BILLY AND HIS PAL is clearly meant to be a comedy, although it may take you a while to untangle that fact if you look at it without warning. Edith Storey plays Billy in drag, lending a piquant tension to Billy's friendship with Francis Ford. Ford was the elder brother of John Ford and a major actor-director in the mid-teens. He got his kid brother a job and although he continued to play major supporting roles through the 1930s, is today best remembered for eccentric bits in John Ford pictures; my mental image of him is as the old Irishman who rises from his deathbed to witness the titanic battle between John Wayne and Victor McLaglen in THE QUIET MAN.
Anyway, Francis, a good looking galoot, is courting a young woman, but various Mexican-looking individuals decide to do him dirt. So they tie him up at the bottom of an arroyo and then go dig out a boulder to bounce off his head. Before they can manage this Herculean task, Billy has alerted the cowpokes who ride to the rescue, with Bily bringing up the rear on a burro.
It's pretty idiotic, which makes me think it a comedy. It's also not funny and at fifteen minutes is way too long. The photography is pretty good, with some very nice landscape photography. It's unlikely to be worth your time.If you think it might be, take a look at the National Film Preservation website. They have it online with a nice rustic-sounding score.
Anyway, Francis, a good looking galoot, is courting a young woman, but various Mexican-looking individuals decide to do him dirt. So they tie him up at the bottom of an arroyo and then go dig out a boulder to bounce off his head. Before they can manage this Herculean task, Billy has alerted the cowpokes who ride to the rescue, with Bily bringing up the rear on a burro.
It's pretty idiotic, which makes me think it a comedy. It's also not funny and at fifteen minutes is way too long. The photography is pretty good, with some very nice landscape photography. It's unlikely to be worth your time.If you think it might be, take a look at the National Film Preservation website. They have it online with a nice rustic-sounding score.