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My Outlaw Brother

Released Aug 22, 1951 1h 22m Western List
Tomatometer 1 Reviews 22% Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
A New Yorker (Mickey Rooney) meets a lawman (Robert Preston) and a senorita (Wanda Hendrix) while searching for his brother in Mexico.
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My Outlaw Brother

Critics Reviews

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Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews Dreadful western. Rated: C Nov 4, 2013 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member Good Cast Helps Make It Work--Mickey Rides The Range!! Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member It's Mickey Rooney! Witty dialogue and high adventure. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member 131225 & 170211: Quaint little black and white film made humorous by Mickey Rooney. Predictable and a little non-sensical but fun enough. Stars a familiar Robert Preston. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/31/23 Full Review Audience Member "My Favorite Brunette" director Elliot Nugent's western MY OUTLAW BROTHER qualifies as a fair to middling oater about a brother's search for his sibling and the Texas Ranger who tags along for the ride. Location lensing at Estudios Tepeyac, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico, enhances both the authenticity and flavor of this otherwise routine horse opera. The capable cast is first-rate. Mickey Rooney plays Denny O'Moore, a feisty New York tenderfoot who has come 3000 miles to see his long, lost brother in Mexico. Finding his brother proves to be quite a challenge for our protagonist. Patrick (a pre-"The Untouchable" Robert Stack) is his brother and he'll do whatever is required to shield his true identity. Denny goes to great lengths to meet his brother. Eventually, about an hour into this 82-minute oater, the brothers meet and chat. Meantime, Denny's compatriot, Texas Ranger Joe Waldner (Robert Preston of "The Music Man"), accompanies him into Mexico in search of Patrick. Our heroes escape from the villain's hideout with the help of a Mexican blacksmith. One major surprise occurs in the Gene Fowler Jr. screenplay, with additional dialogue by Alfred Lewis Levitt, based on Max Brand's novel "South of the Rio Grande." The derby-clad Mickey Rooney protagonist suffers all the indignities forced upon a tenderfoot. He rides into MY OUTLAW BROTHER driving a buckboard through Texas to the town of Border City. Denny watches as a gang of banditos led by an Indian named Le Tigre hold up a bank, shoot a guard, and blast their way out of town. El Tigre is so ruthless that he shoots one of his own who has been wounded during the raid and cannot continue. Denny complains about the gang to the Joe Waldner who owns a pretty smart horse named Sunny. The latest raid is the fifth time that El Tigre has crossed the border. A Mexican official laments the disappearance of three of the best secret agents. Meantime, the townspeople have fun playing pranks on Denny, one of which is telling him to mount his horse from the wrong side. Joe decides to cross the border and hands his Rangers badge to his captain. The Mexicans try to kill Joe, but they mistake Denny for the Texas Ranger. Denny and Joe ride together to the town of San Clemente. "Maybe I'll ride along with your for a piece," Joe observes. He adds, "You seem to have a habit of meeting up with fellows bigger than you are." Denny says that he not only gets all the big guys, but also all the big girls. He reveals that he hasn't seen his brother in eight years and that he's been sending money home to them every month in New York. According to Denny, brother Patrick operates silver mine. Joe expresses surprise at this revelation. Denny points out that his brother has tried to dissuade him from coming to visit him. Nevertheless, Denny has made up his mind and nothing is going to discourage him. "I haven't been doing anything in New York, so I thought I'd go out and help him with the mine." As they descend onto San Clemente, Denny says with verbal irony, "Wait till you see the expression on Patrick O'Moore's face when he sees us." Nugent and Fowler exploit Rooney's diminutive statue and his role as a tinhorn for comic potential. Not bad. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/17/23 Full Review Audience Member The biggest draw here is Robert Stack's crazy-eyed turn as the villain. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/01/23 Full Review Read all reviews
My Outlaw Brother

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis A New Yorker (Mickey Rooney) meets a lawman (Robert Preston) and a senorita (Wanda Hendrix) while searching for his brother in Mexico.
Director
Elliott Nugent
Producer
Benedict Bogeaus
Production Co
Benedict Bogeaus Production
Genre
Western
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Aug 22, 1951, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Aug 11, 2016
Runtime
1h 22m
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