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IMDbPro

Navy Blues

  • 1941
  • U
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
374
YOUR RATING
Kay Aldridge, Leslie Brooks, Georgia Carroll, Marguerite Chapman, Peggy Diggins, Jack Haley, Claire James, Jack Oakie, Martha Raye, and Ann Sheridan in Navy Blues (1941)
On a layover in Hawaii two conniving Navy seamen borrow money to lay down bets that their ship will win the upcoming gunnery practice trophy, having found out that the current gunnery champ has just transferred aboard their ship. What they haven't learned, however, is that the marksman's enlistment is up before the contest is supposed to take place.
Play trailer3:04
1 Video
16 Photos
ComedyMusicalRomance

Two Navy seamen learn their ship has a new skilled marksman. They borrow money betting their ship will win an upcoming gunnery contest. Unbeknownst to them, the marksman's enlistment ends be... Read allTwo Navy seamen learn their ship has a new skilled marksman. They borrow money betting their ship will win an upcoming gunnery contest. Unbeknownst to them, the marksman's enlistment ends before the contest, jeopardizing their scheme.Two Navy seamen learn their ship has a new skilled marksman. They borrow money betting their ship will win an upcoming gunnery contest. Unbeknownst to them, the marksman's enlistment ends before the contest, jeopardizing their scheme.

  • Director
    • Lloyd Bacon
  • Writers
    • Jerry Wald
    • Richard Macaulay
    • Arthur T. Horman
  • Stars
    • Ann Sheridan
    • Jack Oakie
    • Martha Raye
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    374
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lloyd Bacon
    • Writers
      • Jerry Wald
      • Richard Macaulay
      • Arthur T. Horman
    • Stars
      • Ann Sheridan
      • Jack Oakie
      • Martha Raye
    • 17User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:04
    Official Trailer

    Photos16

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    Top cast60

    Edit
    Ann Sheridan
    Ann Sheridan
    • Marge Jordan
    Jack Oakie
    Jack Oakie
    • Cake O'Hara
    Martha Raye
    Martha Raye
    • Lilibelle Bolton
    Jack Haley
    Jack Haley
    • Powerhouse Bolton
    Herbert Anderson
    Herbert Anderson
    • Homer Matthews
    Jack Carson
    Jack Carson
    • 'Buttons' Johnson
    Jackie Gleason
    Jackie Gleason
    • Tubby
    • (as Jackie C. Gleason)
    William T. Orr
    William T. Orr
    • Mac
    Richard Lane
    Richard Lane
    • 'Rocky' Anderson
    John Ridgely
    John Ridgely
    • Jersey
    Kay Aldridge
    Kay Aldridge
    • Navy Blues Sextet Member
    • (as Katharine Aldridge)
    Georgia Carroll
    Georgia Carroll
    • Navy Blues Sextet Member
    Marguerite Chapman
    Marguerite Chapman
    • Navy Blues Sextet Member
    Peggy Diggins
    Peggy Diggins
    • Navy Blues Sextet Member
    Leslie Brooks
    Leslie Brooks
    • Navy Blues Sextet Member
    • (as Loraine Gettman)
    Claire James
    • Navy Blues Sextet Member
    Hardie Albright
    Hardie Albright
    • Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Lane Allan
    Lane Allan
    • Sailor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lloyd Bacon
    • Writers
      • Jerry Wald
      • Richard Macaulay
      • Arthur T. Horman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    5.7374
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    Featured reviews

    msladysoul

    Great Forgotten Musical- A treat to see Ann Sheridan and Martha Raye together

    This movie is a wonderful musical. In the 1930s Warner Brothers was the tops when it came to musicals with Busby Berkeley. In the 1940s, Warner Brothers was famous for their gangster, tough movies. But every now in then, Warner Brothers did a musical featuring Ann Sheridan most of the time. Ann Sheridan has a wonderful singing voice, she's up there with Alice Faye and Judy Garland, but today no one really acknowledge her singing. She does a great Hawaiian dance, she looks great dressed in Hawaiian customs. Martha Raye, I think has a special place in everyone heart, is a great comic, and sings some tunes with Ann Sheridan. There's no competition in this film, Ann Sheridan and Martha Raye holds their own and their great together. Together their two great comics, singers, and dancers. Two, forgotten greats of Hollywood. If you can see this movie, try to find it, you won't be sorry. I'm not=)
    6mbhur

    Overlong and often flat, but still of interest

    As another review pointed out, shortly after this comic romp set among Navy enlisted men in Hawaii was made, things took a dramatic and deadly turn with the attack on Pearl Harbor. So that fact needs to be overlooked in order to enjoy this silly movie. (The scene in which an air attack is faked is particularly unfortunate).

    All that aside, the main problem with this film is that it's basically one joke extended to an absurdly long running time of over 100 minutes. These types of slight comedies more typically ran around 80 minutes, and with good reason. Even though the running time is padded by the many musical numbers, the comedy routines are repetitive and I found myself wanting to start fast forwarding through them, never a good sign.

    On the plus side, we have the always lovely and talented Ann Sheridan, who looks great doing a hula routine. She was an amazingly versatile performer of the type that we just don't see to have anymore. There are also some gifted comic actors (Jack Oakie, Jackie Haley, Martha Raye), though the script is so thin it feels like they are working overtime to be funny. A young, relatively slim Jackie Gleason has some good moments, but one of my favorites, Jack Carson, has a thankless straight man role.

