5/10
Hugely recognizable cast but only an average war film about an historic group
2 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by William Keighley, with an original screenplay by Norman Reilly Raine, Fred Niblo Jr., and Dean Franklin, this average World War II features an all star cast led by James Cagney, in a somewhat against type role as a street tough loner who turns "yellow" in combat. Pat O'Brien plays Father Francis Duffy (naturally), who refuses to give up on Jerry Plunkett (Cagney); George Brent (also somewhat against type) plays the platoon's hard driving Major "Wild Bill" Donovan. Evidently, the real Duffy was memorialized with a statue, posthumously. Jeffrey Lynn plays the company's famous poet, and Sergeant Joyce Kilmer.

In a group loaded with Irish Americans from New York, primarily, Alan Hale plays Sergeant "Big Mike" Wynn, who has several scraps with the tough young Private Plunkett in his regiment. Frank McHugh provides comic relief (as usual); Dennis Morgan appears briefly as a Lieutenant, as does "the Singing Cowboy" Dick Foran. William Lundigan, Guinn "Big Boy" Williams, Sammy Cohen, William Hopper, and Tom Dugan also appear as recently enlisted men in the famous unit. Foran, Hale, and Lundigan plays three members of the same family (brothers), descending in rank, within the group. Once the inductees are ready for battle and shipped "over there", Henry O'Neill and John Litel appear as the Colonel and the Captain, respectively. John Ridgely, whom I recall seeing, and George Reeves, whom I don't, also appear uncredited (among MANY others) as soldiers in this film.

The story is a bit sappy, perhaps, released well before our involvement in the conflict brewing in the East, but it's watch-able nonetheless. Despite the plethora of Warner Bros. stars in the cast, it's only Cagney, O'Brien, Brent, and Hale who are charged with carrying the load. The focus of the plot is on Cagney's character, perhaps one of the least likable he ever played - a coward, the first ever in the famed unit. Brent and Hale are ready to through him out, which takes ever increasing forms as the film progresses to the front lines of battle, while O'Brien tries (quite literally) to "save" him.

The battle scenes are nothing spectacular, but realistic enough to give one at least a feel for the chaos that might cause one (like Cagney's Plunkett) to flinch when faced with the reality of such terror. It probably comes as no surprise to anyone (lest this be a spoiler) that there's a change in our protagonist at just the right time, before the film's conclusion.
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