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Escale à Hollywood

Original title: Anchors Aweigh
  • 1945
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Kathryn Grayson, and José Iturbi in Escale à Hollywood (1945)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:29
1 Video
99+ Photos
ComedyFantasyMusical

A pair of sailors on leave try to help a movie extra become a singing star.A pair of sailors on leave try to help a movie extra become a singing star.A pair of sailors on leave try to help a movie extra become a singing star.

  • Directors
    • George Sidney
    • Joseph Barbera
    • William Hanna
  • Writers
    • Isobel Lennart
    • Natalie Marcin
  • Stars
    • Frank Sinatra
    • Kathryn Grayson
    • Gene Kelly
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    9.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • George Sidney
      • Joseph Barbera
      • William Hanna
    • Writers
      • Isobel Lennart
      • Natalie Marcin
    • Stars
      • Frank Sinatra
      • Kathryn Grayson
      • Gene Kelly
    • 91User reviews
    • 37Critic reviews
    • 60Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 5 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:29
    Trailer

    Photos140

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    Top cast94

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    Frank Sinatra
    Frank Sinatra
    • Clarence Doolittle
    Kathryn Grayson
    Kathryn Grayson
    • Susan Abbott
    Gene Kelly
    Gene Kelly
    • Joseph Brady
    José Iturbi
    José Iturbi
    • José Iturbi
    Dean Stockwell
    Dean Stockwell
    • Donald Martin
    Pamela Britton
    Pamela Britton
    • Girl from Brooklyn
    Rags Ragland
    Rags Ragland
    • Police Sergeant
    • (as 'Rags' Ragland)
    Billy Gilbert
    Billy Gilbert
    • Cafe Manager
    Henry O'Neill
    Henry O'Neill
    • Adm. Hammond
    Carlos Ramírez
    Carlos Ramírez
    • Carlos
    • (as Carlos Ramirez)
    Edgar Kennedy
    Edgar Kennedy
    • Police Captain
    Grady Sutton
    Grady Sutton
    • Bertram Kraler
    Leon Ames
    Leon Ames
    • Admiral's Aide
    Sharon McManus
    Sharon McManus
    • Little Girl Beggar
    James Flavin
    James Flavin
    • Radio Cop
    James Burke
    James Burke
    • Studio Cop
    Henry Armetta
    Henry Armetta
    • Hamburger Man
    Chester Clute
    Chester Clute
    • Iturbi's Assistant
    • Directors
      • George Sidney
      • Joseph Barbera
      • William Hanna
    • Writers
      • Isobel Lennart
      • Natalie Marcin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews91

    7.09.7K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Anchors Aweigh' is a classic MGM musical with Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, and Kathryn Grayson. It features memorable dance sequences, vibrant Technicolor, and innovative camera work. Themes of love, friendship, and ambition are explored. Songs by Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn enhance the charm. Despite some criticisms of length and pacing, the film is celebrated for its entertainment value and historical significance.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    One of the most popular musicals of the period

    Released some months before the end of the war, "Anchors Aweigh" is one of Gene Kelly's major musical triumphs of the forties…

    Under the direction of George Sidney, it had the benefits of a pleasant score, and—best of all—the services of Gene Kelly in his first true starring role at MGM… The year before, in Columbia's "Cover Girl," he had revealed an innovative approach to dance on the screen, a light but agreeable singing voice, and considerable charm In "Anchors Aweigh," although he was billed under Frank Sinatra and Kathryn Grayson, he was laying the solid groundwork for his most revealing years at MGM…

    The film's story, a kind of dry run for "On the Town" four years later, follows sailors Kelly and Sinatra on shore leave, spend their holiday in Hollywood, where they become involved in the affairs of an aspiring singer (Grayson) and her little nephew (Dean Stockwell).

    Grayson, it appears, has her heart set on an audition with conductor-pianist Jose Iturbi… She gets the audition, of course; Kelly gets Grayson after some misunderstandings; and Sinatra, has forgotten to be shy, and has lost his heart to a girl from Brooklyn (Pamela Britton).

