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IMDbPro

Knute Rockne All American

  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Pat O'Brien in Knute Rockne All American (1940)
Trailer for this classic sports drama
Play trailer1:51
1 Video
25 Photos
BiographyDramaFamilySport

The story of legendary Notre Dame football player and coach Knute Rockne.The story of legendary Notre Dame football player and coach Knute Rockne.The story of legendary Notre Dame football player and coach Knute Rockne.

  • Directors
    • Lloyd Bacon
    • William K. Howard
  • Writers
    • Robert Buckner
    • Mrs. Knute Rockne
  • Stars
    • Pat O'Brien
    • Gale Page
    • Ronald Reagan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Lloyd Bacon
      • William K. Howard
    • Writers
      • Robert Buckner
      • Mrs. Knute Rockne
    • Stars
      • Pat O'Brien
      • Gale Page
      • Ronald Reagan
    • 26User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Videos1

    Knute Rockne All American
    Trailer 1:51
    Knute Rockne All American

    Photos25

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    Top cast95

    Edit
    Pat O'Brien
    Pat O'Brien
    • Knute Rockne
    Gale Page
    Gale Page
    • Bonnie Skiles Rockne
    Ronald Reagan
    Ronald Reagan
    • George Gipp
    Donald Crisp
    Donald Crisp
    • Father John Callahan C.S.C.
    Albert Bassermann
    Albert Bassermann
    • Father Julius Nieuwland
    • (as Albert Basserman)
    John Litel
    John Litel
    • Committee Chairman
    Henry O'Neill
    Henry O'Neill
    • Doctor Treating Knute
    Owen Davis Jr.
    Owen Davis Jr.
    • Charles 'Gus' Dorais
    John Qualen
    John Qualen
    • Lars Knutson Rockne
    Dorothy Tree
    Dorothy Tree
    • Martha Rockne
    Johnny Sheffield
    Johnny Sheffield
    • Knute Rockne - Age 7
    • (as John Sheffield)
    Moreau Choir of Notre Dame
    • Moreau Choir
    • (as The Moreau Choir of Notre Dame)
    Nick Lukats
    • Harry Stuhldreher - The Four Horsemen
    Kane Richmond
    Kane Richmond
    • Elmer Layden - The Four Horsemen
    William Marshall
    William Marshall
    • Don Miller - The Four Horsemen
    William Byrne
    • Jim Crowley - The Four Horsemen
    Howard Jones
    • Howard Jones - USC Coach
    Glenn 'Pop' Warner
    Glenn 'Pop' Warner
    • Glenn 'Pop' Warner - Stanford Coach
    • Directors
      • Lloyd Bacon
      • William K. Howard
    • Writers
      • Robert Buckner
      • Mrs. Knute Rockne
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    6.72.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10edwagreen

    An American for All Ages-Knute Shines ****

    Pat O'Brien had his best role ever as Notre Dame football coach Knute Rockne. From humble beginnings, Rockne entered Notre Dame as a student circa 1910. He is into chemistry but becomes a marvelous football player and hero.

    Upon graduation, he teaches chemistry at the school but he has got the football fever that tugs at him, this forces him to give up chemistry to pursue his dream of coaching the game. In a way, too bad, the school probably lost a great chemistry teacher-certainly far better and nicer than the one I had in high school. (Erasmus Hall in Brooklyn to be exact.)

    He motivates his students. He will not tolerate academic underachievement. He is a coach for all seasons.

    O'Brien captures that common kind touch. One of his students, George Gipp, is memorably played in a fine brief supporting performance by Ronald Reagan.

    The years pass and the achievements run high-but Knute remains the same kind coach who testifies before Congress when football is called into question.

    Donald Crisp is outstanding as a Notre Dame priest who knew that Rockne was destined to coach football. Albert Basserman is adequate, but his Jewish accent in the portrayal of a priest is awkward at best. Basserman was nominated that year in the supporting category for "Foreign Correspondent."

