30 April 2022

Buccaneer's Girl (1950) Reviewed

Movie poster for Buccaneer's Girl (1950).

What happens when a woman from Boston stows away on a ship that is captured by pirates? In Buccaneer's Girl (1950), she sings and dances her way into everyone's heart, especially the pirate captain's, whilst guarding a secret that would rock her newly adopted home of New Orleans should it be discovered.

Yvonne De Carlo plays Deborah McCoy, the fearless, streetwise heroine whose life and fate become intertwined with the debonair buccaneer Frederic Baptiste played by Philip Friend. Baptiste is a humane and gallant pirate captain who inspires loyalty and respect. He is, in a word, a gentleman. McCoy, in contrast, is no lady. Any of the manners she displays were learned from Madame Brizar (Elsa Lanchester), the headmistress of a local school for women specializing in singing and dance instruction. Manners, for McCoy, are a means to an end, which, in her case, is a better life. Baptiste, on the other hand, is motivated by a sense of justice to commit crimes on the high seas, and the beneficiaries of his exploits are, as in the case of Robin Hood and Zorro, those who have been wronged by the rich and powerful.

There is, as a result, the mayhem of armed conflict and amorous conflict as different worlds collide, but in both instances the excitement is minimal. The combat scenes are bloodless, uneventful affairs, which is a fair description of the love scenes as well. The plot seems to be an excuse to give the lead actress some singing time in routines that are frankly more suited for a Bob Hope and Bing Crosby comedy than an historical action movie.

Buccaneer's Girl is a semi-comedic, semi-romantic, semi-adventurous near musical with piratical trappings. To call it a swashbuckling movie would be to dilute the definition. It could charitably be called a romantic comedy, but more by virtue of the filmmakers' intentions than by results. It may provide light entertainment or background noise for 77 minutes, but little more than that.

Writing: Mediocre
Directing: Fair
Acting: Mediocre
Cinematography: Fair
Stunts: Mediocre
Swordplay: Mediocre
Panache: Mediocre

Overall Rating: Mediocre
Swashbuckling Rank: Mediocre


[Originally posted in Cuparius.com on 7 April 2011.]

Addendum

Written by: Harold Shumate, Joseph Hoffman, Samuel R. Golding, and Joe May
Directed by: Frederick De Cordova
Performed by: Yvonne De Carlo, Philip Friend, Robert Douglas, Elsa Lanchester, et al.

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