Gable is
fugitive con artist Candy Johnson, who stumbles upon the small town of
Yellow Creek while on the run. He quickly takes advantage of the town's lack
of law and order. He also steals the heart of Elizabeth (Turner), a
Boston-bred girl with a crooked father (Morgan). Although he insists he
can't be tied down, she manipulates him into marrying her and he becomes the
most respected man in Yellow Creek. Her father doesn't trust him, however,
and sets out to destroy his reputation in town.
Reviews
Photoplay Magazine, January 1942
Honky Tonk rambles
and it rambles, and it gets nowhere, but in its circling it does manage to
gather up Lana Turner and Clark Gable and give them a twirl on the usual
sexy old merry-go-round. Gable is a Western con
man who makes his living off<“suckers”. He and
his pal Chill Wills get elected the big bosses of a Western town, tax the
people into rebellion and escape with their hides, their unreformed minds
and little else; except of course, Lana, daughter of Frank Morgan. But the customers will get
their money’s worth out of one embrace after another between Clark and
Lana—that is, if that’s what they paid their money for.
Your reviewer says: Hot stuff.
Cosmopolitan Magazine, September 1941
***1/2 This saga of a con man working the old shell-and-pea game
in the days of the six-shooter is a straight, unadulterated
escapist show. What is more important to feminine fans is the
fact that it's a natural vehicle for Clark Gable. The big fellow
with the sardonic smile goes to town in Honky Tonk. He talks his
way out of several lynchings. He has a dance hall sweetheart
known as "Gold Dust" and a lovely wife who doesn't care how much
of a heel he is. Unless I'm mistaken, most people will refer to
the picture as the new Gable movie rather than as Honky Tonk.
For a good half of the action the show is just as good as Gable.
The opening scene, in which the nefarious hero talks his way out
of being tarred and feathered, is a honey. So are the saloon
brawls which put him in the saddle as undisputed boss of a
Nevada mining town. Even the romantic interludes are believable
and amusing. Then the production, for no good reason, gets
involved in episodic plot complications and winds up in a rash
of phony sentiment and phony melodrama. Since the work was an
original script, there is no excuse for this. Anyway, it blunts
what might have been a sharp and colorful entertainment.
Gable, as I've intimated, is rarely at a loss playing the role
of the confidence man. Until his implausible regeneration in the
ending, he's in there punching with both fists, shooting,
cheating, and making whirlwind love..Lana Turner is not nearly
up to him as the aristocratic gal who loves him in spite of his
skulduggery. But Frank Morgan, Claire Trevor, Marjorie Main, and
the other supporting players uphold the best MGM traditions. A
tighter story and Honky Tonk would have rated four stars.
Newspaper, September 25, 1941
Something to tone up your blood stream, open your pores and
steady your respiration at a healthy throbbing march is a
streaming emotional Turkish bath installed yesterday, doubtless
for the fall and winter and possibly next spring too, at the
Warfield. And they call it simply "Honky Tonk."
This movie's open secret is that it crowds onto one narrow,
inflammable strip of celluloid the reddest blooded manipulator
of basic box office therapy, Clark Gable, and Hollywood's newest
reigning Queen Honey Bunny Boo, Lana Turner.
The news is that MGM's producer Pandro Berman, Director Jack
Conway and Writers Marguerite Roberts and Jack Stanford have
done right by their salubrious secret, professionally,
expensively, frankly and more than engagingly. I feel wonderful.
Back with Chill Wills to another frontier Boom Town (Yellow Crik,
Nev.) comes Clark "Candy" Gable, a limber con man of humor,
sharpness and untiring, implacable stature--a born leader of
suckers, an opportunist custom made for bonanza political
bossing, and a gay dog too!
And so who are we to censure lov'ble li'l Lana, whose softness
is something you can almost feel from her simplest wide eyed
look, if she too surrenders--particularly since she has, sweetly
and ingeniously, tricked the disarming high voltage viper into
marrying her first.
There follow lusty years and racy dialogue, both greased and
loaded with knowing humor, as well as a satisfactory assortment
of killings and such clever dramatic instances as that in which
Lana's old man (Frank Morgan) denounces his son-in-law before
the Governor --thus serving only to clinch the business deal
between the two latter scoundrels.
There are brilliant (and brilliantly photographed) performances
by all principals, which is also to include Marjorie Main and
Claire Trevor, appearing to represent golden hearted frontier
belles of contrasting age and morals. Albert Dekker does a
satisfactory turn as a political competitor, a marked man, of
course, from the beginning.
"Honky Tonk" accounting for 106 minutes, there's no companion
feature.
Quote-able Gable "I'll tell you once again, my friends, if you think my partner
and I cheated you, you're making the mistake of you lives! And
yet I can stand here with my own gun pointed at me and say--to
err is human, to forgive is divine." first lines
"I'm tired of being run out of somebody else's town. I'm going
to find me a town of my own. I'm going to be the gent who says
go or stay."
"I've got a wonderful memory--never forget a face, never forget
a place."
"My, my, be careful where you spit--you might hit a sucker."
"You know what happens to little boys who play with matches?
They do funny things in the dark."
"Oh, pardon me while I clean out my ears!"
