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Call Me Mister

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 36 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,7/10
302
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Betty Grable, Dan Dailey, Danny Thomas, Benay Venuta, and The Three Dunhills in Call Me Mister (1951)
MusikalischRomanze

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA G.I. in occupied Japan tries to re-woo his old love, who's putting on a show for the troops.A G.I. in occupied Japan tries to re-woo his old love, who's putting on a show for the troops.A G.I. in occupied Japan tries to re-woo his old love, who's putting on a show for the troops.

  • Regie
    • Lloyd Bacon
  • Drehbuch
    • Albert E. Lewin
    • Burt Styler
    • Harold Rome
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Betty Grable
    • Dan Dailey
    • Danny Thomas
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,7/10
    302
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Lloyd Bacon
    • Drehbuch
      • Albert E. Lewin
      • Burt Styler
      • Harold Rome
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Betty Grable
      • Dan Dailey
      • Danny Thomas
    • 12Benutzerrezensionen
    • 4Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 wins total

    Fotos11

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
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    + 4
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    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    Betty Grable
    Betty Grable
    • Kay Hudson
    Dan Dailey
    Dan Dailey
    • Shep Dooley
    Danny Thomas
    Danny Thomas
    • Stanley
    Dale Robertson
    Dale Robertson
    • Capt. Johnny Comstock
    Benay Venuta
    Benay Venuta
    • Billie Barton
    Richard Boone
    Richard Boone
    • Mess Sergeant
    Jeffrey Hunter
    Jeffrey Hunter
    • The Kid
    Frank Fontaine
    Frank Fontaine
    • Sergeant
    The Three Dunhills
    • Speciality Act
    • (as The Dunhills)
    Yumin Akita
    • Japanese Man
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Richard Allan
    Richard Allan
    • Stewart
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Leon Alton
    Leon Alton
    • Soldier
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Gordon Armitage
    • Soldier
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Amy Barnhart
      Betty Jane Barton
        Anne Beck
        • Nurse
        • (Nicht genannt)
        Robert Bohannon
        • Soldier
        • (Nicht genannt)
        Tommy Bond
        Tommy Bond
        • Little Soldier
        • (Nicht genannt)
        • Regie
          • Lloyd Bacon
        • Drehbuch
          • Albert E. Lewin
          • Burt Styler
          • Harold Rome
        • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
        • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

        Benutzerrezensionen12

        5,7302
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        Empfohlene Bewertungen

        4planktonrules

        Too much of the same...which is a shame.

        I've recently seen several Dan Dailey movies and while they are rather pleasant viewing, they also suffer from a certain sameness...way too much sameness. In at least four of his films (a few of which ALSO feature him with Betty Grable), he plays a song and dance man who is a terrible husband and whose wife is sick and tired of it. And, in all of them, by the time the film ends, he hasn't changed that much and yet there's some happily ever after. It is complete formula...and because of that, there's really no need to see them all.

        The story begins just after V-J Day. Shep (Dan Dailey) is looking for his wife, Kay, as they were separated by the war...with him serving in the Army and her as well, but with a unit entertaining the troops. But she does NOT want Shep to follow her as their marriage is in shambles and she is planning on divorcing him. Oddly, however, she has never finalized the divorce...which only encourages Shep to keep pursuing her...which he does throughout the film.

        This is pretty much the usual Twentieth Century-Fox production. The songs are mostly forgettable (though I liked the one set on a train) and the formula is something every audience knows by heart. So, if you've never seen one, you'll probably like this movie a lot more than I did. I just felt it was a case of 'been there...done that'.

        By the way, the film did a lousy job showing what was supposed to be Tokyo circa September, 1945. The town was mostly leveled...burned to the ground by American bombers. But here, it looks just fine. The story also is supposedly set in Kyoto...which was spared the bombings and the film get this part right.

        For someone who has seen too many such Dailey films...4. For someone not tired of the formula...6.
        6SimonJack

        A light show biz and wartime film with the troops

        "Call Me Mister" is an interesting film on a number of counts. It's billed as a musical, in the form of a musical revue within a story. Betty Grable and Dan Dailey Star as Kay Hudson and Shep Dooley. He is a GI in occupied Japan sometime after the end of World War II, who tries to woo Kay. She is his old love from before the war who has arrived to organize entertainment shows for the soldiers.

        The film is also interesting for something of the history that it shows. At the time it came out, the Korean War was being fought (June 25, 1950 - July 27, 1953). Grable's Hudson is in a uniform with a shoulder patch that reads "CAT." I had never heard of this before, but in checking it out I found that CAT stood for Civilian Actress Technician. The CATs were an entertainment program created during the Korean War for the U.S. Army. They would travel to Army posts outside the U.S., and organize, set up and direct entertainment using the GIs themselves.

        The film has a screwy opening with dates. People are waiting in New York when at 7 p.m. on Aug. 14, 1945, Pres, Truman announces that Japan has surrendered. Then it switches immediately to Japan and American GIs marching at a replacement depot - the 4th Replacement Depot, Camp Zama, in Tokyo. While American occupation officially started with Japan's surrender, American units and servicemen began moving in and setting up house over the next few weeks. But, if the CATs weren't organized until the Korean War, then the setting of this film would be at least five years after the end of WW II.

        The performance that the CATs organize is given in the Ernie Pyle theater. It was named after the famous and beloved WW II journalist who was killed near end of the war on a small island off Okinawa on April 18, 1945. Pyle won a Pulitzer Prize for his war reporting about individual GIs and their hometowns and families.

