Tennessee's Partner

1955 "When the West was a Shameless Young Hussy!"
6.4| 1h27m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 21 September 1955 Released
Producted By: RKO Radio Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
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A tough, womanizing high-stakes gambler known only as Tennessee has an uneasy relationship with Duchess, madam of a thinly-disguised bordello, and no other friends at all. But he's saved from murder by a lonesome cowpoke ('My friends call me Cowpoke'), in town to meet his fiancée Goldie on the steamboat. When she arrives, there's a mysterious undercurrent between Goldie and Tennessee, whose newfound friendship with Cowpoke is destined to be severely tried...

Genre

Western

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Director

Allan Dwan

Production Companies

RKO Radio Pictures

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Tennessee's Partner Audience Reviews

Ensofter Overrated and overhyped
Micransix Crappy film
Suman Roberson It's a movie as timely as it is provocative and amazingly, for much of its running time, it is weirdly funny.
Tobias Burrows It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.
alexandre michel liberman (tmwest) There are many factors which determine crucial decisions in our lives. Ideas, Love, Patriotism,etc. In this film it is Friendship, between the gambler Tennessee (John Payne), the cowpoke (Ronald Reagan) and also the miner "Grubstake" (Chubby Johnson). There is also the "Duchess" (Rhonda Fleming) , who is a friend besides being the madam, and the woman who is a foe, Goldie (Coleen Gray). All this provides an interesting and entertaining western, which is to be expected when the director is Allan Dwan. There are two remarkable moments in the film, when the "Duchess" asks Tennessee to kiss her like he wants to get married, and not out of lust, and the poker game where the gamblers keep raising the stakes. The film is based on a story written by Bret Harte who also wrote "The Outcasts of Poker Flat" . "Tennessee's Partner" was Allan Dwan's favorite among all his films.
Spikeopath Tennessee's Partner is directed by Allan Dwan and collectively adapted to screenplay by Milton Krims, D.D. Beauchamp, Teddi Sherman and Graham Baker from a short story written by Bret Harte. It stars John Payne, Rhonda Fleming, Ronald Reagan and Coleen Gray. Music is by Louis Forbes and cinematography by John Alton.We are in a gold mining town in California and Tennessee (Payne) is an excellent poker player operating out of Elizabeth 'Duchess' Farnham's (Fleming) bordello. But when you are so good at cards you make enemies fast and Tennessee is only saved from being killed by the intervention of a stranger named Cowpoke (Reagan). The two men quickly become friends, but that friendship is sorely tested when Cowpoke's intended bride to be turns out to be a no good gold digger whom Tennessee knows well.Producer Benedict Bogeaus once again assembles the principals that made the excellent Silver Lode the previous year. Dwann directs Payne while Alton photographs and Forbes drips his Western flavoured music over the top of things. Although this is not in the same league as Silver Lode, it's a hugely enjoyable movie in spite of adhering to a formula so rife in B Westerns of the 50s. The plot has enough going for it to keep it from ever feeling lazy, at its heart is a friendship under pressure from matters of the heart, but there is also gold in them thar hills, and with that also comes greed and irrational behaviour. With all hostile roads leading to Payne's gambling anti-hero.The friendship between Tennessee and Cowpoke is very engaging. Tennessee has no friends, his line of work and his womanising ways have ensured that is the case, but Cowpoke is an amiable fella who only judges what he sees at first hand, and Tennesse welcomes this with open arms. But Cowpoke is gullible as well, especially where viper in the nest Goldie (Gray) is concerned. With Payne making Tennessee calm and slick, and Dwan able to get a very human aw-shucks performance out of Reagan for Cowpoke, they are interesting polar opposites, but still it's very easy for the audience to care what happens to them. While Fleming's Duchess is beautiful and brainy, and she's the glue holding firm while the town comes apart.The French Region 2 DVD is not a perfect print, but it has transfered well enough to see the benefit of having John Alton on photography. Filmed out of Iverson Ranch, the film barely sets foot out of the confines of the town, so this is all about close character filming and sumptuous Technicolor lenses, and here Alton excels. The costuming (Gwen Wakeling) is first rate, especially for Fleming, who gets to don a number of knockout dresses, with a red one eye poppingly gorgeous, and the set design for the bordello/gambling den is wonderfully ornate. So with a good blend of quality aesthetics and weighty plotting, Tennessee's Partner easily shakes of its "B" budget beginnings to become a safe recommendation to the Western lover. 7.5/10
