Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaBlondie mobilizes housewives for wartime duties. Husbands resist domestic roles. Dagwood fakes enlisting. Blondie dissolves housewives' group, returns home. Focus on gender role reversal ami... Leggi tuttoBlondie mobilizes housewives for wartime duties. Husbands resist domestic roles. Dagwood fakes enlisting. Blondie dissolves housewives' group, returns home. Focus on gender role reversal amid war efforts.Blondie mobilizes housewives for wartime duties. Husbands resist domestic roles. Dagwood fakes enlisting. Blondie dissolves housewives' group, returns home. Focus on gender role reversal amid war efforts.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- 'Cookie' Bumstead
- (as Cookie)
- Husband Whose Wife Knits Socks
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Mrs. Jones, Housewife of America
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Mr. Crumb, Former Mailman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Mr. Larkin, Husband Who Nominates Dagwood
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Housewife of America
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Minor Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Housewife of America
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Minor Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Housewife of America
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
The first part is a hoot as Blondie organizes neighborhood wives into a wartime support group, 'Housewives for Victory'. It's early 1942, just months into the big war. Naturally, B&D have to respond, while even Daisy the dog collects money for bombs. Trouble is the wives now have duties apart from housework, which means husbands have to take up the slack. In short, gender roles get muddied. Of course, for B&D the material is loaded with all kinds of potential laughs. Now if D can only figure out which food goes to people and which goes to puppies. Then too, B needs to learn First Aid without turning D into an American Mummy.
The second half, however, moves into a more conventional slapstick, with everyone racing around in a gloomy forest, including a mysterious character with a loaded sack-- is he a saboteur or what. There's not as much flag-waving as might be expected, though the women show they can march as formidably as men. Emphasis instead is on how suburban couples learn to adjust to the new conditions. For B&D that means a lot of laughs; for contemporary viewers it's an entertaining glimpse of a stressful time.
All in all, the programmer's a humorously revealing 70-minutes with our adorable couple facing up to the demands of a new era. The latter half may be somewhat repetitive, but overall the entry's still worth tuning in.
Since ABBOTT AND COSTELLO and LAUREL AND HARDY at the time made some popular movies about the war, why not join them? It was a smart move that sees Blondie uniting the neighborhood housewives to do their part. Unfortunately, that leaves Dagwood to blame by all the lonely husbands? Watching Arthur Lake is just plain outrageous.
I agree with the last reviewer. There are some wacky situations that may have inspired I LOVE LUCY, and when you come down to it, the BLONDIE series was the grand daddy of sitcoms, albeit on the wide screen. As usual, Dagwood and Mr. Dithers make a genuine Odd Couple, this time having Dithers over for dinner and feasting on a "pot luck" sort of a meal. Daisy's dog food gets mixed in and do the math.
Also a little adventure added, which changes gears to a dramatic finale, all about the town dam -- which could be blown up by saboteurs! Character actor Charles Wagenheim raises suspicion lurking around the place in the dark, and its kind of spooky. Good support from Ed Gargan as a brash sergeant and Stu Erwin as Private Smith. Erwin was a staple in many classic comedies, who had just appeared in THE BRIDE CAME C. O. D., starring Bette Davis.
Also some good bits; stone-face Renie Riano playing Miss Crabber(?), Cookie's babysitter. Sylivia Field ( DENNIS THE MENACE) plays Mrs. Williams.
This episode runs fast because so many goofy scenes are thrown at you. The THREE STOOGES were also filmed at the same studio (Columbia Pictures), so comedy was in the air, and yes, it does have the feel at times of a Stooge movie. Once again, director Frank Strayer has fun with the cast. You really have to love this stuff, and lots of us kids grew up watching it on tv in glorious black and white.
The password is "Tires," uttered by Mr. Dithers, since there was a WWII ration on rubber at the time, also sugar, which plays into the plot.
Thank you to MOVIES Net for rerunning this classic series Saturday mornings, like the old days. Forever on remastered dvd.
"Mr. Dithers will understand that our country comes first."-Blondie
And the next thing you know in an act of demonstrating first aid...Dagwood is all trussed up in bandages.
This is a huge add for the war...war bonds, first aid, etc. Released in 1942 at the height of America's involvement in WWII.
"She's devoting her life to the welfare of others."-Dagwood
This is a classic Blondie performance by Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake. Fans from all over will love it!
