8/10
No Bing popup to steal Dorothy from Hope
6 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Finally, a film were there's no Bing Crosby to steal Dorothy Lamour from Bob Hope in the last segment, as was the usual case in the famous "Road" series. Even in "The Princess and the Pauper", where Virginia Mayo substituted for Dorothy in a raucous farce, Bing showed up at the end to steal the fair damsel away from Hope. David Butler directed that film, as well as the present one. Bing's substitutes in this film: Eddie Bracken and Lynne Overman, were no substitute for the presence of Der Bingle as a foil for Hope, as well as a little singing and dancing. Hope's obstacles to marrying Dorothy included his own cowardice and incompetence, his persistent trickery, and the opposition of Dorothy's father, Colonel Fairbanks, unless he could qualify to be at least a corporal and show evidence of adequate bravery. During his basic training , he lived in fear that Col. Fairbanks would make good his threat to transfer him to another base, if he didn't stop pestering Dorothy, and start showing some competence as a potential soldier.

Hope has frequent access to the Colonel's residence during his training, where Dorothy is also residing. We certainly have to wonder how he managed that, and why Dorothy put up with his repetitive bumbling and trickery to chose him as a potential husband. Must be that he is a famous movie actor when not in the army, despite his various phobias and clumsiness.

In the beginning, the two things Hope most feared were being drafted and being suckered into a marriage to hopefully avoid being drafted. "That's like cutting your throat to cure laryngitis". Dorothy seemed to be an exception to his fear. Thus, he aggressively pursued marriage to her to hopefully avoid the draft. As you might expect, he ended up married, and in the army, as an involuntary volunteer, we might say.

The film begins with Hope, among others, mired in a very muddy trench in WWI. This turns out to be a film shoot. Strangely, Hope is rattled by loud noises, even from a pistol shot, and faints at the sight of his blood. His first meeting with Dorothy and her father, on the movie set, is a disaster, as he mistakes her father for one of the actors, and sprays him with mud. Next, he lands in a gooey mud pit, totally immersed except for his eyes, exclaiming "Mami!", as if he was in blackface.

Most of you will probably consider the segment where Hope has to drive a tank the most hilarious. Narrowly missing various disasters, he ends up grazing the side of the Colonel's car, knocking the door off its hinges, after having picked up a pretty nurse along the way... Hope fails miserably as a paratrooper and on the target range....Then, there's the segment where Hope is hiding and being chased around the base hospital. The last segment has Hope and buddies participating in a war game. They become heroes in averting a disaster, are promoted to corporal, and Hope is judged now to be fit to marry Dorothy.

Unlike the "Road" series, there is no singing or dancing. Thus, this film totally relies on one liners and physical comedy for its interest

Hope and Dorothy made another film during the war without Bing: "They Got Me Covered": a combination comedy and spy thriller, relating to the war. I haven't seen it.
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