Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThis drama is "dedicated to the soldiers of the United States Army." Men with diverse backgrounds enlist in the army and are all assigned to the same post. Some adapt easily to army life, wh... Ler tudoThis drama is "dedicated to the soldiers of the United States Army." Men with diverse backgrounds enlist in the army and are all assigned to the same post. Some adapt easily to army life, while others have trouble making the adjustment.This drama is "dedicated to the soldiers of the United States Army." Men with diverse backgrounds enlist in the army and are all assigned to the same post. Some adapt easily to army life, while others have trouble making the adjustment.
- Indicado a 1 Oscar
- 1 indicação no total
- Charles Corbin
- (as William Orr)
- Soldier Sewing On Stripes
- (não creditado)
- Army Lieutenant
- (não creditado)
- Tom's Father
- (não creditado)
- Tom's Mother
- (não creditado)
- Train Passenger
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
People enlist for all kinds of reasons in the army during time of peace and one of those enlisting is William T. Orr. Watching this one has to remember this was the Depression and jobs just weren't to be had. I could relate to that because in my family my one surviving uncle now 96 wanted to enlist in the Navy, but was implored with tears by my grandmother not to do it. So he sat around and couldn't get a job until World War II started. Who knows if he had enlisted, he might have been killed at Pearl Harbor. As it was he survived the Battle Of The Bulge.
In any event Orr had the same idea as my uncle. Three hot meals a day and a place to sleep. The film is about how those notions get radically changed by Colonel Henry O'Neill and Sergeant Robert Armstrong among others.
And among others you'll recognize William Lundigan and Herbert Anderson as fellow enlistees. All in all a decent short film which if expanded could have been a good feature.
So how did Hollywood respond to all this? They began making pro-war films--or at least pro-US military films. In addition to this film, "Service With The Colors", they also began featuring Nazis as evil characters in a few films as well as made a string of comedies featuring the funniest men of the day in bootcamp...such as Laurel & Hardy, Abbott & Costello and Bob Hope...among others.
"Service With The Colors" is a color short featuring a group of Hollywood actors playing bootcamp inductees and their drill sergeants (Robert Armstrong and William Lundigan). It follows them during the time they spend at the Presidio army base in San Francisco. Among the recruits is a brash (and unrealistic) recruit (William Orr) who has a rotten attitude who seems destined to spend his time in the service in the brig.
The transformation in this rotten soldier really isn't convincing....and it's also pretty vague. Too bad. Otherwise, an effective and well made short.
It's basically a peacetime recruiting film. The Second World War had been been going on officially for ten months, and the 'Phony War' phase had ended in the spring. Our involvement was in the offing, with Lend-Lease, and talk of the first peacetime draft in our history. With most of Warner's Technicolor shorts of the period, bright colors are emphasizes. Here, though, it's brown: the brown of uniforms, of wood and of dirt, with the splashes of colors largely limited to the Golden Gate Bridge.
A month after this movie was released, the first Peacetime draft began.
Bob.
Orr was then an up-and-coming Warner Bros. actor before he became a TV producer and plays the soldier who ends up going AWOL before he is caught. His tough sergeant (Robert Armstrong) has an unbelievable role as a man who's really soft at heart and keeps giving the soldier another chance whatever his shenanigans. William Lundigan is a level-headed army buddy who tries to talk sense into Orr.
Strictly a by the numbers patriotic short that somehow got nominated for a Best Short Subject Oscar. Best aspect is the color photography photographed at the Presidio training center in San Francisco.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesBy the motto shown on the flag, the regiment depicted is the U.S. Army's 30th Infantry Regiment (motto: "Our Country Not Ourselves"). At the time of this film, it was attached to the 3rd Infantry Division (mottos: "Rock of the Marne" and "Nous Resterons La" - translates as "We Shall Remain Here") stationed at the Presidio of San Francisco in California, as noted in the picture.
- Erros de gravaçãoNo one ever made Sergeant within days of joining the United States Army, especially in the peacetime army. In the time before World War II, it could take a number of years even to make Private First Class. Robert Armstrong, playing Sergeant Clicker, was far too old as seen in this picture to have rank of only basic Sergeant; he should have been at least a First Sergeant or even a Master Sergeant, and would not have been in charge of only that small number of new recruits.
- Citações
Col. Nelson: You thought you joined the army so you could eat three times a day, have a place to sleep, and clothes to wear. But the minute you signed up, you took on an obligation - not only to the army, and to your country, but to your regiment.
- ConexõesEdited into The Tanks Are Coming (1941)
- Trilhas sonorasYou're in the Army Now
(uncredited)
Music by Isham Jones and lyrics by Tell Taylor and Ole Olsen
Performed by William Lundigan, Herbert Anderson and George Haywood
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Technicolor Specials (1939-1940 season) #8: Service with the Colors
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 21 min
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1