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0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
This is made by PRC...'nuff said!, 7 October 2010
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
Hollywood musicals were usually the domain of studios like MGM and
Twentieth-Century Fox, occasionally studios like RKO or Warner Brothers
made one. However, the so-called 'Poverty Row Studios' rarely tried
this genre--mostly because this was way outside their usual range of
pictures. Usually these ultra-low budget studios specialized in
B-movies--westerns, comedies, mysteries and adventure stories. However,
this is an odd case where a Poverty Row movie studio (PRC) tried to
make a musical--an idea that was doomed from the start not only because
it was outside their scope but because PRC made many, many god-awful
films! So, the fact this film stank came as no surprise to me! The film
starts on a very false note. A famed celebrity talks about quitting the
business and enlisting in the military now that the US was involved in
WWII. In fact, this was VERY common among the Hollywood elite--tons of
them joined at that time. So, when the guy talks about joining and one
of those he tells openly derides this and calls him stupid for joining,
you know this is ridiculous. Such anti-patriotic sentiments may have
existed at the time, but frankly, saying them so loudly might have
gotten your teeth kicked in at this those around you!! NO ONE would
have said anything so overtly anti-war at that time...no way. This
scene was obviously meant as propaganda and came off as fake...and
stupid, as WWII was very popular at home. It simply was the thing to
do...period and this guy's anti-American effort routine throughout the
film was just dumb.
The rest of the film is a bit like "Buck Privates"--except with a lot
more singing and no comedy. I think they DID intend for it to be a
musical-comedy...but it wasn't funny. The closest to this was when one
soldier said that the other looked like Maxie Rosenbloom--at which case
the other got angry like it was an insult--insisted he didn't--yet this
guy really was Maxie! Overall, the film featured adequate acting (and
no better), a poor script and bad songs (though a couple of them COULD
sing well). It's the sort of schmaltzy patriotic stuff that audiences
ate up at the time but plays rather poorly today.
0 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
when people get sloppy with their flag waving, 23 August 2005
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Author:
killingentelletilti from Norway
This is a musical - sorta. It portrays the adventures of a Broadway
actor and songwriter who wants to serve his country - Over There - but
is too old to be enlisted in the army. So he finds his own way of going
about it.
It's really a fun film to watch, but in 2005 maybe more for the
weirdish anthropology than for anything else. In the introduction the
voice over talks about how "when people get too cocky and sloppy with
their flag waving, some other nation will eventually come along to
prove how necessary it really is to wave flags" - or something to an
equally nationalistic effect. Also, the time colorite is priceless,
there's a scene with some youngsters who can't even be communicated
with because of their constant breaking in to jive. Also, if you're in
to marching bands, this should be your choice for the evening.
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