On shore leave, a young sailor meets and falls in love with a pretty young blonde. But her parents disapprove. She leaves home, determined to live on her own and expects marriage.On shore leave, a young sailor meets and falls in love with a pretty young blonde. But her parents disapprove. She leaves home, determined to live on her own and expects marriage.On shore leave, a young sailor meets and falls in love with a pretty young blonde. But her parents disapprove. She leaves home, determined to live on her own and expects marriage.
Clarence Brown
- Roller Coaster Rider
- (uncredited)
Gino Corrado
- Headwaiter at Garden Cabaret
- (uncredited)
Shorty English
- Sailor at Canteen
- (uncredited)
Adolph Faylauer
- Cabaret Dancer
- (uncredited)
Christian J. Frank
- Cabaret Doorman
- (uncredited)
Frankie Genardi
- Child
- (uncredited)
Pat Harmon
- Bouncer at Garden Cabaret
- (uncredited)
Maxine Elliott Hicks
- Girl in Sweatshop
- (uncredited)
Frank McLure
- Cabaret Dancer
- (uncredited)
Charles McMurphy
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
King Mojave
- Cabaret Dancer
- (uncredited)
Featured review
This film begins with an obnoxious sailor by the name of "Jack Kelly" (William Haines) being ordered to attend a semi-formal dance sponsored by a local women's organization in a port on the West Coast. Although he has absolutely no interest in attending this dance, he does happen to meet an attractive blonde named "Alice Brown" (Anita Page) who catches his fancy. From that point on he does everything he can to romance her but is caught completely off-guard when she responds in a much more serious tone. Fearing any sort of commitment, he leaves rather abruptly and-recognizing the impact his words have upon her-struggles with his feelings immediately afterward. Unfortunately, his feelings of abandonment only deepen when his ship leaves port that very night leaving Alice all alone. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this was an okay comedy for the most part which contained a certain amount of innuendo appropriate for the time. Both William Haines and Anita Page performed in a solid manner and Karl Dane (as "Sven Swanson") also contributing some good comedy as well. That being said, while this clearly wasn't a great comedy by any means, it was good enough for the time spent and I have rated it accordingly. Average.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis was the first all-talking picture William Haines starred in. He had previously starred in MGM's first talkie, a silent film with talking sequences, in 1928 and had appeared in MGM's 1929 all-star revue.
- GoofsAt 41 min a fly lands on William Haines' forehead.
- Alternate versionsMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer also release this movie as a silent with film length 1,888.24 m.
- SoundtracksNavy Blues
(1929)
Music by Fred E. Ahlert
Lyrics by Roy Turk
Played during the opening credits and sung by an unidentified man
Sung a cappella by William Haines (uncredited) often
Sung a cappella by Anita Page (uncredited)
Sung by the sailors twice
Played by the organ grinder
Details
- Runtime1 hour 17 minutes
- Color
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