    Rockne's tragic death, in a plane crash, robbed the world of many more years of a totally professionally wonderful human-being. The film is great.
    7whpratt1

    Pat O'Brien was Outstanding

    Recently was traveling in Norway from Bergen, Norway and stopped in the small town of Voss, Norway and there was a monument in honor of Knute Rockne who was born in Voss years ago. The people all know about Knute to this day and tour guides are proud to stop at his monument. This film is a great history of this great man and his great love for Notre Dame Never realized that Knute has such great talents in chemistry and laboratory science and also taught chemistry for years and at the same time coached the football team. Ronald Reagan played the role of George Gipp, (The Gipper) who was an outstanding football player; Reagan had a short role, but gave a great supporting role in this film. Donald Crisp, (Father John Callahan) was outstanding as a priest who always had great faith in Knute during his entire life at Notre Dame. This is a great Classic film and will be viewed by many generations to come. Enjoy.
    cariart

    Affectionate, Winning Football Bio...

    When Warner Brothers decided to produce the biography of Notre Dame's legendary football coach, Knute (pronounced Ka-Newt) Rockne, there were major hurdles that had to be faced. Rockne had only passed away nine years earlier, at 43, and his image and distinctive speaking style were well-known to football fans, nation-wide, through newsreels and radio, as was his Cinderella-like story (born in Voss, Norway, he and his family had emigrated to Chicago, Illinois when he was five, he worked to pay tuition to attend Notre Dame, then went on to revolutionize football as both a player and coach). Any film about Rockne had to secure the permission of his widow, Bonnie Skiles Rockne, and the cooperation of Notre Dame, and both wanted final approval of both the script, and the actor to play 'Rock'.

    While the script, focusing on Rockne's devotion to 'his boys', making football more exciting, and his unshakable faith in the importance of athletics and education to America's youth, would win Mrs. Rockne and Notre Dame's support, casting the coach would prove a challenge. When stocky, darkly handsome 41-year old Irish American actor Pat O'Brien (best known as James Cagney's frequent co-star) was announced to play the craggy Norwegian American Rockne, there was some concern raised whether he was 'right' for the role. But in full makeup, O'Brien was quite convincing, and he could mimic the coach's staccato speaking style perfectly. Knute Rockne would become O'Brien's 'definitive' role, as well as his personal favorite, in a career that spanned over sixty years.

    From his introduction to football as a boy (played by Johnny 'Tarzan's Boy' Sheffield), as he admonishes his father (veteran character actor John Qualen) to "speak American, Papa...We're in America, now", through his years working at a Post Office earning tuition money, to his courtship of Bonnie Skiles (Gale Page) and on-field partnership with 'Gus' Dorais (Owen Davis Jr.), who would toss Rockne the forward pass against Army that would revolutionize the game, the story is both entertaining and informative (Rock, it is revealed, could have made a "first class" chemist).

    Then Ronald Reagan appears, as flippant, yet private George Gipp, and the film achieves it's legendary status. Coach Rockne and player Gipp, as portrayed by O'Brien and Reagan, have a 'father/son'-like bond that is irresistible, and in less than ten minutes of screen time, Reagan establishes himself as no longer a 'B' actor, but a star to be reckoned with. The "Win One for the Gipper" speech has become one of the best-loved in movie (and sports) history, and, while it has been parodied frequently through the years (particularly while Reagan was President of the United States), it is still quite moving.

    While Gipp's untimely death casts a momentary pall on the film, his place is soon taken by the legendary "Four Horsemen", as Rockne introduces 'the backfield shift' to football. The coach becomes the spokesperson of College Football, defending both himself and such legends as Alonzo Stagg, 'Pop' Warner, Howard Jones, and Bill Spaulding (playing themselves), against charges of gambling and football's place in an academic environment.

    Through it all, Bonnie Rockne offers loving support to her often preoccupied but devoted husband and their large family. The bond they share is so intimate that she 'feels' the airplane crash that takes his life, in the film's tragic finale.

    Punctuated by Notre Dame's classic fight song, KNUTE ROCKNE ALL AMERICAN is certainly not a 'perfect' film (watch how frequently jersey numbers appear, disappear, and change, as vintage newsreel footage is used during big games), but the overall result is both rousing and sentimental. It's easy to see why "Rudy" Ruettiger would be inspired by it, and would want to add his own chapter to Notre Dame's illustrious history.