    The plot is conventional for the period but, regrettably, it now seems barely tolerable… But there is Gene Kelly, who dominates the movie with his agreeable personality… Perhaps he grins too much, but when is permitted to dance, the film finally lifts off the ground…

    "I Begged Her," his early song and dance with Sinatra, is amusing and slightly absurd, in which he imagines himself as a bandit chieftain in a Spanish courtyard, courting maiden Grayson with a flamboyant flamenco dance and some athletic leaps… He also does a charming Mexican dance with little Sharon McManus in the square of a Mexican settlement in Los Angeles…

    The highlight of the movie, however, is Kelly's famous dance with the cartoon character Jerry the Mouse (of "Tom and Jerry" fame). Delightful and innovative, it skillfully combines live action and animation in its tale of a sad mouse king who refuses to allow music in his kingdom until Kelly, a sailor in the "Pomeranian Navy," wearing a striped shirt and a beret, shows him how to dance… "Look at me, I'm dancin'!" says the gleeful mouse king...
    didi-5

    the dancing debut of Jerry Mouse

    Famous for the scene where Gene Kelly dances a duet with Jerry Mouse, this zippy musical is also the one where Kathryn Grayson trills 'Jealousy', and Frank Sinatra sings in the arena of a thousand pianos ('I Fall in Love Too Easily'). Grayson is a young mother who wants more than anything else to be in the movies. Her little boy (Dean Stockwell, who would turn up much later in TV's Quantum Leap) wants to join the US forces, and so he meets sailors Kelly and Sinatra heading out for a bit of leave. There are some echoes of 'On the Town' in this movie, but not enough to spoil the mix.
    7TheLittleSongbird

    Overlong, but watchable with a memorable sequence with Gene Kelly and a certain mouse

    Anchors Aweigh is not a favourite of mine by all means, but I do enjoy it. It is overlong, the story is somewhat slight and the dialogue is unexceptional. Despite its failings, it is enjoyable. The production values are pleasing to the eye, while the score and songs are very pleasant and the choreography sprightly. The direction is good enough, while the pace while slightly mannered I had little problem with, as there are certain delights that stop the film from being dull. The cast, dancing and singing are excellent. Gene Kelly is always likable and here is no exception, while Frank Sinatra delights with his beautiful voice and and Kathryn Grayson is graceful and beautiful. The real delight though is the film's most famous sequence and no surprise really, the sequence when Kelly dances with Jerry of Tom and Jerry fame is as clever as it is memorable. So overall, not exceptional by all means, but there is much to enjoy still. 7/10 Bethany Cox
    8craig_smith9

    This Movie Is Full Of Life

    Overall this is a delightful, light-hearted, romantic, musical comedy. I suppose a small case could be made for the movie being to long. But I'm not sure what you would cut out. The singing that Kelly and Sinatra do? No. The fabulous dancing that Kelly does? No. The time the movie takes to develop the story line and develop the relationships of the characters? No (that seems to be a common complaint many times that more recent movies don't develop the characters).

    Some comment that Iturbi didn't bring much to the movie but this gives us a chance to see and hear a great talent from the 1040s. So what if he wasn't an actor? He was an important part of the movie as the basic plot was to get Grayson an audition with him.

    Originally Katherine Grayson wanted to be an opera star. Louis B. Mayer brought her to MGM for a screen test that included an aria. During her audition in the movie there is a shot of the MGM brass nodding and smiling. You can just imagine it was like that when she had made her real screen test years before.

    This movie is so full of life it is hard to hit all of the highlights. Great use was made of color and lighting throughout the movie. You can see why Frank Sinatra became the star he did. A nice counter-point in the movie is how Sinatra (a ladies man even then) played the role of wanting to just find a date while on leave. You'll feel good after seeing this movie. 7/10
    stryker-5

    "All Kinda Mixed-Up And - Interesting"

    MGM was intent on making the most of its hot new properties Kelly and Sinatra in this affable sailor saga. The stars' characters were created with maximum screen impact in mind, and were to be retained (with minor adjustments) in "Take Me Out To The Ball Game" and "On The Town". Gene Kelly plays Joe "Sea Wolf" Brady, the twinkle-eyed Irish womaniser who never quite seems to get a woman. Clarence "Brooklyn" Doolittle, Sinatra's screen persona, was put together as a blatant attempt to pander to his bobbysoxer following. He is the bashful, slightly geeky ingenu, pushing his cuteness for all it's worth - "the romantical type fella".

