Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA horse is offered for sale to the cavalry but is rejected as unfit for service. A cavalry private buys the horse, and trains it to be a champion racer. When he thinks it's ready, he manages... Leer todoA horse is offered for sale to the cavalry but is rejected as unfit for service. A cavalry private buys the horse, and trains it to be a champion racer. When he thinks it's ready, he manages to sneak it into England to race in the British Grand National. Based on a true story.A horse is offered for sale to the cavalry but is rejected as unfit for service. A cavalry private buys the horse, and trains it to be a champion racer. When he thinks it's ready, he manages to sneak it into England to race in the British Grand National. Based on a true story.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Corporal Kane
- (as Ben Hendricks)
- Texas
- (as Tracey Lane)
- Joan Furse
- (as Ellen Clancy)
- Bess Merrill
- (as Helen Valkis)
- Henry H. Henry
- (as Sam McDaniels)
- Cavalryman
- (sin créditos)
- Turner - Horse Trainer
- (sin créditos)
- Cavalryman
- (sin créditos)
- Major Gruff
- (sin créditos)
- Rover Meat Co. Superintendent
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
** (out of 4)
Ronald Reagan, in his third film, plays Pvt. Dennis Reilley, a somewhat timid guy who joined the Army to be with his best friend, Sergeant Murphy, who just happens to be a horse. Reilley is about to get out of the Army and he wants his friend to come with him so he must find a way to get the horse kicked out. This "B" picture from Warner really doesn't have anything bad in it but at the same time there's nothing good in it either. I'm sure this film would have been forgotten more than it already is if it weren't for Reagan having the leading role, although one could argue that the film does belong to the horse. At 58-minutes the thing moves fairly quickly but there's not too much that happens at any point. The so-called laughs of Reagan trying to get the horse kicked out of the Army features zero laughs. The second half of the film where he tries to win the girl (Mary Maguire) isn't any better and of course it leads to a very predictable ending. Reagan's performance, like the film, isn't bad but it's not good either. I think he does a fairly good job for his third film and the fact that he didn't have to much to work with. He certainly has a swagger about him but his comic timing isn't quite there.
Now early in his career, Reagan also was relegated to some dreadful B-films but at least with most of these you can't blame him. He was not yet a star and simply had to take what the studio gave him. Despite despising his Brass Bancroft films (and they were bad), he had no choice but to take them as he was a lowly bit actor until his breakout films, such as KINGS ROW.
Considering that SERGEANT MURPHY was only Reagan's third film and his first starring film, you can certainly understand his acting with a horse! Yes, I did say horse! It seems that 'Sergeant Murphy' is actually the name of a horse and Ronnie is devoted to it in a rather strange and unnatural way (not THAT unnatural--get your mind out of the gutter). When his father sold the horse to the military, Reagan joined the army just to be near the Sergeant!! I don't know about you, but I'd just find another horse! However, this is a Hollywood B-film and naturally by the time it's over (just 57 minutes later), Ron not only has gotten the girl but Sergeant Murphy is world-famous and a champion--all in under one hour!
There is nothing particularly bad about the film but sadly there is absolutely nothing good about the film other than Reagan's surprisingly good performance. He was an avid horseman in real life and served with the cavalry, so he was able to make this ludicrous film seem convincing to a degree I wouldn't have thought possible. However, it's still a pretty dumb film and not even for a millisecond is the plot believable or even particularly interesting.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaLoosely based on Sergeant Murphy, the first American-bred horse, and the oldest (alongside Why Not in 1884) at age 13, to win the Grand National. The winning prize was £5,000. The horse was owned by John Sanford (1851-1939), an American businessman and breeder of thoroughbreds who also won the Kentucky Derby in 1916 and the American Grand National also in 1923, but with different horses each time. The real Sergeant Murphy had to be put down in 1926 after breaking a hind leg at a steeplechase race in Scotland.
- ErroresSgt. Murphy is wounded on his left side behind his front leg, but at the vet clinic, they put him on the tilt table with his left side down.
- Citas
Mule Boat Captain: If you know what's good you'll get down below and start bedding down those jackasses.
Private Dennis Reilley: Okay, skipper. What kind of straw do you like?
[walks off]
- ConexionesReferenced in Jack L. Warner: The Last Mogul (2023)
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución57 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1