The time is World War II and Blondie (Penny Singleton) leaves the household chores to her husband, Dagwood (Arthur Lake) while doing her patriotic duty as leader of the American Women's Volunteer Service. With the housewives participating in the war effort (one of them being Dithers' wife, Cora), the husbands are left to tend to the cooking and cleaning at home, causing the men to rebel, electing Dagwood as their leader in hope that he'll lure his wife back to active duty at the home-front so that the others will follow. He does this by borrowing a uniform from a soldier named Herschel Smith (Stuart Erwin), to let Blondie know that he's "enlisted," while Herschel finds himself mistaken for Dagwood while sporting his suit and bow tie. The plan nearly works until the soldiers are called to report to active duty, causing Dagwood to look for Herschel and switch clothes before being taken to go on the battlefield, leading to a merry chase with Dagwood, a tough sergeant (Edward Gargan), and the military police along with a mysterious individual (Charles Wagenheim) believed to be the one to blow up the local water dam.
Another satisfying episode with numerous comic highlights: Mr. Dithers (Jonathan Hale), Dagwood's boss, having trouble with his eyes, refusing to see an optometrist, involved a slight accident while driving with Dagwood with his car found in a sideway position; Dagwood volunteering as a wounded patient for the volunteering housewives, leaving him bandaged from head to toe; Dagwood having Dithers over to the house for dinner and unwittingly switching canned items leading them to eat dog food instead, resulting to boss and employee literally barking at one another; Dagwood's attempt from getting arrested or taken by the MPs while hiding in the pond of cold water with the assistance of Blondie and Dithers; and Dagwood running through the woods into Bert Crump (Irving Bacon), his former postman now retired, continuously knocking him down as he did during Crump's morning mail delivery.
Adding to the supporting players are Majelle White as Baby Cookie; Don Beddoe in his third and final appearance as Marvin Williams; Eddie Acuff and Dewey Robinson as the husbands; Renie Riano as Miss Cabbler, a snoring baby sitter; Thurston Hall as the captain; Danny Mummert returning as Alvin Fuddow who bribes Dagwood after obtaining his diary with things Blondie shouldn't see; and special guest star, Stuart Erwin, as a country boy raised by his mother and sisters, wanting to break away from his female environment by enlisting as an Army private to feel like a soldier in the company of real men. Being true to his word about avoiding females, he refuses to have his picture taken with the most gorgeous movie starlets, including Rita Hayworth.
While BLONDIE FOR VICTORY might have been handled more seriously due to its wartime theme, it remains relatively amusing throughout until Blondie's patriotic speech followed by the entire Bumstead family standing in front of the waving American flag. As much as this entry in typical situation-comedy, battle of the sexes theme, overall it represents true-to-life Americans doing their part for the good of humanity.
BLONDIE FOR VICTORY, along with 27 others in the series, was formerly distributed on video cassette through King Features, and presented on American Movie Classics from 1996 to 2001. Next in the series: IT'S A GREAT LIFE 1943).(**1/2)
When the story begins, Blondie has organized the housewives in town into a paramilitary sort of group...and the husbands are mad because the wives aren't there to feed them and keep house. When the other fellows learn that Blondie is behind all this, they threaten Dagwood...telling him to stop her...or else. Dagwood comes up with a really stupid plan where he pretends to enlist so that Blondie will come home and give up this organization. The plan not only makes no sense but could get Dagwood in a lot of trouble for impersonating a soldier. Yet, inexplicably, the whole thing ends well...and no one punched in Dagwood's face.
While most wartime Hollywood films are very patriotic, this one is different and seems to tell housewives NOT to do their part and men to do anything (short of joining up) to stop them. Despite this goody message, a sickeningly sweet three cheers for America and the war effort ending is tacked on to the film...leaving me very confused and wondering what happened to the writing with this one!
By the way, after Dagwood wrecks Mr. Dither's car, Dithers asks "Are my tires okay?!"...this is because there was a severe tire shortage during WWII as most all of the rubber went to the war effort.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe twelfth of twenty-eight Blondie movies starring Penny Singleton as Blondie Bumstead and Arthur Lake as Dagwood Bumstead.
- BlooperWhile Dagwood's civilian clothes are too loose for Pvt. Smith, the Private's uniform fits the taller Dagwood perfectly..
- Citazioni
[Blondie has observer duty at the local dam]
J.C. Dithers: A wife's place is in the home... and not by a dam site!
- ConnessioniFollowed by It's a Great Life (1943)
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- Troubles Through Billets
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- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 11min(71 min)
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- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1