The invention and use of a jeep are described, from the viewpoint of one of the vehicles.The invention and use of a jeep are described, from the viewpoint of one of the vehicles.The invention and use of a jeep are described, from the viewpoint of one of the vehicles.
- Directors
- Writer
- Stars
Claire Chennault
- Self - Talking to a Soldier in a Jeep
- (archive footage)
- (as General Chennault)
King George VI
- Self - Riding in a Jeep
- (archive footage)
- (as King George)
Douglas MacArthur
- Self - Riding in a Jeep
- (archive footage)
- (as General MacArthur)
Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother
- Self - Riding in a Jeep
- (archive footage)
Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Self - Riding in a Jeep in Casablanca
- (archive footage)
- (as President Roosevelt)
Joseph W. Stilwell
- Self - Talking to a Soldier in a Jeep
- (archive footage)
- (as General Stilwell)
Wendell Willkie
- Self - Talking to a Soldier in a Jeep
- (archive footage)
Bud Abbott
- Self - in a Jeep in Parade
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Claudette Colbert
- Self
- (uncredited)
Lou Costello
- Self - in a Jeep in Parade
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Oliver Hardy
- Self - in a Jeep in Parade
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Stan Laurel
- Self - in a Jeep in Parade
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writer
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
When he debarked on a Normandy beach a few days after the D-Day landings, Andy Rooney was a correspondent and, as such, was issued a Jeep, an ungainly but rugged four-wheeled convertible. He used the vehicle through the European Theater for most of the rest of the war. At the end, he was transferred to the China-Burma-India Theater where nothing of import was happening. Since he need to leave the jeep behind, he simply turned it over to a fellow correspondent.
Two years after the war's end, Rooney received a letter from the authorities. He was required to account for the whereabouts of the Jeep, Serial Number 012345x. He placed the letter in a neglected drawer of his desk and it may still be there.
Rooney is no longer with us and neither is the original Jeep, made for the Armed Forces by the Willy Company. It was ubiquitous. If there were men and women in uniform around, there were also Jeeps. In the post-war years the original design was replaced by a somewhat bigger one. "Improvement" always means "bigger." This short film uses the first-person narrative (by Pat O'Brien) to describe the Jeep's development and capabilities. No mention of the prevailing belief that it rolled over on top of the occupants too easily. It's kind of entertaining to see these boxy things, so unlike any previous or existing automobiles, schlepping cannons and trailers and bouncing up and down, taking flight sometimes, swimming across rivers, being packed into cargo airplanes.
One kind of misses that robust simplicity. Now we're using SUVs too big to fit into the garage because of the 20 mm. cannons on top.
Two years after the war's end, Rooney received a letter from the authorities. He was required to account for the whereabouts of the Jeep, Serial Number 012345x. He placed the letter in a neglected drawer of his desk and it may still be there.
Rooney is no longer with us and neither is the original Jeep, made for the Armed Forces by the Willy Company. It was ubiquitous. If there were men and women in uniform around, there were also Jeeps. In the post-war years the original design was replaced by a somewhat bigger one. "Improvement" always means "bigger." This short film uses the first-person narrative (by Pat O'Brien) to describe the Jeep's development and capabilities. No mention of the prevailing belief that it rolled over on top of the occupants too easily. It's kind of entertaining to see these boxy things, so unlike any previous or existing automobiles, schlepping cannons and trailers and bouncing up and down, taking flight sometimes, swimming across rivers, being packed into cargo airplanes.
One kind of misses that robust simplicity. Now we're using SUVs too big to fit into the garage because of the 20 mm. cannons on top.
This was a very cute film from the Office Of War Information about the invention and development of the "jeep". One difference today is that the quotations marks have been dropped. Today's audience viewing this will learn that the word came into existence because the order that the automobile industry designers got was for general purpose (GP) type vehicle for rough terrain.
The jeep takes on human voice and persona and we see the vehicle perform in all kinds of conditions doing all kinds of tasks. A few celebrities get into the act, many a touring celebrity rode in those things away at the front. Presidents, prime ministers, generals and movie stars.
The jeep of yesterday has spawned the SUV all terrain vehicles of today. But they're still around, a popular product spawned of wartime necessity.
