Blondie's Hero (1950) Poster

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6/10
Dagwood joins the army
bkoganbing11 December 2015
The Blondie series of films from Columbia Pictures ran from 1938 to 1950 completely covering the World War II years. Ironic indeed that Dagwood Bumstead who never served in the Armed Services during the war now decides to enlist in the Army Reserve. I guess he did not figure on Korea being close at hand. Of course Dagwood was the sole support of his family which include Blondie, two children and several dogs.

But enlist he does so the Blondie series now has a service comedy among it films. By this time the American movie going public was used to the Bumsteads and Arthur Lake's interpretation of the lovable bumbling Dagwood so little was left to the imagination. Dagwood was to the army as Gomer Pyle was to the Marines. The usual service comedy situations served up nice.

The second plot element in this film involves three confidence people, William Frawley, Frank Jenks, and Iris Adrian who conspire to sell the Bumstead home to some unsuspecting buyers. When Penny Singleton finds a strange couple living at their house after visiting Dagwood in basic training I'd say she was a lot more understanding than most would be.

This is the next to last of the Blondie series and it's a good one.
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7/10
Blondie's Hero was the penultimate entry in the series
tavm2 August 2015
This is the twenty-seventh and penultimate entry in the Blondie series. While Dag's firm is being reorganized, he finds himself enlisted in weekend army basic training. Also, the house is being paid for a final time. When Dagwood makes that payment, someone overhears him and makes a deal to get him rich. What Mr. Bumstead doesn't know is he's a crook...Arthur Lake gets the lion's share of funny scenes whether trying to get someone sleeping next to him to stop snoring or accidentally driving a tank with his wife in tow. Alyn Lockwood, whose role as Mary the receptionist is usually brief in these movies, has an expanded role as someone driving the rest of the family to Dag's army base and briefly getting involved with a soldier. William Frawley makes a third appearance in the series-having previously been in Blondie in Society and Blondie's Anniversary-with the series entry director being different each time. This was also the third time I've seen Iris Adrian in a movie the past several weeks, the previous ones being Million Dollar Kid and The Stork Club. Anyway, Blondie's Hero was another funny enough entry in the series. One more to go...
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5/10
Make it 5.5!
JohnHowardReid11 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Penny Singleton (Blondie), Arthur Lake (Dagwood), Larry Simms (Alexander), Marjorie Kent (Cookie), William Frawley (Marty Greer), Danny Mummert (Alvin), Joe Sawyer (Sergeant Gateson), Teddy Infuhr (Danny Gateson), Alyn Lockwood (Mary Reynolds), Iris Adrian (Mae), Frank Jenks (Tim Saunders), Dick Wessel (mailman), Jimmy Lloyd (Corporal Biff Touhey), Robert Emmett Keane (J. Collins), Edward Earle (Richard Rogers), Mary Newton (Mrs Rogers), Pat Flaherty (recruiting sergeant), Ted Mapes (fruit salesman), Frank Wilcox (Captain Masters), Frank Sully (Mike McClusky), and "Daisy".

Director: EDWARD BERNDS. Original story and screenplay: Jack Henley. Based on the comic strip created by "Chic" Young. Photography: Vincent Farrar. Supervising film editor: Aaron Stell. Assistant film editor: Henry Batista. Music director: Mischa Bakaleinikoff. Art director: Perry Smith. Set decorator: George Montgomery. Military technical adviser: Arthur Landau. Producer: Ted Richmond.

Copyright 31 January 1950 by Columbia Pictures Corp. No New York opening. U.S. release: 9 March 1950. U.K. release: 13 February 1950. Never theatrically released in Australia. 6,028 feet. 67 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: After a hectic weekend training session in the Army Reserve corps, a toughened Dagwood reclaims the Bumstead home from confidence tricksters.

