Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuIn order to trap some spies, the Bowery Boys join the Army.In order to trap some spies, the Bowery Boys join the Army.In order to trap some spies, the Bowery Boys join the Army.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
William 'Billy' Benedict
- Whitey
- (as William Benedict)
William Bailey
- Officer
- (Nicht genannt)
Chet Brandenburg
- Pedestrian
- (Nicht genannt)
Loren Brown
- Officer
- (Nicht genannt)
Ken DuMain
- Officer
- (Nicht genannt)
George Eldredge
- Major
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
While sharing a soda with a young blond boy, hapless Huntz Hall (as Horace De Bussy "Sach" Jones) mistakes a mock "Air Raid" drill for the real thing. Feeling patriotic, Mr. Hall takes three of "The Bowery Boys" to join the U.S. Army. Soon, wise guy leader Leo Gorcey (as Terence Aloysius "Slip" Mahoney) arrives to find father Bernard Gorcey (as Louie Dumbrowsky) has barricaded his "Sweet Shop", fearing an attack. After learning his missing pals have gone to enlist, Mr. Gorcey seeks to retrieve them. But, Leo Gorcey is tricked into enlisting himself, by drill sergeant Donald MacBride (as Herbert Frisbie).
After turning the elder Gorcey away as too old, the Army recruits heroic "Major Dumbrowsky", due to his past service record (he invented the "hydrogen ray"). Meanwhile, son Gorcey, Hall, William "Billy" Benedict (as Whitey), Buddy Gorman (as Butch), and David Gorcey (as Chuck) provide Sgt. MacBride and the Army with "Bowery Boy" high-jinx. The best bit involves Gorcey and the gang unwittingly donning officers' uniforms. MacBride's engaging "Sgt. Frisbie" characterization gives the tired, old plot some spark.
**** Bowery Battalion (1/24/51) William Beaudine ~ Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Donald MacBride
After turning the elder Gorcey away as too old, the Army recruits heroic "Major Dumbrowsky", due to his past service record (he invented the "hydrogen ray"). Meanwhile, son Gorcey, Hall, William "Billy" Benedict (as Whitey), Buddy Gorman (as Butch), and David Gorcey (as Chuck) provide Sgt. MacBride and the Army with "Bowery Boy" high-jinx. The best bit involves Gorcey and the gang unwittingly donning officers' uniforms. MacBride's engaging "Sgt. Frisbie" characterization gives the tired, old plot some spark.
**** Bowery Battalion (1/24/51) William Beaudine ~ Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Donald MacBride
Bowery Battalion (1951)
** (out of 4)
Number twenty-one has Slip, Sach and the other three joining the Army accidentally when they think the country comes under attack. Once there they battled with Sgt. Frisbie (Donald MacBride) as Louie (Bernard Gorcey) is called to Washington, D.C. as it turns out he was a WW1 hero who just happened to create a special bomb. Soon a couple spies are trying to kill Louie and it's up to the boys to try and keep him safe. I'm surprised it took so long for the studio to send the boys to the Army especially when you consider most comedy team do this at some point in their careers. Even by 1951 the "dumb recruits" battling the mean drill Sergent had already grown old and sadly this film doesn't add anything new or fresh. I think the biggest problem with the film is that they're working with an incredibly unoriginal story and there's not single attempt to do anything with it. We get so many forced situations that you can't help but sit there and feel as if you've seen it countless times before and done much better. The running gag here is that the boys keep doing dumb things and keep getting thrown into jail. This happens around four times. It wasn't funny the first time and it's certainly not funny any of the other times. I was really surprised at how unfunny many of the scenes where even if they weren't original. Usually the scene where the men try to follow all the instructions at least gets a few laughs but not here. The only saving grace happens early on when the boys don't like their outfits and try on some others, which just happen to belong to some Majors. The boys start going around not fully understanding why everyone is saluting them but of course they figure it out after it's too late. I think Hall comes off the best here as he's at least energetic and tries to keep things moving. Leo doesn't get to do much, which is shocking but even more so is the fact that he's not given any good dialogue to mix up. Daddy Gorcey comes off a little better and especially in the early scene where he tries to enlist. I think the stuff dealing with him missing the boys was quite touching in its own right. With that said, we've simply seen this type of film way too many times and this one here just isn't funny enough to bother with.