The jeep takes on human voice and persona and we see the vehicle perform in all kinds of conditions doing all kinds of tasks. A few celebrities get into the act, many a touring celebrity rode in those things away at the front. Presidents, prime ministers, generals and movie stars.
The jeep of yesterday has spawned the SUV all terrain vehicles of today. But they're still around, a popular product spawned of wartime necessity.
This American WW II time propaganda movie tells about the invention of the jeep and the everyday use of it by the American army during WW II. The end result is an interesting to watch short film, that also works quite well educational.
Not trying to sound like a big history buff but I know quite a lot about WW II and its weapons and vehicles of its time. Nevertheless, it wasn't until this film that I really fully started to realize- and appreciate the importance of the jeep and what a quite revolutionary invention it was, for its time. Let's face it, without WW II the jeep would had probably not had been invented for another 10 or 15 years. War always brings new inventions, that are revolutionary and in many ways ahead of its time. The jeep is really one of those revolutionary war-time inventions.
This short film shows the jeep in full action and shows for what purposes it all can be used by the army. I still learned some things I didn't knew yet. It all is told and explained from the point of view of the jeep itself. It might sound childish perhaps but it works really well.
Instead of having a 30 minutes+ long documentary with lots of talking, this is a fast paced only 9 minutes short documentary that tells you everything you really want to know and it does this in a rather light and amusing way, without ever loosing any of its informing and educational value. The short running time and its pace also makes sure that it keeps you interested for its entire duration.
The film also features a whole lot of military, royal and Hollywood celebrities driving the jeep, to once more- and to extra point out the importance, reliability and usefulness of the vehicle.
Great light educational, little short, WW II-time film.
8/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
Not trying to sound like a big history buff but I know quite a lot about WW II and its weapons and vehicles of its time. Nevertheless, it wasn't until this film that I really fully started to realize- and appreciate the importance of the jeep and what a quite revolutionary invention it was, for its time. Let's face it, without WW II the jeep would had probably not had been invented for another 10 or 15 years. War always brings new inventions, that are revolutionary and in many ways ahead of its time. The jeep is really one of those revolutionary war-time inventions.
This short film shows the jeep in full action and shows for what purposes it all can be used by the army. I still learned some things I didn't knew yet. It all is told and explained from the point of view of the jeep itself. It might sound childish perhaps but it works really well.
Instead of having a 30 minutes+ long documentary with lots of talking, this is a fast paced only 9 minutes short documentary that tells you everything you really want to know and it does this in a rather light and amusing way, without ever loosing any of its informing and educational value. The short running time and its pace also makes sure that it keeps you interested for its entire duration.
The film also features a whole lot of military, royal and Hollywood celebrities driving the jeep, to once more- and to extra point out the importance, reliability and usefulness of the vehicle.
Great light educational, little short, WW II-time film.
8/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
This is one of 50 films included in the DVD set "Treasures from American Film Archives (2000)". It's a documentary about the Jeep--and, oddly, it's told as if the Jeep itself is narrating the film! That is a pretty weird idea but it actually worked great. As you see the many crazy and difficult jobs this general purpose vehicle did, you can't help but admire the ingenuity of the car maker and designers. I was also surprised to see the likes of Laurel & Hardy and Claudette Colbert driving about in them for Bond Drives as well as Roosevelt and King George VI riding in them around the globe. I don't know exactly who the intended audience was for this one, but it was truly inspiring and exciting to watch even today--almost 70 years later.
An amusing short that contains some spectacular off-road shots of the Jeep, narration by the Jeep itself. Interesting and likeable, obviously a response to the publics interest in this revolutionary new vehicle at the time. Also has some good shots of rare early jeep models (Bantam etc)
Did you know
- TriviaOne of the 50 films in the 4-disk boxed DVD set called "Treasures from American Film Archives (2000)", compiled by the National Film Preservation Foundation from 18 American film archives. This film was preserved by the National Archive and Records Administration.
- Crazy creditsActors not marked uncredited are credited orally by the narrator.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Jeep: Steel Soldier (2007)
- SoundtracksRamblin' Wreck From Georgia Tech
Composers unknown
Played for marches, parades and as background music often
Details
- Runtime9 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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