Take Me to Town
Take Me to Town (1953)

Take Me to Town

1/5
(26 votes)
6.5IMDb

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A Malayan Sun Bear, the most easily tamed of all bears, is presented as the dangerous American Grizzly.

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The story idea in "Take Me to Town" isn't the most original. In the 1930s and 40s, Hollywood made several similar stories about folks hiding out from the law with a nice family that miraculously reforms the crook.

This was Ross Hunter's first film as producer for Universal. After his death the obituaries were hardly kind to his great body of work, and that was just before the elevation of Douglas Sirk in places like the English press as being a great director.

The forms the final part of Sirk's early Americana trilogy. As with the first two films, ("Has Anybody Seen my Gal" and "Meet Me at the Fair") it's is a lightweight, extremely affectionate look at American society in the early part of the 20th Century.

Here, the town is wishful thinking, on the verge of being built and needing a church big time. It isn't just for the saloon run by Lee Patrick but the ladies who point their fingers in judgment at Patrick and the wild Ann Sheridan yeah charge above reproach themselves.

Ann Sheridan plays Vermilion O'Toole ,a saloon singer who seeks to evade the law by taking refuge in a remote lumber community where she develops a fondness for widower Will Hall who in addition to being a lumberjack doubles as the local preacher.She sees no reason why she should not make him a good wife and be a fine mother to his 3 boys -a sentiment they endorse The community is outraged but she is nothing if not determined and sets out to stake her claim on Hall .

Vermillion O'Toole needs a place to hide out after escaping from the law (that wanted her for something she hadn't done). So she accepts the offer of three little boys to stay with them while their father is gone logging (even though he's a preacher on Sundays).

Saloon singer Ann Sheridan on the run finds love with widower preacher Sterling Hayden who has got three cute kids.It's not a great Sirk movie,(it's perhaps even one of his least interesting efforts) but it predates some aspects of his soon-to-come "all that Heaven allows" (one could begin to detect in " has anybody seen my gal?

During the opening and closing credits, Dusty Walker sings "The Tale of Vermillion O'Toole", with differing lyrics at the beginning and end. The lyrics at the beginning make it sound like she's rather naughty, but the point of the film is that she has been unjustly labeled as such.

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