    "Anchors Aweigh" set the pattern for a whole assembly line of MGM musicals to come, and one could almost say it established an art-form. Kelly did the choreography, and his first-ever 'dream ballets', two of them, are on display here - the famous pas de deux with Jerry The Mouse, and the Zorro interlude. The dance sequences are brimming with innovative ideas - mixing human action with animation, artistic use of slow motion, 'playing' the items on the craft stall and bouncing on the beds in the servicemen's hostel.

    MGM itself appears, almost as a character in the movie, with self-indulgent shots of the art deco facade and the bustle of the back lot. Jose Iturbi, the Spanish musical director contracted to MGM at the time, plays himself in a slightly odd role. He is the big noise at the studio whom Aunt Susie is anxious to impress, and in a bid to give the meandering storyline some cohesion, he opens the film conducting the Navy band (this strange set-up is 'explained' in a later throwaway line: he was brought in to tighten-up the Navy's musical style). There are two problems with giving Iturbi an important role in the movie - one, nobody has ever heard of Jose Iturbi, and two, his Valencian accent is so strong that it renders him virtually unintelligible. But anyhow, Iturbi conducts the said Navy band, and then an orchestra on the MGM sound stage, playing a "Rhapsody In Blue" rip-off. He presides over Aunt Susie's auditon, and plays some classical stuff at the keyboard (including an interesting "Hungarian Rhapsody" at the Hollywood Bowl, with massed pianos).

    The plot (if that is not too choate a term for it) goes thus: an aircraft carrier puts in at San Diego, and two sailors are given shore leave. They encounter a little boy who leads them to his pretty Aunt Susie, a taco joint chanteuse who dreams of the big time. Without giving the game away, I can reveal that more than one person falls in love Susie, leading to the customary complications and misunderstandings. The energy and exuberance of the performances, and particularly that of Kelly, carry the madcap action along nicely, and the eccentricities of a storyline which goes from mariachi groups to Tom And Jerry don't seem so very outlandish after all. This new brand of musical comedy, breaking completely with the pre-war conventions of tuxedos and ocean liners, is attractive and refreshing.

    Young Mister Sinatra, under a separate contract from the others, sings numbers specially written for him by Jules Styne and Sammy Cahn. By far the best of these formulaic boy-crooner ballads is the final one, "I Fall In Love Too Easily". Throughout the film, Frank sings in his upper register, aiming for a light ballad sound, and consequently not doing any justice to that reedy baritone voice.

    The film has attractive visual gimmicks, quite apart from the man-and-cartoon-mouse stuff. Iturbi plays a transparent keyboard, shot from below. In a clever comment on the storyline, Joe rises from the table and physically comes between Clarence and Susie. The string section of the orchestra is filmed playing pizzicato in the reflection of Iturbi's grand piano.

    Katherine Grayson is more than adequate playing the female ingenue, and her voice is spectacular, if a little too showy and operatic. The screen test is a knockout coloratura performance.

    The film falls away a little towards the end. The Hollywood Bowl is incorporated, one feels, merely to give the movie a photogenic location to use, and this passage distorts the storyline somewhat. The fallings in and out of love are totally arbitrary, and the resolutions hurried and thin. But for all that, "Anchors Aweigh" is fun to watch, and its stylistic innovations paved the way for the great MGM musicals of the next ten years.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When the dance sequence with Gene Kelly and Jerry Mouse was screened for MGM executives, someone noticed that, although Gene Kelly's reflection shone on the floor during his dancing, Jerry's did not. This required animators William Hanna, Joseph Barbera, and their team to go back and draw Jerry's reflection on the floor as he was dancing.
    • Goofs
      When Clarence is singing to the waitress in the restaurant, there is a picture of Susita on the wall. When seen at a distance, her head is tilted to the left, but in a closeup, her head is vertical.
    • Quotes

      Jerry Mouse: Look at me, I'm dancing.

    • Crazy credits
      [in some versions, after the end credits]

      TO FAMILIES AND FRIENDS OF SERVICEMEN AND WOMEN:

      Pictures exhibited in this theatre are given to the armed forces for showing in combat areas around the world.

      WAR ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY
    • Connections
      Edited into American Masters: Gene Kelly: Anatomy of a Dancer (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Anchors Aweigh
      (1906) (uncredited)

      Music by Charles A. Zimmerman

      Played off-screen during the opening credits

      Played by a Navy Band conducted by José Iturbi

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 15, 1948 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Anchors Aweigh
    • Filming locations
      • Hollywood Bowl - 2301 N. Highland Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,556
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 20 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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