. Enroute to Dallas, Gene's car and trailer collide with the cattle truck of Marion Hill, turning lose a herd of steers she is hauling for show purposes. Gene unloads his horse Champion and rounds up the cattle. Gene, still posing as Ford and singing over the radio (although Ford is not a singer) is a sensation. Ford hears a broadcast and is peeved and threatens to sue the studio. Meanwhile, a group of blackmailers (in snappy-brim hats and double-breasted suits) demand $25,000 from the studio to keep quiet about hoax. Things work out okay after six or seven songs.
At the Texas Centennial in Dallas Autry confuses two girls by being himself and his own stunt double.
This is an almost archival history film in addition to being a standard &quot;Singing Western&quot; of the Gene Autry genre. It&#39;s got 1930&#39;s ,movie making, stunt making, classic cars...even an early Greyhound type bus thrown in, streetcars, art deco fair buildings, a radio studio and clothing styles for both men and women of 1936 in addition to a lot of other details,et cetera. et cetera, and so forth, ad infinitum . Republic Studios probably didn&#39;t realize that &quot;The Big Show&quot; would be an almost documentary film much later in its life via the VHS.<br/><br/>First off, we see movie making, mostly likely in one of the &quot;Movie Ranches&quot; which were located in the Simi Hills area northwest of Los Angeles, complete with cameras and other paraphernalia. (Note that the truck is labeled &quot;Tom Ford And His Wonder Horse Champion&quot; in the opening scenes.)<br/><br/>Amusing take off on the Hatfield-Mc Coy Feud in the comic song &quot;The Martins And The Coys&quot; gives Gene a chance to do some singing right at the first.<br/><br/>Then we get a glimpse of stunt making, complete with an early camera car. Then back to the &quot;Mammoth Studios&quot; in a caravan of what would be classic auto nowadays nowadays.<br/><br/>Next off comes some scenes with Autry and Burnette grooming &quot;Champion&quot;; most likely on an actual back lot at Republic Pictures. Wiliam Newell gets into the act as &quot;Mammoth&#39;s&quot; PR Man.<br/><br/>Charles Judels turns in a bit hammy performance as the overbearing boss of &quot;Mammoth Studios.&quot;<br/><br/>About the only nit-pick this veteran nit-picker could find was in the &quot;road scenes&quot;. From further research it was found these were filmed in the Saugus, California area and not on highways in Texas. Also if you check out &quot;Dallas-225 Miles&quot;, this would place it somewhere around Abeline, and the countryside in the &quot;Longhorn Chase&quot; is nowhere like that shown in the movie.<br/><br/>Good scenes in the Texas Centennial Exposition. A lot of those buildings are still standing so the scenes could probably be duplicated today and no one would notice the difference. Harry Worth appears in one of his usual villain type roles. <br/><br/>Finally we get some scenes from &quot;The Cavalcade of Texas&quot;, which was one of the first of the &quot;Historical Pageants&quot; typical of Fairs of the 1930&#39;s. Look closely and you may spot a young Roy Rogers, most likely who was known as Leonard Slye at the time. Also that &quot;Old Faithful&quot; song is a real tear-jerker.<br/><br/>Art Linkletter, of later &quot;Truth Or Consequences&quot; fame, claimed he got his start in show business with the &quot;Cavalcade.&quot;<br/><br/>All in all, it&#39;s a bit unusual for a standard &quot;B&quot; Western in that it&#39;s got going for a lot of history crammed into 71 minutes. And this reviewer has only skimmed the surface !<br/><br/>And in the final scene the truck is labeled &quot;Gene Autry And His Wonder Horse Champion&quot;...and guess who&#39;s the stunt man now ? Frog got a good start on his stunt but the horse had other ideas and that familiar &quot;Help !&quot; is heard in the background. And for goodness sake...Gene kissed the girl....and not his horse in the final scene. A really fun movie in addition to all of the above.
Let&#39;s get the plot out of the way first. Gene plays a double role as a bad tempered cowboy star, Tom Ford (who has large gambling debts and a blonde fiancée) and his stunt double. Gene winds up impersonating Ford at the Texas Centennial of 1936, as a cowboy and a singer, even though Ford can&#39;t sing. We expect some identity mixups and we get them. The fiancée and the gamblers appear to cause trouble and a final chase scene, but the film mostly centers around the Centennial. <br/><br/>It&#39;s an unusual Western because it was filmed during the Centennial celebration at Fair Park, where we see many shots showing the abundance of deco buildings and statues. They&#39;re all still there, as it is now called the Texas State Fairgrounds. What a setting for a picture! We see a cast of thousands! The parades, the stadium crowds, and the outdoor staged &#39;panoramas&#39; that were a common part of expositions and World Fairs from before to after the turn of the century, even up to the late forties. We see the Western cavalcade, the Texas Six Flags, and Gene&#39;s singing farewell to his &#39;wounded&#39; horse Champion. <br/><br/>It&#39;s definitely a musical Western, because the story elements fly by, especially in the 54 minute edited version found in most remainder bins (such as Platinum&#39;s &#39;The Great American Western Volume 5&#39; DVD, which is the version I have.) The performance of &#39;The Lady Known as Lulu&#39; by the black &#39;Jones Boys&#39; is missing from the 54 minute versions. The official, restored 71 minute version has 10 songs, but only two are halfway decent (both ballads, &#39;Mad About You&#39; and Jimmie Davis&#39;s &#39;Nobody&#39;s Darlin&#39; But You&#39;).<br/><br/>Other highlights: Kay Hughes is the female lead. Gene apparently likes wholesome looking girls, since she was also in &#39;Ride, Ranger, Ride&#39; (1936). She plays Gwen in the first Dick Tracy serial (1937), and the spunky Molly Selkirk in &#39;Radio Patrol&#39; (1937). Contrary to what most people say, here&#39;s a film where Gene actually does kiss the girl at the end of the movie, but with the vocal track still going, he&#39;s singing while he does it! <br/><br/>Another lowlight: Gene is clearly not a stunt man. In the scenes where he&#39;s supposedly stunting for Ford, he can be seen several times carefully, warily, and worriedly looking for his safety hand holds. And of course, he&#39;s all too obviously doubled for in the fight sequence in the hotel with the evil gambler Collins (Rex King).<br/><br/>William Newell seems to get as much screen time as Gene; his other big role is as Mala&#39;s helper Hank in &#39;Robinson Crusoe of Clipper Island&#39; (1936), but after that he went on to a distinguished career as an uncredited bystander in hundreds of movies and TV shows.<br/><br/>We get our standard sidekicks Smiley Burnette and Max Terhune (this time doing his ventriloquist act), the Beverly Hillbilles as Gene&#39;s backup group, fresh from &#39;The Phantom Empire&#39; (1935), and the Sons of the Pioneers with the twinkling smile of Roy Rogers (Leonard Slye), a rhythm guitarist in the back row.<br/><br/>Full of historical interest, it&#39;s an enjoyable diversion despite the weak music, but as a film it&#39;s just a four.

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