"I never joke with money in my hand."
"I was always taught to turn the other cheek!"
"Candy--outside of a woman's lips, the sweetest thing on earth.
Good for the nerves, steadies the hand
and clears the eye."
"Have you any idea what a gal like you could do to a gent like
me?"
"Well, I've seen women I'd look at quicker, but never one I'd
look at longer."
"You've got a full set of Boston principles which are about as
easy on a man as a hair suit!"
"You're prettier than a little white kitten with a blue ribbon
on it."
"Well I'm a citizen like this--I like to know that every door
works both ways. When I walk in,
I've gotta know I can walk out."
"Well then, I'm going to get you off my mind if I have to hire a
man with a gun to keep me away from you!"
"I've got a compliment for you: you're prettier than you were
last night."
"You married trouble, honey."
"You ought never to open your mouth except to eat."
"Every time I get a hold of you, I forget we're married."
"I never can figure it out--whether you're prettier by lamplight
or by daylight."
"Anything I like I don't let get away from me."
"I'm through talking to suckers and I'm through running. "Bad
luck to say goodbye twice to the same person."
"You're here because you're crazy about me. You like me the way
I was and the way I always will be. You wouldn't change a hair
on my head." final lines
Behind the Scenes Filming began on June 2, 1941.
Turner became flustered when Carole Lombard turned up on set
during the filming of one of Turner
and Gable's love scenes. Feeling Lombard's stare, she ran to her
dressing room and when she re-emerged, Lombard was gone. She
assumed Gable had asked her to leave. When Turner apologized,
Gable simply said, "I understand."
Rumors were rampant that Gable and Turner were having an affair
during filming--rumors they both denied. To show a united front,
Gable and Lombard attended the first preview together hand in
hand.
The pairing of Gable and Turner was called "the team that makes
steam" by the press.
Honky Tonk was MGM's highest grossing film of 1941 and cemented
Turner's place as a leading lady. It was also one of the most
successful films of Gable's career.
In Production: Honky Tonk from Modern Screen Magazine, November 1941
Out on sprawling Lot 3, MGM carpenters whipped up the town
of Yellow Creek, largest set Hollywood's ever seen--three acres
of late '90's streets and buildings, including a City Hall, a
mansion, and the biggest tent ever built for pictures. Three
hundred of "Honky Tonk's" 500 bearded and booted extras crowd
into this canvas colossus for one scene. It houses Clark Gable's
roaring Square Deal Saloon and the largest collection of
gambling devices ever assembled in one spot: 60 slot
machines, seven roulette layouts, seven crap tables, faro,
chuck-a-luck and wheels of fortune. All this canny Metro bought
up when the Mexican Government expropriated the $5,000,000
Casino at Agua Caliente about three years go. This was once a
favorite Hollywood haunt and is now a military school for boys.
Production headaches: One scene called for a cook to fry
steaks for hungry miners/ Economically, the studio tried faking
it, but the sizzle didn't look real. So off went the supply
department for 35 or 40 juicy tenderloins, and all day the
extras happily gorged themselves...Gambler Gable's three
assistants are lady barbers. And even in Hollywood the
combination of tonsorial and thespian art is non-existent. So
Metro picked out three stock girls, gave them a short, intensive
course in hair-cutting and shaving under Studio Barber Jimmy
Adams.
Biggest job of Costume Designer Adrian was to keep billowing
gowns of the period from hiding Lana Turner's streamlined
curves. For rowdy dancer Claire Trevor he sketched out a dilly
of an ensemble almost entirely made up of vari-colored ostrich
feathers...Lana watched Gable closely during entire shooting to
get acting pointers. A Rummy fiend, she played endless games
between scenes with her hairdresser for lunches, lost
consistently. After one week the latter had gained six pounds,
so they switched to mythical money stakes. At picture's end,
Lana owed the girl $8,000,000....Frank Morgan, who had promised
himself a post-shooting fishing trip on his elegant "Corsair",
inspected wares of sporting goods salesmen between scenes,
incurred Director Jack Conway's ire by trying out swordfish
tackle.
Though sweater girl Lana Turner plays a prim Boston schoolmarm
who tricks Gambler Gable into marriage after succumbing to his
muscular charms, Marjorie Main is more appropriately cast as a
lady who conducts a mission. In private, tall, gaunt Marjorie
neither smokes, drinks nor swears, says, "I come from the Middle
West where people don't like women who do those things." For the
first time in her life, she broke down and bought a car at the
beginning of this picture. She drove it twice, sold it,
explained she preferred buses.
One hirsute extra did a slow burn after Dead Shot Gable had
"killed" him. The camera moved off on a truck shot, and the
extra lay "dead" two hours thinking it would come back. It
didn't.
Tensest moment in the whole pic is a scene in which Gable and
his favorite screen enemy, Albert Dekker, indulge in a "last
bullet" duel. Emptying a gun of all but one shell, Gable twirls
the cylinder, and they take turns snapping the trigger at their
temples. When only two cylinders are left, Dekker weakens,
exposes his basic cowardice. Climax of the scene is Gable's
revelation that there had never been a bullet in the gun.
Sleight-of-hand expert that he is, he had "palmed" the bullet
before they started.