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Wednesday, Apr 12, 1989
Lady of the Dug-Out
Although this virtually unseen 5-reeler from 1918-produced, written by and starring real-life Western bandit Al Jennings-deserves revival for its curiosity value alone, it also proves highly entertaining. Jennings' odd career took him from frontier bank robber to prison inmate, then winner of a Presidential pardon from Theodore Roosevelt. After an unsuccessful run in 1914 for governor of Oklahoma, the state that had put a bounty on him, Jennings took to the religious lecture circuit, using his life as a lesson. "Based on absolute facts," as one reviewer optimistically noted, Lady of the Dug-Out makes Jennings out as a Western Robin Hood who gallantly bestows bank loot on an impoverished mother and child living in a half-buried sod house (the "dug-out"). Al Jennings and his brother Frank ought to have been far too old in 1918 to impersonate their wild youth, but they still look mighty sinewy here. The entire film has a disarming charm and apparently effortless authenticity unknown in the Western genre since the 'teens. Scott Simmon
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