        This is one of the few films in which the Dunhill Trio danced. Others in the cast include Dale Robertson, Richard Boone and Jeffrey Hunter. The film is okay but nothing special. The music and dance numbers take up just a small portion. The story itself and screenplay are just so-so.

        Here are a couple of good lines.

        Kay Hudson, "Well, captain, I'll be brief." Capt. Johnny Comstock, "Oh, please don't."

        Stanley, played by Danny Thomas, "How do you like that. An American Greek copying Japanese numbers in English. Boy is this Army gonna be mixed up."
        7marcslope

        It's a beautiful day, ain't it?

        So goes the first line of the title song of the 1946 hit Broadway revue on which this is (very loosely) based. 20th obviously couldn't film a revue, and a lot had happened in five years, so it whipped up a story and added some new songs to the Harold Rome score, most of which it discarded. As an adaptation it's a bust, but as an original movie musical it's pretty good. And what really makes it work, of all things, is Dan Dailey. As Betty Grable's still-in-love-with-her ex, he's much more of an actor than most hoofers, and his.yearning and longing provide an emotional center.it surely wouldn't have otherwise. Grable does her usual thing, nicely, with lots of legs, and Danny Thomas is saddled with some shabby material and a not-good song as The Ethnic Humor. The most thrilling, and unexpected, moment is surely "Going Home Train," a celebration of returning GIs led by, of all people, Bobby Short. The plot, such as it is, wraps up quickly and illogically, and Lloyd Bacon's best directorial days were long gone. But as a run-of-the-mill Fox musical with more emotional engagement than most, thanks to Dailey, I like it fine.
        7bkoganbing

        GIs Wanna Go Home

        There was not much you could do with Call Me Mister after 20th Century Fox bought the rights. Unless of course you wanted to do a review like Ziegfeld Follies. So the title is retained and a few songs and a story is written. Of course when you have Betty Grable doing her fourth and last film with Dan Dailey that usually sold any film that Fox put out.

        Harold Rome wrote the score for the Broadway revue Call Me Mister. The theme was about the end of World War II and the return to civilian life for the troops. The songs and sketches reflected that. The very topicality of the show is the reason it's not revived today. The plot here concerns the end of the war. Betty Grable is a WAC and her estranged husband are both in occupied Japan. They were a double act in vaudeville, she's looking to put on a GI show. He's looking to get the title of civilian again.

        But Dailey who arrives at base a little late finds his ship has sailed for the USA and discharge. So he fakes some orders and gets himself assigned to Grable's show. Where he has to deal with Captain Dale Robertson to win back his wife.

        Let's say it helps that Dailey sings and dances in his quest. And through some typical army red tape his potential jackpot disappears.

        Danny Thomas is in the cast also and he gets one of the Rome retained songs Military Life. Bobby Short also is lead singer with Going Home Train also retained from the original.

        I can't understand myself why the biggest hit of the show South America Take It Away didn't make the film. It sold a lot of records for Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters. As the film itself was about putting on a show it could have been worked in easily enough. It's heard in passing briefly.

        One song I always liked was The Shiny New Face On The Dime in tribute to Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 1946 with FDR's death still fresh it was a poignant show stopper. I guess that Darryl Zanuck felt it wouldn't have the same impact in 1951. A pity, it's a great song.

        In small roles at the start of their careers are Richard Boone and Jeffrey Hunter both Fox contract players. Benay Venuta is Grable's girl sidekick and she and Thomas pair off well.

        For fans of any of the cast members in this still amusing and entertaining musical.
        dmatthews03

        Pleasant, easy going musical.

        This was just about the last of the "putting on a show" musicals and even in 1951 it probably had rather an old fashioned look about it. It's nothing special, the music and sets are rather uninspired and the humor is dated but Betty Grable and Dan Dailey make a pleasant couple. Apparently they liked working together and it comes across in their dance numbers.

        Highlights are Grable and Dailey's love duet and Bobby Short in the "Going Home Train" number.

        Nice, nostalgic way to spend 90 minutes and the Grable legs have lost none of their lustre.

        Handlung

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        Wusstest du schon

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        • Wissenswertes
          In this musical, director Lloyd Bacon and dance director Busby Berkeley worked together for the first time since Die 42. Straße (1933).
        • Patzer
          Shep Dooley hops a ride on a rickshaw to reach his military base and passes a stonewall flower garden. Several hours and a very tired rickshaw runner later, he reaches his destination, and we pass the very same flower garden.
        • Zitate

          Kay Hudson: Well, captain, I'll be brief.

          Capt.Johnny Comstock: Oh, please don't.

        • Soundtracks
          Call Me Mister
          Music by Harold Rome

          Lyrics by Harold Rome

          Performed by Betty Grable and Dan Dailey

        Top-Auswahl

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        Details

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        • Erscheinungsdatum
          • 8. April 1951 (Vereinigtes Königreich)
        • Herkunftsland
          • Vereinigte Staaten
        • Sprache
          • Englisch
        • Auch bekannt als
          • Kalla mej älskling
        • Drehorte
          • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(Studio, uncredited)
        • Produktionsfirma
          • Twentieth Century Fox
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        Box Office

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        • Budget
          • 1.900.000 $ (geschätzt)
        Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

        Technische Daten

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        • Laufzeit
          • 1 Std. 36 Min.(96 min)
        • Seitenverhältnis
          • 1.37 : 1

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