** (out of 4)
Number twenty-one has Slip, Sach and the other three joining the Army accidentally when they think the country comes under attack. Once there they battled with Sgt. Frisbie (Donald MacBride) as Louie (Bernard Gorcey) is called to Washington, D.C. as it turns out he was a WW1 hero who just happened to create a special bomb. Soon a couple spies are trying to kill Louie and it's up to the boys to try and keep him safe. I'm surprised it took so long for the studio to send the boys to the Army especially when you consider most comedy team do this at some point in their careers. Even by 1951 the "dumb recruits" battling the mean drill Sergent had already grown old and sadly this film doesn't add anything new or fresh. I think the biggest problem with the film is that they're working with an incredibly unoriginal story and there's not single attempt to do anything with it. We get so many forced situations that you can't help but sit there and feel as if you've seen it countless times before and done much better. The running gag here is that the boys keep doing dumb things and keep getting thrown into jail. This happens around four times. It wasn't funny the first time and it's certainly not funny any of the other times. I was really surprised at how unfunny many of the scenes where even if they weren't original. Usually the scene where the men try to follow all the instructions at least gets a few laughs but not here. The only saving grace happens early on when the boys don't like their outfits and try on some others, which just happen to belong to some Majors. The boys start going around not fully understanding why everyone is saluting them but of course they figure it out after it's too late. I think Hall comes off the best here as he's at least energetic and tries to keep things moving. Leo doesn't get to do much, which is shocking but even more so is the fact that he's not given any good dialogue to mix up. Daddy Gorcey comes off a little better and especially in the early scene where he tries to enlist. I think the stuff dealing with him missing the boys was quite touching in its own right. With that said, we've simply seen this type of film way too many times and this one here just isn't funny enough to bother with.
This was kind of in the center of the bowery boys films, which means all three gorceys are in it... Leo, his brother, and his father. Along with huntz hall and billy benedict. In this one, when the military does a mock raid on the city, the boys join up. Although slip was already 35. Would the army really take him at 35, six years after the end of WW II, much less dumbrowski, at age 65 ? The usual silly bowery boys madness. Donald mcbride (was always yelling at the marx brothers) is in here as sergeant frisbie. Can the gang stay out of jail long enough to figure out who the spy is? All part of the bowery boy recipe of fun. Entertaining, if you go along for the ride. Directed by bill beaudine, who made tons of films with the bower boys crew. Leo gorcey wasn't in the last few bowery boys films, after his dad had died in a car accident. Leo passed away at age 55.
The gang mistakes a practice air raid for the real thing. They immediately sign up for the military. Slip tries to stop them but gets trapped himself. The boys get into constant trouble at camp but end up rescuing Louie and saving a secret weapon from foreign spies.
This was released soon after the start of the Korean War. I doubt it's anything deliberate. This is not wartime patriotism but rather a random coincidence. "At ease" is a funny button to a comedy scene. The spy stuff is very convoluted but that could work in a screwball comedy. I would leave Louie out of this one or at least interrogate him into the story in a more simple way. All in all, this is ok for Bowery completist.
This was released soon after the start of the Korean War. I doubt it's anything deliberate. This is not wartime patriotism but rather a random coincidence. "At ease" is a funny button to a comedy scene. The spy stuff is very convoluted but that could work in a screwball comedy. I would leave Louie out of this one or at least interrogate him into the story in a more simple way. All in all, this is ok for Bowery completist.
I am watching Bowery Battalion (1951) on TCM right now. Sach sees an air raid drill going on in the Bowery and thinks it the real thing. He, Whitey, Butch, and Chuck rush down the army recruiting office to serve their country in time of war. When finds out what they've done, he goes to get them out, but winds up signing enlistment papers too! When the recruiting sergeant asks Slip his occupation, he responds with "spy." That sounds a little better than "shiftless loafer." Naturally, the boys get in trouble from the start and wind up in guardhouse. Louie misses the boys so much he tries to enlist, but is turned down. However, Louie was actually a hero in WWI for bravery under fire. He was also known for inventing a hydrogen ray, which supposedly could devastate the enemy, but was later proven impractical. The army wants to catch some spies lurking around the base, and decides to recall Louie and make him a major. Then they can use him and his hydrogen Ray weapon as bait to catch the bad guys. Naturally, things don't go as planned and Louie gets kidnapped. Can the boys come to his rescue in time?
The opening theme is a snappy rendition of "You're in the army now." Leo Gorcey is credited first, above the title. Then Huntz Hall by himself. The supporting actor page lists Bernard Gorcey and William Benedict (Whitey) in larger letters than Buddy Gorman (Butch) and David Gorcey (Chuck).
Bowery Battalion (1951) is an entertaining BB movie and is made better by the performance of Donald McBride as Sergeant Frisbie. This one is well worth watching.
The opening theme is a snappy rendition of "You're in the army now." Leo Gorcey is credited first, above the title. Then Huntz Hall by himself. The supporting actor page lists Bernard Gorcey and William Benedict (Whitey) in larger letters than Buddy Gorman (Butch) and David Gorcey (Chuck).
Bowery Battalion (1951) is an entertaining BB movie and is made better by the performance of Donald McBride as Sergeant Frisbie. This one is well worth watching.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe 21st of 48 Bowery Boys movies released from 1946 to 1958.
- PatzerWhen the spies go to kidnap Louie at night, from outside we see the light go on in his room and no shade is visible on the door's window. In the following shot, the shade is partly down.
- Zitate
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: [talking to a donkey] As Democrats, we gotta stick together.
- VerbindungenFollowed by Ghost Chasers (1951)
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Os Anjos e os Espiões
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 9 Min.(69 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen