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IMDbPro

Give Me a Sailor

  • 1938
  • Approved
  • 1h 20m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,4/10
497
MA NOTE
Bob Hope, Betty Grable, Martha Raye, and Jack Whiting in Give Me a Sailor (1938)
ComedyRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueJim and Walter are two brother sailors in the United States Navy. Walter tells Jim as soon as they get home he is going to ask his beautiful girlfriend, Nancy Larkin to marry him. But Jim is... Tout lireJim and Walter are two brother sailors in the United States Navy. Walter tells Jim as soon as they get home he is going to ask his beautiful girlfriend, Nancy Larkin to marry him. But Jim is also in love with Nancy so he begs Nancy's ugly duckling sister, Letty to help break Walt... Tout lireJim and Walter are two brother sailors in the United States Navy. Walter tells Jim as soon as they get home he is going to ask his beautiful girlfriend, Nancy Larkin to marry him. But Jim is also in love with Nancy so he begs Nancy's ugly duckling sister, Letty to help break Walter and Nancy up. Letty agrees only under one condition, he help her to win Walter!

  • Director
    • Elliott Nugent
  • Writers
    • Anne Nichols
    • Doris Anderson
    • Frank Butler
  • Stars
    • Martha Raye
    • Bob Hope
    • Betty Grable
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,4/10
    497
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Elliott Nugent
    • Writers
      • Anne Nichols
      • Doris Anderson
      • Frank Butler
    • Stars
      • Martha Raye
      • Bob Hope
      • Betty Grable
    • 16Commentaires d'utilisateurs
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 3 victoires au total

    Photos14

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    Rôles principaux43

    Modifier
    Martha Raye
    Martha Raye
    • Letty Larkin
    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Jim Brewster
    Betty Grable
    Betty Grable
    • Nancy Larkin
    Jack Whiting
    Jack Whiting
    • Walter Brewster
    Clarence Kolb
    Clarence Kolb
    • CaptainTallant
    J.C. Nugent
    J.C. Nugent
    • Mr. Larkin
    Bonnie Jean Churchill
    • Ethel May Brewster
    Nana Bryant
    Nana Bryant
    • Mrs. Minnie Brewster
    Kathleen Lockhart
    Kathleen Lockhart
    • Mrs. Hawks
    • (scenes deleted)
    John Henry Allen
    • Messenger Boy
    • (uncredited)
    John Henry Allen
    • Black Sailor
    • (uncredited)
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • The Druggist
    • (uncredited)
    Bobby Barber
    Bobby Barber
    • Sailor
    • (uncredited)
    Eddie Borden
    Eddie Borden
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Don Brodie
    Don Brodie
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Billy Daniel
    • Dancer at Picnic
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Denning
    Richard Denning
    • Sailor
    • (uncredited)
    Eddie Dunn
    Eddie Dunn
    • Newsreel Director
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Elliott Nugent
    • Writers
      • Anne Nichols
      • Doris Anderson
      • Frank Butler
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs16

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    Avis en vedette

    5bkoganbing

    Martha Raye's Legs Were the Sexiest?

    A few years after Give Me a Sailor was out, Betty Grable finally hit the big time over at 20th Century Fox. Those beautiful legs of her's on which perched the USA's all American girl were her stock and trade. Reportedly Lloyd's of London had them insured in seven figures.

    So when part of the plot is Martha Raye winning a radio contest with a picture of her legs, it strains the credulity a lot. Of course the folks at Paramount obviously did not read into the future about Betty Grable's legs being her fortune.

    Give Me a Sailor is one of the weaker of Bob Hope's early films. He was co-starred with Martha Raye a lot and note the billing where she's above him in the title and would be that way in all of their joint projects in the late Thirties.

    Raye and Grable are sisters, Raye's the plain jane who's the good cook, but with apparently great legs. Grable's the beautiful sister whose gams never got noticed and she can't cook to save her life.

    The sisters are being courted by two brothers, Bob Hope and Jack Whiting who are both in the Navy. Well at least both are after Betty with the other maybe doomed to settle for Martha. After a lot of crazy screwball antics which finds them at one point engaged to the wrong girl, all is right in the end. Guess who winds up with who though.