NOTES: Second last of the 28-picture series. It was also of course the second last movie for Lake who had become so identified with the Dagwood character, he was unable to obtain any other roles. Miss Singleton, however, did make another movie appearance after "Beware of Blondie" (1950), — in "The Best Man" (1964). And on the Broadway stage, she filled in for Ruby Keeler in the summer of 1971 when Miss Keeler was vacationing from "No, No Nanette". And while Lake's career languished on all fronts, Miss Singleton went on to become a powerful union boss with the American Guild of Variety Artists.

COMMENT: "Blondie's Hero" benefits from an injection of money which allows location filming in an army camp and an escapade (even if it is a bit too long — at least in the 75 minute TV version) in a runaway tank and also from the interweaving of two plots which keeps audience interest at a tolerable level and allows for the introduction of a large support cast.

William Frawley who played a loan shark in "Blondie's Anniversary", here plays a similar type role but an entirely different character, while Frank Jenks who played a real estate clipper in Blondie's Reward is up to the same tricks here. Oddly enough his look-alike Frank Sully also appeared in Blondie's Reward as a cop and here he plays the recruit whose snoring keeps Dagwood awake!

Dick Wessel carries on with his part as the mailman but the scriptwriters fail to work any new variations into this running gag which repeats routines from previous films. Jerome Cowan does not figure in this one at all. Joe Sawyer is in his element as a drill sergeant and "Mary" has a bigger role than usual. Iris Adrian has a brief bit. Miss S.'s part is padded out with a dream sequence that is not particularly successful as a satire of war movies, due to her and Lake's leaden playing and the heavy-handed direction.

The film is at its best in the familiar but still amusing comedy routines with Lake on the obstacle course and in particular with his efforts to stop Sully snoring.

Despite location lensing at the Organised Reserved Corps Training Center at Fort MacArthur, California, and the number of extra players employed, production values are still moderate, whilst direction and other technical credits never rise above the mediocre.
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3/10
Dagwood in the Army Reserves
lugonian18 July 2003
BLONDIE'S HERO (Columbia, 1950), directed by Edward Bernds, is the next to last chapter in the long running domestic comedy series featuring those comic strip characters, the Bumstead family, as created by Chic Young.

In this 27th installment, BLONDIE'S HERO takes a different turn from the previous entries. This time Dagwood (Arthur Lake) is not at the office nor is he getting fired from his job only to make amends for his blundering with an important client. The office is presently closed and Dagwood is at home trying the patience of ever-patient spouse, Blondie (Penny Singleton). During his time off, Dagwood starts off his day by taking Daisy and the pups out for a walk about the neighborhood. As Daisy starts sniffing some fruit stacked on a stand on the street corner, the angry vendor (Ted Mapes) kicks the pooch and socks Dagwood down as he tries to defend his dog. With the incident witnessed by Sergeant Gateson (Joseph Sawyer), he tells him that an incident like that could have been handled differently had he not been so weak with his fists. The tough sergeant then convinces the out-of-shape Dagwood to enlist in the reserves for the weekend, where he can strengthen himself both physically and mentally. Before taking that advise, Dagwood comes to the bank where he makes his final payment on the house. He is then overheard and approached by Marty Greer (William Frawley), a con man posing as a real estate agent who interests him into selling his home at a profit to him. The ever trusting Dagwood is talked into the idea, and since the home will be empty one day during the weekend, he entrusts him with his house key. After Dagwood goes into the Army reserves, he is guided by Sergeant Gateson's all-knowing pre-teen son, Danny (Teddy Infuhr) who trains him in the correct manner. During the weekend, Blondie (Penny Singleton), along with the children, Alexander (Larry Simms) and Cookie (Marjorie Kent) pay Dagwood a visit at the training camp, with Mary (Alyn Lockwood) of Dagwood's office, as their driver. After they return home, the Bumsteads not only find that their home has been sold while they were away, now with new owners already taking residence, but that Dagwood has been swindled(!).

