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10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Wallace Beery scores another hit, 10 February 2004
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Author:
raskimono
What can be said about this movie that? It's highly formulaic yet lovable due to the charismatic lead performance by its star, one of the great ones Wallace Beery. He plays a role he had a played a thousand times before, that of the lovable doofus who always screws up but seems to make things right by the end. It is a popular hollywood archetype. The plot is about tanks replacing horses in the cavalry and Beery's resistance to it. Laughs are obviously got out of this situation but in the last reel it becomes an effective thriller/action movie with the last five minutes become the absolution pretty intense. Formulaic MGM stuff from the forties but a good introduction to Beery for first-timers.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Sound Retreat, 6 May 2010
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
In real life Wallace Beery was far from the lovable oaf he was normally
cast as. In fact he could be one downright nasty person. But such was
his public image and MGM made a lot of money off that image. In the
case of The Bugle Sounds however, the image was strained beyond belief
in a film that could never be made other than for propaganda purposes
during World War II.
Beery like George S. Patton in real life is an old horse cavalry
soldier who is not crazy about the fact that cavalry is a thing of the
past. Of course if he was any kind of observant during World War I
where it is said he served as well as in the Pancho Villa campaign, he
would have seen just how useless horses are in the trench warfare that
was World War I in France. Patton sure adapted to mechanized warfare,
but Beery just can't get it.
Nevertheless when Colonel Lewis Stone orders him to whip some of those
new draftees into shape for the new mechanized army he does what he's
told. But when one of the tanks goes awry and kills his favorite old
campaign horse, Beery goes bonkers.
There's also some nasty sabotage afoot here led by cashiered soldier
George Bancroft and Jerome Cowan in a laughable Teutonic accent. It all
gets pretty silly before the film is over.
Marjorie Main was opposite Beery as she was in many films, but even
their on screen chemistry couldn't do much here. And believe me the
chemistry was strictly on screen. I don't know how much good The Bugle
Sounds did for young Donna Reed as the earnest young wife of William
Lundigan, one of Beery's recruits. Beery works for Main at her greasy
spoon restaurant.
Even the presence of such scene stealing players as Eddie Acuff, Guinn
Williams, and Chill Wills all playing sergeants and Beery's peers in
terms of military service don't elevate this film.
The Bugle Sounds is a textbook case of the military propaganda film
rendered laughable by time. And a great example of what MGM gave
Wallace Beery to sell before the American movie-going public.
3 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Wasn't even fresh in its day, 24 January 2004
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Author:
train464 from United States
A highly predictable, but pleasant enough trick story line. The idea was done to death in films both before and after, but can be forgiven because this was a patriotic push prior to our entering WWII. Not really a must for Wallace Berry fans, it's still nice to see a good character acter carry a movie.
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