    Jack Whiting made very few films, but he was a leading Broadway musical star and had the distinction of being Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.'s stepdad. Whiting married Anne Sully Fairbanks after her divorce from Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. was finalized. He has a long list of Broadway credits stretching almost 40 years. He had a pleasant enough singing voice, but as a film personality he was bland. Hope, Raye, and Grable just run all over him. I guess Hope needed to wait for Bing Crosby for a singer who could hold his own and more with him on screen.

    Raye has some funny moments in the film, especially when she and Hope are stuck out in the woods together. She's the best one in the film by far.

    Fans of Rapid Robert will like Give Me a Sailor as certainly will fans of Martha Raye and Betty Grable. If there are any Jack Whiting fans out there, this is one of the few places you'll see your man.
    7lugonian

    Legs Ahoy

    GIVE ME A SAILOR (Paramount, 1938), directed by Elliott Nugent, is a minor comedy with notable casting leads of Martha Raye, Bob Hope and Betty Grable. Based on an play by Anne Nichols, the plot sounds very much like a Cinderella story with Raye playing an ugly ducking competing with her attractive sister (Grable).

    The slight plot finds sailor brothers, Jim (Bob Hope) and Walter Brewster (Jack Whiting) going on shore leave in San Francisco where Walter intends on proposing marriage to Nancy Larkin (Betty Grable), his childhood sweetheart, who's quite popular with the other fellas. It so happens that Jim wants to marry Nancy as well. For ten years Jim has plotted schemes with Nancy's unattractive sister, Letty (Martha Raye), by arranging her to marry Walter, whom she has loved since childhood. During the course of the story, Letty sneaks away to be alone with Walter in Paradise Valley by hiding in the trunk of his car, only to have her scheme backfire when Jim becomes the driver instead and ends up alone with him. Due to unexpected circumstances, Letty's accidental photographed legs were submitted by her cousin, Meryl (Emerson Treacy) to a contest that wins, turning Letty from homely household cook to a popular celebrity, much to the chagrin of Nancy, who finds Walter has changed his affections from her to Letty. As Jim's schemes to get Walter married to Letty, Letty begins to have second thoughts. Other members of the cast include: J.C. Nugent (Mr. Larkin); Clarence Kolb (Captain Tallant); Irving Bacon (The Film Processor); Eddie Kane, among others.

    On the musical soundtrack by Leo Robin and Ralph Rainger, songs include: "The U.S.A. and You" (sung by sailors); "What Goes On Here in My Heart?" (sung by Betty Grable and Jack Whiting, followed by a slight dance); "A Little Kiss" (sung by Martha Raye); "A Little Kiss" (reprise by Raye); and "The U.S.A. and You" (instrumentally played by parade band). Though the songs are okay, they are mostly unmemorable and forgotten.

    At first, GIVE ME A SAILOR starts off like a nautical musical in the tradition of BORN TO DANCE (MGM, 1936) with singing sailors on board ship. Once the sailor brothers (Hope and Whiting) go on shore leave to be with their gals, they spend much of the story in civilian clothes with little references about their ranks. With both Hope and Grable not major star attractions as of yet, it's most interesting seeing these two together in the same movie. Their previous film, COLLEGE SWING (1938), also with Raye, had the more apart than together. Yet, GIVE ME A SAILOR belongs very much to Martha Raye. Aside from her antics answering telephone calls for her sister, chasing Ethel May Brewster (Bonnie Jean Churchill), a bratty child, around the kitchen, getting her face trapped in a clay pack that hardens, and hiding under the bed to avoid scandal of being found inside the Inn bedroom alone with Jim (Hope), she also gets her very rare moments of sympathy when finding herself rejected, along with later becoming glamorous in fur coats, expensive clothes, jewelry and beauty parlor hairstyle. While Raye's character got much publicity about her legs here, it would be Betty Grable a few years later who would be known for having her "million dollar legs." As much as Raye would have more screen time with Hope than with other members in the cast, they have little opportunity together showing how funny they can be as a team. However, they did have better luck getting some belly laughs in their final film together of NEVER SAY DIE (1939).

    Once broadcast regularly on the late show in the seventies before shifting to public television in the 1980s. GIVE ME A SAILOR has become available on both video and DVD formats in later years. One of its known cable television showings to GIVE ME A SAILOR has turned up on Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: August 30, 2014). (*** Bells)
    8jayraskin1

    Bob Hope's First Real Starring Film, Raye and Gable are Fine

    In 1938, when this film was made, Bob Hope was 35 years and while he had been a star in vaudeville and Broadway for 15 years, he had just gotten his first radio show. While he had been in films for a few years, this was the first time he was the real star of a film.

