The National Barn Dance (1944)
This film gives a fictionalized version of how the popular real-life radio program of the title began.
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In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
The movie is wonderful and true, an act of love in all its contradictions and complexity
There's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.
It's a good bad... and worth a popcorn matinée. While it's easy to lament what could have been...
As a boy of 10, I found this movie great fun when it opened in 1944 at the Lyric Theater in Spearman, Texas. The movie didn't have much plot, as I remember, just lots of music and homespun humor. The main thing was that it had all my little sister's and my favorites--like Pat Buttram, the Hoosier Hotshots, and best of all, Lulubelle and Scotty--from the "National Barn Dance" radio program. Our older sister--a teenager in 1944--thought this WLS-Chicago radio show was corny. I guess it was--and the movie, too--but we were always glad when big sis had a date on Saturday night so that we could hear Lulubelle and Scotty instead of having to listen to "Your Hit Parade." After we saw the "National Barn Dance" movie, the Saturday night battle over what to listen to raged even more violently than it had before.