Stagecoach Kid (1949) Poster

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5/10
Another passable Tim Holt western.
tankjonah27 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
A young woman (Jeff Donnell) wants to escape to the big city and disguises herself as a cowboy but falls in love with a stagecoach guard (Tim Holt) who wants him/her to identify a bandit who robbed his stagecoach. Watchable B-western which is very lightweight and tries for much silly comedy, particularly the scenes where Donnell is confused as a real cowboy and not as a cowgirl. Most of the comedy fails to raise a grin let alone laughs. Perhaps the most amusing and bizarre thing about the film is the real name of the girl disguised as a boy - Jeff Donnell, sometimes billed as Miss Jeff Donnell! Given the gender-twist in the plot it really is funnier than anything that's actually in the script.
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6/10
Tim Holt is a cowboy hero and a legend in the western genre
Ed-Shullivan19 October 2018
Yes, it is your typical Tim Holt western which makes it well worth watching at least twice. There are thieves, shoot-em-ups, horse chases, and women looking for love. It's just another one of many great Tim Holt westerns. I enjoyed it.
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7/10
Sylvia Scarlett Goes West
bkoganbing16 December 2008
This entry in the Tim Holt B western series for RKO takes some inspiration from another gender bending film classic the studio did back in the Thirties, Sylvia Scarlett. Though Jeff Donnell isn't Katharine Hepburn, this film has a few more laughs in it than the normal Holt western where usually the laughs are provided by Richard Martin's amorous intentions.

Thurston Hall and daughter Jeff Donnell are traveling to Arizona for him to check on one of his holdings, a ranch there and for Donnell to get away from some fortune hunter who's been romancing her. That's bad news for Joe Sawyer and a couple of hands there who've been stealing the absentee owner blind. Sawyer should have listened to his two henchmen who said it was time to flee the territory. Instead they set up an ambush to murder Hall.

Bad luck to do it though within hearing range of the stagecoach station that Holt and Martin operate on their ranch. But does a thwarted stage holdup deter Donnell? Not a bad, she's determined to get back to San Francisco and marry her guy. While in town she sneaks away and dons the disguise of a boy and gets on the coach.

No need to tell the rest of the story, it's set up nicely for quite a few laughs as well as the usual gunfights that are required. Stagecoach Kid is definitely one of the better Tim Holt westerns that RKO did and Donnell is quite a good comedienne.
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Jeff Donnell Showcase
dougdoepke4 June 2011
Donnell may not be as pretty as the standard girl lead, but she's a very good comedienne. In fact, her amusing impersonation of a boy (Jessie) just about overshadows the rest of this oater. The plot itself is fairly typical—crooked ranch hands try to bump off the boss, and in the process also steal Dave's (Holt) stage line gold shipment. Naturally Dave doesn't take kindly to this, and so the conflict takes off from there. Complicating things is Jessie who falls big time for Dave who, amusingly, thinks she's a boy, leading to some interesting situations.

Aside from Donnell's expert turn, director Landers makes scenic use of the neolithic Alabama Hills familiar to generations of Western fans. In fact, for a journeyman director some of the outdoor staging is downright inspired (Jessie running across the flats in a long shot). Good to see veteran actors like Sawyer, Hall, and the mustachioed MacDonald (as a sheriff, no less!), picking up a payday. My only question is what Birdie (Carol Hughes) is doing in the movie since her role seems unnecessary—the romantic stuff being handled by Donnell. Probably, they wanted a foil for Chito (Martin); after all, this may be the only matinée series where the sidekick is handsomer than the lead!

Anyway, it's a solid series entry with a standout performance and a bunch of fine outdoor scenery.
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6/10
"You just get gay with me and you'll see".
classicsoncall20 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
I wasn't quite sure what to make of that line spoken by Jessie James Arnold (Jeff Donnell) to Tim Holt when he roughed her up a bit early in the story. The line seemed to be spoken using today's context with Jessie disguised as a cowboy, but to my mind, the term 'gay' did not gain general prominence to describe a sexual orientation until a decade or two after this picture was made. One could argue otherwise, and the way Jessie said it sounded like she was advising Dave not to act in such a carefree manner in scolding her. Still, the remark seemed unusual and made me do a double take.