The supporting players in this production include: Danny Mummert as Alvin Fuddow; Iris Adrian as Mae; Frank Jenks as Tim; Edward Earle and Mary Newton as Richard and Mrs. Rogers; Robert Emmett Keane as Mr. Collins; Jimmy Lloyd as Biff; and Dick Wessel as the Mailman. William Frawley makes his third and final screen appearance in the series. He was previously as Walso Pincus in BLONDIE IN SOCIETY (1941) and as Sharky in BLONDIE'S ANNIVERSARY (1948).

In spite of one realistic unpleasant scene involving the fruit vendor kicking Daisy, who would get what he deserves later on in the story, BLONDIE'S HERO is 68 minutes of standard comedy, funny at times, mediocre in others, which, as always, centers more on Dagwood than on the titled character. And as for the comedy bits, many of it is quite familiar, having been done before, ranging from the military comedies dating back to the silent era, right to the present day. But this time, the comedy is brought up to date and performed Arthur Lake-Dagwood style. One scene finds Dagwood going through basic training and fouling up everything, but makes up for it later, thanks to his young trainer (Infuhr), as well as Dagwood, during chow time, exhausted from all that training, falling asleep with his face landing right on his plate of mashed potatoes. During the visitation scene in which Blondie comes on up with the kids to see how Dagwood is doing, Blondie and Dagwood unwittingly find themselves inside a runaway army tank that goes amok all over the field and heading to a warehouse that supplies dynamite.

BLONDIE'S HERO, along with the other 27 "Blondie" comedies, are not only available on video cassette, but has had a successful four year (1996-2001) run on cable television's American Movie Classics. Next and final chapter: BEWARE OF BLONDIE (1950).(*1/2)
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2/10
About a decade too late....and obvious proof that the series had run out of ideas.
planktonrules17 August 2017
Towards the end of the long-running Blondie series, it was obvious that the films had seen much better days. While I am fan of them, I am not blind to the fact that in their last few films the writers simply ran out of ideas and the series had simply jumped the shark, so to speak. Gone were the usual plots and in their place plots that just made no sense. "Blondie's Hero" might just be the worst of these, with a plot that seems as if it was randomly tossed onto the film!

Dagwood decides to join the Army Reserves...which is incredibly odd since he did NOT serve in WWII a decade earlier. Why is he suddenly joining now...now that there is no war (the Korean War was about to begin but it came as a bit of a surprise)?? And, why would they want to take a man nearing 40?! What motivated this sudden change?! Who knows?!

At the same time Dagwood is away at training, a con man (William Frawley) convinced him to sell his house for a huge profit. What he doesn't realize is that the guy is a crook and he sells the house while the family is gone and runs away with the money.

Both of these plots seem awfully far-fetched and strange...and because of that the film never really works. Gone is the normal, lovable and sweet comedy and in its place is something a bit like "Buck Privates"...especially with that stupid runaway tank bit...one, oddly, that had zero repercussions for Dagwood. If you see the film, you'll understand what I mean. Overall, a bad film....no other way to say it. And, it's one that you should never show to people not familiar with the series...lest they refuse to watch any more!!
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4/10
When Dagwood got tanked.
mark.waltz5 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Amusing here and there, but probably one of the weakest episodes of the 12 year/28 segment "Blondie" series, something that might have been timely during the early World War II years. With the world quite a different place by 1950, this comes off as very dated and rather forced. Dagwood (Arthur Lake) somehow ends up in the army reserves, and Fred Mertz of all people (William Frawley) cons his way into the Bumstead house in an effort to illegally sell it, aided by brassy Iris Adrian.

As a late entry in the series, it definitely evidence that even with continued success, the result wasn't as good as it could have been. Comics have been through basic training and threatened to loose wars with their incompetence many times, and this plot was probably about a decade too late. One funny sequence has Dagwood dealing with a snorer in his barracks, attempting with a metal helmet unsuccessfully to stifle it. Even the silliest entries of the series seemed to have a purpose, but this one outside of a few bright moments is a disappointment, starting with a store clerk kicking one of Daisy's pups, a very disturbing moment.
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