The crazy crew of McHale decide to use their PT boat as an off-track betting parlor and run in to lots of trouble when they owe money to some marines and a horse they bought causes a Japanes... Read allThe crazy crew of McHale decide to use their PT boat as an off-track betting parlor and run in to lots of trouble when they owe money to some marines and a horse they bought causes a Japanese sub to run aground.The crazy crew of McHale decide to use their PT boat as an off-track betting parlor and run in to lots of trouble when they owe money to some marines and a horse they bought causes a Japanese sub to run aground.
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- Japanese J.G.
- (as John Mamo)
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Featured reviews
This all doesn't lend itself well to the longer format.
It's a lot of silly slapstick comedy. I never saw the TV show. If this is any guide, it's a pretty low grade sitcom. The show is in black and white while this is in sharp bright colors. It could be funny in half hour spurts but it feels tiresome after awhile. It does allow Conway to riff on extended jokes. However, even he feels a bit too extended just like the movie. It is what it is and what one expects.
Tim Conway and Ernest Borgnine were very good, too, and it is amazing that in real life you would never picture Tim Conway in the role of a dim witted clown.
Did you know
- TriviaThis movie's PT-73 was a British-designed seventy-foot Vosper MTB (Motor Torpedo Boat) built under license in the U.S. for export to Russia. World War II ended before the boat could be sent to the Soviet Union. The boat was used for shots of the PT-73 underway at sea, while a full-scale mock-up was used for studio scenes. The real PT-73 in World War II II was a seventy-eight-foot Higgins PT boat, assigned to the U.S. Navy's MTB Squadron 13, and was placed in service on August 12, 1942. PT-73 was destroyed to prevent capture after running aground while delivering supplies to guerrillas near Lubang Island in the Philippines, on January 15, 1945.
- GoofsMcHale, and all officers in the film (Ensign Parker, Captain Binghampton, and Lieutenant Carpenter) wear brown low-quarter uniform dress shoes. This is incorrect, as traditionally, only naval aviators (flyers) wear brown shoes. The U.S. Navy has always differentiated between the "black-shoe" (ship and submarine officers and men) and the "brown-shoe" (naval flying officers and men) Navy(s).
- Quotes
Seaman Joseph 'Happy' Hanes: [to approaching Marines] Well, what do you know? Real life GI-rines, just like in the movies. Which one of you guys is John Wayne?
- ConnectionsFollowed by McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force (1965)
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- McHale's Navy
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- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1