bkoganbing Tennessee's Partner is very loosely based on a Bret Harte story. The story takes place in a gold mining town in California where gambler John Payne finds it easier to make money at the poker table than digging for gold. Payne's who's name is Tennessee is probably no better than he ought to be, but the place is full of rough characters.One of them is Anthony Caruso, another gambler who's got a bad case of jealousy. He eggs on another poker loser to bushwhack Payne, But a stranger riding into town played by Ronald Reagan saves Payne. He's simply known as Cowpoke. And he becomes Tennessee's partner.Reagan is in town to marry Coleen Gray who's name Goldie implies what she's really after. Payne's known her in the past and knows what Gray is all about. He romances her again and leaves her on a boat to San Francisco.Of course that's bitter medicine for Reagan and it puts a strain on the partnership.Payne has another partner in town, Rhonda Fleming who's the local madam. They're partners in a combination bordello/gambling establishment. Payne takes the customer's money downstairs at the poker table and Fleming's girls do the same upstairs.This marked the fourth film during the Fifties that Ronald Reagan and Rhonda Fleming appeared together in. They were good friends professionally and politically. Ms. Fleming's politics were quite compatible with the 40th president of the United States.Tennessee's Partner is a nicely crafted B western and good entertainment even if we never do learn the real names of both Tennessee and Cowpoke.
bsmith5552 "Tennessee's Partner" was one of a series of minor westerns produced by Benedict Bogeaus, directed by Alan Dwan released by RKO in the 1950s. Gambler Tennessee (John Payne) cleans up at the gambling table at the "establishment" run by he beloved, the "Duchess" (Rhonda Fleming). Bad guy Turner (Anthony Carouso) sends Clifford (John Mansfield) who was the big loser to ambush Tennessee. A stranger who calls himself "Cowpoke" (Ronald Reagan) rides into town and saves Tennessee's life. Cowpoke then becomes, now wait for it, Tennessee's Partner. Cowpoke it seems has come to town to marry a girl named Goldie Slater (Colleen Gray) whom the boys meet at the boat dock. It turns out that Goldie has a past and had been involved with Tennessee earlier. So Tennessee sets out to save his partner from this fortune seeker. He manages to convince her to run away with him to San Francisco and takes her to the boat, but puts her aboard and returns to his true love the Duchess. Meanwhile, Cowpoke finds out what has happened and swears to kill his friend. Meanwhile, meanwhile Tennessee had financed an old miner named "Grubstake" (Chubby Johnson) and he strikes it rich. In an effort to shield Grubstake from the other miners, Tennessee takes him to his place. While Tennessee is trying to convince the Duchess that he didn't run off with Cowpoke's girl, Grubstake is murdered, his map stolen and Tennessee is blamed. Tennessee seeks out Cowpoke at his mine to settle accounts and allows Cowpoke to beat him up. But just then, the Sheriff (Leo Gordon) rides up and arrests the pair. To clear themselves the boys escape and go to the location of Grubstake's mine to catch the real murderer and.... It's odd that so many of the characters in this film have only nicknames. We never learn Tennessee or Cowpoke's real names. The so-called "Marriage House" run by the Duchess is nothing more than a thinly disguised brothel, sanitized to appease the censors of the day. The story is weak and there are few surprises. Payne plays an unsavory character for a change, Reagan is good as the jilted lover, Fleming is beautiful as always and Gray is only around for a short while. Others in the cast include Morris Ankrum as the Judge, Myron Healey as a hired gun, Joe Devlin as Carouso's assistant, Frank Jenks as the bartender and if you pay attention you'll see Angie Dickenson as one of the Duchess' girls. Veteran Pierce Lydon also has a bit as one of the miners. Reagan, Carouso, Johnson, Ankrum and Healey all appeared in "Cattle Queen of Montana" made by the same team a year earlier.