    The film certainly deserves it's 'classic' status!
    8jotix100

    The fighting Irish

    "Knute Rockne All American", the biopic about the famous Notre Dame beloved coach Knute Rockne, is an excellent sports film to watch. Not ever having seen it, we were surprised by the technique used in the movie by director Lloyd Bacon, who shows he was ahead of his times in photographing football games. The result is a vibrant picture about the man responsible for the legacy of the collegian sport, Knute Rockne.

    The film presents Rockne from his humble origins in Chicago to his studies in famed Notre Dame University in South Bend, Indiana. He was an ambitious man who had a vision about how the game should be played. Luckily, he went to give his beloved Notre Dame the glory he was after.

    Pat O'Brien looks a bit older when he starts as a freshman. In fact, he doesn't change much throughout the film, but he is fine as Mr. Rockne. Pat O'Brien shows he could inspire the players under him by just being a father figure. Gale Page plays Bonnie Rockne, the wise woman who understood her husband's call in life. Ronald Reagan plays George "The Gipper" Gipp, who was a legend that died much too young, but who left a legacy behind. Donald Crisp makes a good contribution as Father John Callahan who was Rockne's mentor at the university.

    This film will delight not only sports because of LLoyd Bacon's direction and the fast pace he gives to the movie.
    10DARTHKOOL

    Greatest Football movie ever...

    The true life story of perhaps the greatest football coach the game has ever known. Knute Rockne led the game of football out of the "stone age" with innovations such as the forward pass and offensive formation shifts. But he is probably best known for his motivational locker room speeches. Along the way, he brought fame and glory to a tiny, little, unknown Catholic school in Indiana. Pat O'Brien is incomparable in his role as Rockne. Terrific cast that includes Ronald Reagan who gives a great performance as Notre Dame's first, true superstar, George Gipp.

    For Football aficionados, this is the greatest football movie ever made. Do yourself a favor and rent the black and white version. (Some versions have deleted scenes for some reason) If you got the good version, look for a brief cameo by the immortal Jim Thorpe as he sticks his head in the locker room telling Rockne and the team they only have a few minutes left before the 2nd half begins.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The unnamed "disease" that killed George Gipp wasn't a disease, it was actually complications from strep throat.
    • Goofs
      The airplane in which Knute Rockne lost his life was the Fokker F-10 tri-moter. The movie uses a metal-winged Ford tri-motor. The F-10 had wooden wings, which failed during the flight due to internal deterioration, causing the crash. The movie seems to indicate that Rockne's plane crashed because of engine trouble.
    • Quotes

      Knute Rockne: Now I'm going to tell you something I've kept to myself for years. None of you ever knew George Gipp. He was long before your time, but you all know what a tradition he is at Notre Dame. And the last thing he said to me, "Rock," he said, "sometime when the team is up against it and the breaks are beating the boys, tell them to go out there with all they've got and win just one for the Gipper. I don't know where I'll be then, Rock," he said, "but I'll know about it and I'll be happy."

    • Crazy credits
      The movie begins with the Foreword: "The Life of Knute Rockne is its own dedication to the Youth of America, and to finest ideals of courage, characters and sportmanship for all the world. Knute Rockne was a great and vital force in moudling the spirit of modern America through the millions of young men and boys who loved and respected him, and who today are living by the high standard that he taught. This picture has been made with the permission and valuable assistance of his widow, Bonnie Skiles Rockne. Appreciation is expressed to the University of Notre Dame for its gratuitous co-operation."
    • Alternate versions
      For years TV prints of "Knute Rockne All-Amercian" deleted about 13 minutes of footage, including the famous "Win one for the Gipper" speech, for legal reasons concerning the George Gipp family. When the US video version was released in 1998, all the deleted scenes were restored, and seen for the first time since the original theatrical showings. The restored, complete print has since been released on DVD (as of 2006) and is now available for television viewings.
    • Connections
      Featured in Family Classics: Family Classics: Knute Rockne: All American (1963)
    • Soundtracks
      The Notre Dame Victory March
      (1908) (uncredited)

      Music by Michael J. Shea

      Lyrics by John F. Shea

      Played during the opening and end credits

      Played and sung by the crowd at the railroad station twice

      Played as background music often

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 5, 1940 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Creador de campeones
    • Filming locations
      • University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana, USA
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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