A luckless army intelligence lieutenant finds himself stationed on a remote island army outpost during World War II, where all the action is between the sheets.A luckless army intelligence lieutenant finds himself stationed on a remote island army outpost during World War II, where all the action is between the sheets.A luckless army intelligence lieutenant finds himself stationed on a remote island army outpost during World War II, where all the action is between the sheets.
- Officer
- (uncredited)
- Nun
- (uncredited)
- Lieutenant
- (uncredited)
- Club Patron
- (uncredited)
- Lieutenant
- (uncredited)
- Club Patron
- (uncredited)
- Officer at Welcome Party
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis is believed to be the first of a handful of films shot in the short lived Panacolor system. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer struck the U.S. release prints in their own lab under the Metrocolor label.
- GoofsWhen Lt. Wye is transferred to the island, the shoulder patch on his uniform changes to one signifying the U.S. Army's Ryukyu Command. This film is set during WWII and this patch did not appear until 1950 (although some references state it was unofficial as early as 1947).
- Quotes
Lt. Molly Blue: So I date a lot. I admit it. I'm shopping around. I'm 22, Merle. By the end of this war, I may be 30.
Second Lt. Merle Wye: That's why I say, "Gather ye rosebuds, while ye may."
Lt. Molly Blue: Oh, I wish I had a dollar for every time that's been suggested. You could at least be a little more original.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Password: Kitty Carlisle vs. Jack Carter: evening show (1962)
- SoundtracksThe Horizontal Lieutenant
Music by George Stoll
Lyrics by Stella Unger
Performed by The Diamonds
Courtesy of Mercury Records
I don't know what is the tone of the novel by Gordon Cotler that inspires this film, but the central plot can be treated as comedy or drama: during II World War a young G-2 officer (Hutton) is sent to a Japanese island to catch a thief, while he courts an old university girlfriend (Prentiss), whom he meets again working as a nurse. However, George Wells' script is old-fashioned, attached to moral standards that not even the military on the war front in the 1940s should have respected, especially with men and women in the same camp. We can understand the screenwriter was limited by the Production Code, but it was truly agonizing by 1962.
One more film like this and the careers of Prentiss and Hutton would have finished and, indeed, poor Jim Hutton had to endure one more silly comedy (with Connie Francis), in which Prentiss only made a brief appearance and received star status, after the doors were opened to her with Howard Hawks' "Man's Favorite Sport?"
The entire cast (especially Yoshio Yoda as Tada) struggles to get the best out of the story and a script with jokes that, in most cases, have no effect; or loses focus with endless interior sequences, like an interrogation conducted by an alcoholic officer (Jim Backus).
The basic premise could have had a sad or happy ending and the producers opted for comedy, so when «The Horizontal Lieutenant» ends, it leaves us with a smile on our faces, but little else. Richard Thorpe, a veteran with a career in the business since 1921, should have been bored by then, directing the young Metro actors, whose conduct and morals were surely foreign to him.
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,020,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1