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The Daring Young Man (1942) More at IMDbPro »


Overview

User Rating:
6.0/10   9 votes
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Director:
Writers:
Karen DeWolf (original screenplay) and
Connie Lee (original screenplay)
Contact:
View company contact information for The Daring Young Man on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
8 October 1942 (USA) more
Genre:
Tagline:
He's been weak in the head from birth! You'll be weak in the ribs from mirth! (original Card B ) more
Plot Keywords:
User Reviews:
Funny World War II Farce more (1 total)

Cast

  (Credited cast)
Joe E. Brown ... Jonathan Peckinpaw and Grandma Peckinpaw
Marguerite Chapman ... Ann Minter
William Wright ... Sam Long
Roger Clark ... Ted Johnson
Claire Dodd ... Marlene

Lloyd Bridges ... Hans Muller
Donald Douglas ... Carl Rankin (as Don Douglas)
Frank Sully ... Luke
Ben Carter ... Pinky
Eddie Laughton ... Fogarty
Robert Emmett Keane ... Bowling Alley Manager
William Forrest ... Bill White
Robert Middlemass ... Drummond
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Brownie (USA) (working title)
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Runtime:
73 min
Country:
Language:
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:

FAQ

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2 out of 2 people found the following review useful.
Funny World War II Farce, 16 September 2002
Author: mark.waltz from New York City

Joe E. Brown made several dozen comedys throughout the 1930's and early 1940's, most of which are very mediocre and some extremely unfunny. At Warner Brothers, he was their comic star throughout the depression era, and his mild-mannered characters (with the loud yell from his overly large mouth when in trouble) were the perfect depression comic hero. By the time World War II arrived, Brown was reduced to a series of less-than-funny comedys at Columbia. I watched several of them along with this one, having little enthusiasm for the minimal amount of comedy they provided. That cannot be said for "The Daring Young Man", an actually very funny low-budget comedy which was the best of the bunch.

The story has Brown in a dual role as a mild-mannered not-so-youngish young man determined to get into the Army who fails at every attempt. Brown also appears for the umpteenth time in drag, this time as his grandmother, probably the only time he actually played a female character. Reporters follow his every attempt to get into the army, and before you know it, Brown is a buffoon for the media. Of course, a group of Nazi spies come Brown's way, and he ends up a hero by the time the film's 73 minutes have passed.

Having appeared in drag in a very poor Columbia western comedy, "Shut My Big Mouth", one of the few saving graces of that film, Brown pulled the same gag again. Let's just say Brown's drag would never threaten RuPaul or even Milton Berle. He is more of an American counterpart to Britain's Old Mother Reilly with his grandmotherly outfits that add comic effect to his characterization. In "Shut My Big Mouth", he was supposed to be a bride, and looked more like Frankenstein's mother than the bride of. Here, Brown plays an elderly lady, combo of OM Reilly and Jonathan Winter's Ma Frickle, and is absolutely hysterical in the part. There is a fashion show sequence where Brown (in his old lady guise) dresses in several glamorous outfits, and his shaunte-sashe's are hysterical. So are the reactions of his reluctant audience, which makes room for at least one classic wisecrack.

There is another hysterical sequence where Brown's male character finds himself in the hospital with a tyrannical nurse (the always dependable "B" character actress Minerva Urecal, from the Bela Lugosi Monogram horror films) where Granny makes an unexpected appearance and gives the ultimate revenge that would stifle both Nurse Ratchid and Diesel. The finale is filled with some great slapstick that barely gives the audience to catch their breath from all that has happened prior.

The supporting cast is overshadowed by Brown who gives his all. His leading lady, Marguerite Chapman, gets very little to do. Look for a very young Lloyd Bridges.

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