Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaTwo Navy seamen learn their ship has a new skilled marksman. They borrow money betting their ship will win an upcoming gunnery contest. Unbeknownst to them, the marksman's enlistment ends be... Ler tudoTwo Navy seamen learn their ship has a new skilled marksman. They borrow money betting their ship will win an upcoming gunnery contest. Unbeknownst to them, the marksman's enlistment ends before the contest, jeopardizing their scheme.Two Navy seamen learn their ship has a new skilled marksman. They borrow money betting their ship will win an upcoming gunnery contest. Unbeknownst to them, the marksman's enlistment ends before the contest, jeopardizing their scheme.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Tubby
- (as Jackie C. Gleason)
- Navy Blues Sextet Member
- (as Katharine Aldridge)
- Navy Blues Sextet Member
- (as Loraine Gettman)
- Officer
- (não creditado)
- Sailor
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
The leads are only so-so. Oomph girl Ann Sheridan looks great and Martha Raye is suitably brassy, but Jacks Haley and Oakie are hardly Abbott and Costello, and Herbert Anderson is woeful as Sheridan's romantic interest.
Plots are always secondary in musicals, though sometimes they help pick up the pace. Here, a typically thin story line is a good 20 minutes too long.
For all these weaknesses "Navy Blues" has some interesting aspects.
The cast features the already rotund Jackie Gleason in his first film. He doesn't have very many lines but you can't miss him as a young sailor named Tubby. Had this been made a decade later he would have been a natural for Oakie's role.
More significantly, this is a last look at the United States Navy on the eve of World War Two. These are real ships and real sailors on the brink of history.
When Oakie and Haley's characters disembark at Honolulu (actually San Diego), the ship in the background is the USS Curtiss, a seaplane tender that a few months later was damaged at Pearl Harbor. Twenty-one of her crew were killed on December 7th.
Other scenes appear to have been shot on an Astoria class heavy cruiser, of which there were six. The following year three of these ships were sunk off Guadalcanal, with great loss of life.
Surely many of the sailors parading behind the cast members in the closing sequence would not survive the war. Few could foresee that in the spring of 1941, but for us that sad fact gives the film a poignancy its makers never intended.
At 108 minutes long, this movie is just TOO long. At a time when films often ran 80 minutes, that would have been a more appropriate running time. There are too many lame jokes, that are lame precisely because situations run on too long, and the subplots would have been funnier if they had been more to the point.
What's good about this movie? I really loved the big band big musical numbers with Ann Sheridan singing. The title song is particularly catchy. You also get a glimpse of Jackie Gleason when he is starting out, Jack Carson just as he arrives at Warner Brothers where he really perfects his somewhat unlikeable "gray guy" persona, and Martha Raye is used to good effect as the ex-wife of one of the goofball sailors who demands she gets her alimony.
As for me mentioning this film is a moment captured in time - consider this. The film was made three months before the attack on Pearl Harbor. As the sailors keep mentioning, they joined the navy "to see the world", which is what you did in peacetime which was about to end. Honolulu was the playground of that peacetime navy, just as depicted in the film (actually filmed in San Diego). Thus something I just couldn't get out of my mind as I watched this somewhat silly yet utterly enjoyable 1941 film about the Navy in Hawaii was that it gives no hint of the horror to come - how could it?, and probably thus had a very narrow window in time in which it was the least bit relevant before it would have to be put in mothballs for probably at least ten years or else it would appear almost flippant to those going through WWII and then afterwards, to those who had been through it and survived.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesFilm debut of Jackie Gleason.
- Erros de gravaçãoDuring the gunnery awards ceremony, the band is playing, "Semper Paratus". This is the service anthem for the U.S. Coast Guard, and would not be played during a U.S. Navy awards ceremony.
- Citações
Cake O'Hara: Why i'm so lucky, the horses put MY shoes up over their doors!
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosThe actors spell out the words 'The End' as they sing and march into formation at the very end.
- ConexõesFeatured in We Haven't Really Met Properly...: Jack Haley as the Tin Man/Hickory (2005)
- Trilhas sonorasNavy Blues
(uncredited)
Music by Arthur Schwartz
Lyrics by Johnny Mercer
Sung by Ann Sheridan, Martha Raye, Navy Blues Sextette, sailors and chorus
Played during opening and closing credits, also as background music
Reprised by the Company at the end
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 929.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração1 hora 48 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1