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Frenchie (film)

Frenchie
Theatrical release poster
Directed byLouis King
Written byOscar Brodney
Produced byMichael Kraike
StarringJoel McCrea
Shelley Winters
CinematographyMaury Gertsman
Edited byTed J. Kent
Music byHans J. Salter
Color processTechnicolor
Production
company
Universal Pictures
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • December 25, 1950 (1950-12-25) (Los Angeles)
Running time
81 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1,450,000 (US rentals)[1]

Frenchie is a 1950 American Western film directed by Louis King and starring Joel McCrea and Shelley Winters. The plot is loosely based on the 1939 Western Destry Rides Again.

Plot

Frank Dawson is killed in the town of Bottleneck by his double-crossing partner Pete Lambert, leaving a young girl without a father. For the next 15 years, she lives in orphanages and works for the Fontaines, originally from Paris, earning her the nickname "Frenchie."

Now grown, she makes a fortune running a casino in New Orleans, then returns to Bottleneck to finally try to find her father's killer. She buys the casino the Scarlet Angel but learns that sheriff Tom Banning has cleaned up the town, forcing gamblers to go to nearby Chuckaluck, where the man in charge is Lambert.

Frenchie gets in touch with Lance Cole, a man who helped her in New Orleans, and asks him to come to Bottleneck to run the Scarlet Angel with her. Lambert's gambling interests are threatened, so he plans to ambush Cole's stage. Banning intervenes and prevents bloodshed.

Cole though is in love with Frenchie and suspicious Banning may be too. Diane, Banning's former fiancee, is jealous, too. To get even she marries the rich banker, Clyde Gorman, for his money and then round up the Bottleneck townspeople to rid it of Frenchie and her crew.

Frenchie visits her father's grave. Banning sees this and guesses she is Dawson's daughter. He rides to Chuckaluck to prevent trouble, but Lambert tries to shoot him.

The men of Bottleneck who want Frenchie gone head for the hills when she lies to them about a gold discovery there. Diane declares her love to Banning who rejects her. Diane goes to the Scarlet Angel to confront Frenchie and slips her husband is Lambert's silent partner and working against her. The women get into a fight, Tom breaks it up.

Frenchie now knows the identities of the two men who murdered her dad. When she decides against vengeance, Cole figures she won't kill Gorman because that would make Diane a widow and free to be with Tom.

An unknown figure shoots Gorman in the back. Banning is accused and locked up in his own jail. Frenchie organizes a jailbreak, but Tom is suspicious because he thinks Frenchie could be setting him up to be gunned down by a posse.

Thinking that Tom is out of the way, Lambert and his men ride to Bottleneck to take Frenchie's casino by force. Tom is inside and tells Lambert that he is there to negotiate sale of the casino. Lambert goes inside. Tom tells him that he is taking him in for the murder of Frank Dawson. Lambert draws and Tom kills him in self-defense. When things look bleak for him, Diane confesses that it was she who killed her husband. Tom assumes that Frenchie will leave town now, but Frenchie goes into a cell, closes the door and throws away the key, letting Tom know she's not going anywhere.

Cast

References

  1. ^ 'The Top Box Office Hits of 1951', Variety, January 2, 1952
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