In most Tim Holt Westerns that I've seen where he teams up with Chito Rafferty (Richard Martin) he goes by his own name, but this time out he's Dave Collins, owner of a stage line. He and Chito bust up a stage robbery and attempted murder of Peter Arnold (Thurston Hall), who's daughter is intent on heading back to San Francisco to marry her boyfriend. Using the name Jessie James, she manages to fool those around her into believing she's a cowboy, but I had to wonder if even matinée fans back in the Forties would have bought it. She sure sounded like a girl every time she spoke.

The picture manages to squeeze out some mild humor when Dave and Jessie find themselves stranded in the desert following a gunfight with a couple of henchmen. For all of her growing romantic feelings for Collins, Jessie continues to dodge the issue until Dave offers to 'make her warm'. This all seemed a bit of a stretch for a B Western, but it all came across fairly lighthearted without innuendo, and it did manage to make Jessie come clean.

As far as calling bluffs go, Chito wound up at the finale on the wrong end of a proposal as far as he was concerned. Fellow stage traveler Birdie (Carol Hughes) would have pinned him down too if she had her way. Instead it's Holt's character who's going to get hitched, having lassoed Little Jessie James for good.
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7/10
tim holt western
ksf-221 October 2018
When the owner of the ranch runs into trouble with the bunch of crooks in the ol west, Collins (Tim Holt) tries to help. "Jessie", the ranch owner's daughter (Jeff Donnell), can ID the crooks, but decides to masquerade as a man for some unknown reason. It's all so more complicated than it needs to be. Some great scenes of the Alabama Hills, where SO MANY old westerns were made. The constant, silly "mis-understandings" and complaining by Jessie got annoying after a while. It's a very, typical western, bad guys on the run from the good guys. Tim Holt died quite young at 54 from the cancer. Directed by Lew Landers, who directed TONS of films in the 1930s and 1940s. It's pretty good. Plain, simple wester, with some great outdoor chase scenes. Oatburners...
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8/10
One of the best Tim Holt westerns
segstef27 May 2001
Has a similar theme as "West of the Pecos" where a lady disguises herself briefly as a boy. This movie was fun to watch. Different from many Tim Holt westerns-he goes by another name in this movie,his character and Chito are not mending fences,and surprise, surprise-he gets the girl at the end. The ending is typical with a lady chasing Chito.
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9/10
Stagecoach Kid
coltras3512 March 2024
After building his fortune in San Francisco, millionaire Peter Arnold (Thurston Hall) is heading to his ranch to retire, taking with him his daughter Jessie (Jeff Donnell) who wants to go back to San Francisco. But it seems that Arnold's ranch foreman, Thatcher (Joe Sawyer) has been lining his own pockets whilst running the ranch and knows that when Arnold discovers the truth the good times will be over. It is why Thatcher has a couple of men attack the stagecoach which Arnold and Jessie are travelling on but are thwarted by Dave (Tim Holt) and Chito (Richard Martin). When the same two henchmen rob another stagecoach Dave and Chito find themselves going after the stolen gold whilst Dave has to deal with Jessie who after masquerading as a cowboy finds herself falling for Dave.

It's a Tim Holt western but cutie Jeff Donnell steals the scene with her comic timing. She plays the daughter of a rich man who wants to return to San Francisco- there's some humorous lines, an air of lightness amidst the usual sagebrush action. It has shades of "It happened one night" and it's quite surprising that Chico didn't get the gal in the end. It's strange that Chico is meant to be girl crazy but he didn't figure out that "Jesse James" is Jeff Donnell! But Tim Holt knew all along. It's a thoroughly fun western with a grand location. One of Tom Holt's best.
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