    It was also the first time that Martha Raye had star billing in a film. She had co-starred in films with Bing Crosby and Jack Benny before this, but at age 22, she was at the peak of her short film career, which had started just two years before. While she would have top billing in two more films, by 1941, three years later, her film starring career was largely over. She did do a wonderful bit part in Chaplin's "Monsieur Verdoux" in 1947, but for the most part, she starred on television here and there from the 1950's to the 1980's.

    Betty Grable was also 22. Although she started her movie career well before Raye, she had done a lot of bit parts and hadn't become famous yet. This supporting actress role was one of her meatier ones. Three years later, just when Raye's film career was spiraling downward, she was becoming a superstar.

    The movie is a rather silly screwball comedy with a lot of amusing bits, but nothing memorable or outstanding. Hope is almost the breezy, nervous, sentimental fast talker that he will portray brilliantly for the next 40 years. Raye is frenetic, but can't quite carry the film as the lead. Grable adds a nice sweet touch to the proceedings. She plays well off both Hope and Raye.

    Jack Whiting, in apparently his one major role, is pretty awful as Hope's brother. He seems nervous and doesn't have much charm, although both Gable and Raye are supposed to be gaga over him.

    Clarence Kolb is the one bit player who stands out. He went on to play Mr. Honeywell, the cantankerous boss in the "My Little Margie" television series in the 1950's.

    The movie alternates between flat and mildly amusing dialogue and slapstick bits. It is worth watching just to see Hope and Grable at the beginning of their careers, and Raye at the too short peak of hers.
    6hitchcockthelegend

    Screwball farce finds Raye dominating proceedings.

    Jim (Bob Hope) and Walter (Jack Whiting) are two brother sailors in the United States Navy. Walter plans to marry Nancy Larkin (Betty Grable) as soon as they get home, a problem since Jim is also in love with Nancy. So Jim hatches a plan with Nancy's more "low key" sister, Letty (Raye) to help break Walter and Nancy up. Letty agrees, only under one condition, he help her to win Walter!

    And so it unfolds, a series of scattergun dialogue and scenes as Hope and Raye get into all sorts of scrapes whilst trying to alter the trajectory of Cupid's arrow. There's no prizes for guessing where that arrow will land, but in the main there's decent comedy and good comedy performances to take the picture into safe waters. An early picture for Hope, one just before he would make it big and entertain the masses with some distinction, it's actually Raye who owns the picture (she is top billed after all). Raye and Hope were paired together a number of times, their chemistry is set in stone, they worked well as a duo and played off of each other with enjoyable aplomb. As with some other screwball movies, this one comes close to overdoing it, not letting the comedy flow naturally, given over to histrionics instead of genuine character interactions. But it never sinks below average, has some truly funny scenes (Raye trying to hide under a mattress is a great moment) and the outcome puts the smile firmly on the face. 6.5/10
    5arthur_tafero

    Not the Best Hope Film - Give Me A Sailor

    This is one of Bob Hope's weaker efforts. Martha Raye saves what is left of the film after the script writers tried to ruin it with their infantile plot. Betty Grable is not one of the better actresses as well; especially in this film. The rest of the cast is OK, but there is no chemistry between Hope and his brother? Fortunately for Hope, Bing Crosby will come along soon to rescue him and provide the perfect foil for his talents. Until then, watch this one only if nothing of any value is available at the same time.

    Histoire

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    • Anecdotes
      J.C. Nugent, who played Mr. Larkin, was the father of the movie's director; Elliott Nugent.
    • Connexions
      Referenced in Jazz: A Film by Ken Burns: Swing: The Velocity of Celebration - 1937-1939 (2001)
    • Bandes originales
      The U.S.A. and You
      Music by Ralph Rainger

      Lyrics by Leo Robin

      Played over the opening credits and sung by Male Sailors

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 19 août 1938 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • To skøre sjæle
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • société de production
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 20 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Bob Hope, Betty Grable, Martha Raye, and Jack Whiting in Give Me a Sailor (1938)
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