    My rating of 6 is based on the fact that I can watch Ann Sheridan in anything. (And this comes pretty close to being "anything.") Also, the historical interest of having a nostalgic snapshot of a more innocent time in history, just before the world changed forever.
    6marcslope

    Fine, as long as it's singing and dancing

    A Warners musical that feels more like Paramount, with the Paramount contractee Martha Raye in a lead and a lightheartedness that one doesn't associate with Warners. And Jack Haley and Jack Oakie, as lovable-bumbling Navy men, try to get a Hope and Crosby rhythm going (their relationship is also very Dennis Morgan-Jack Carson, who did this sort of thing at Warners a few years later; Carson, meanwhile, is here as their exasperated commanding officer, taking lots of pratfalls and water-in-the-face takes). Ann Sheridan is around to be glamorous and sing, pleasantly, and Herbert Anderson is given something of a (failed) star buildup as her love interest. But the real stars are songwriters Arthur Schwartz and Johnny Mercer, who open the film with a ten-minute title song with yards of plot-exposition lyrics and follow it up with unusually funny, incisive, tuneful songcrafting. The plotting isn't up to much, and it's overlong, but the musical numbers are all keepers.
    5gvb0907

    Mediocre Musical With Some Interesting Details

    The best musicals offer memorable songs imaginatively staged. "Navy Blues" offers neither. Both composer Arthur Schwartz ("Dancing in the Dark") and lyricist Johnnie Mercer ("Hurray for Hollywood") did much better work elsewhere, as did choreographer Seymour Felix ("The Great Ziegfeld").

    The leads are only so-so. Oomph girl Ann Sheridan looks great and Martha Raye is suitably brassy, but Jacks Haley and Oakie are hardly Abbott and Costello, and Herbert Anderson is woeful as Sheridan's romantic interest.

    Plots are always secondary in musicals, though sometimes they help pick up the pace. Here, a typically thin story line is a good 20 minutes too long.

    For all these weaknesses "Navy Blues" has some interesting aspects.

    The cast features the already rotund Jackie Gleason in his first film. He doesn't have very many lines but you can't miss him as a young sailor named Tubby. Had this been made a decade later he would have been a natural for Oakie's role.

    More significantly, this is a last look at the United States Navy on the eve of World War Two. These are real ships and real sailors on the brink of history.

    When Oakie and Haley's characters disembark at Honolulu (actually San Diego), the ship in the background is the USS Curtiss, a seaplane tender that a few months later was damaged at Pearl Harbor. Twenty-one of her crew were killed on December 7th.

    Other scenes appear to have been shot on an Astoria class heavy cruiser, of which there were six. The following year three of these ships were sunk off Guadalcanal, with great loss of life.

    Surely many of the sailors parading behind the cast members in the closing sequence would not survive the war. Few could foresee that in the spring of 1941, but for us that sad fact gives the film a poignancy its makers never intended.
    8ksf-2

    Fun, upbeat Navy flick from JUST before pearl harbor

    With a ukulele playing in the background, and all those HUGE Hollywood names, how could you NOT have a great time? Haley (The Tin Man!), Ann Sheridan & Jack Carson from SO many great films. Martha Raye, Jackie Gleason. Herb Anderson is in here as the dumb hick; Anderson will be Henry Mitchell, Dennis the Menace's dad in the TV series. Jack Oakie was nominated for Best Supporting Actor in The Dictator. In our story, Cake (Oakie) and Powerhouse (Haley) set up a gambling scam in a get rich quick scheme aboard a navy ship. This film was released in September 1941, so J-U-S-T a couple months before the big surprise at Pearl Harbor. It definitely still has the upbeat, happy go lucky feeling of fun and adventure in the Navy. Their entire gig depends on Homer (Anderson), but of course it all comes apart at the seams. Sound and picture are excellent. The story moves right along. Jack Carson doesn't have much of a role here, but it all works! I had never seen this one before... hopefully Turner will show it often -- it's fun. There's a slightly dirty song about all the things that happen "In Waikiki"... and of course a drag number with Oakie and Haley. I'm surprised at the lower rating, as of today, only 6.5 stars. Directed by Lloyd Bacon, who had started in the silents. Bacon worked with Lucy on a couple films, and made a truckload of war timers during WW II.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film debut of Jackie Gleason.
    • Goofs
      During the gunnery awards ceremony, the band is playing, "Semper Paratus". This is the service anthem for the U.S. Coast Guard, and would not be played during a U.S. Navy awards ceremony.
    • Quotes

      Cake O'Hara: Why i'm so lucky, the horses put MY shoes up over their doors!

    • Crazy credits
      The actors spell out the words 'The End' as they sing and march into formation at the very end.
    • Connections
      Featured in We Haven't Really Met Properly...: Jack Haley as the Tin Man/Hickory (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Navy Blues
      (uncredited)

      Music by Arthur Schwartz

      Lyrics by Johnny Mercer

      Sung by Ann Sheridan, Martha Raye, Navy Blues Sextette, sailors and chorus

      Played during opening and closing credits, also as background music

      Reprised by the Company at the end

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 13, 1941 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Donanma şarkısı
    • Filming locations
      • Honolulu, O'ahu, Hawaii, USA(hula dancers)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $929,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 48 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Kay Aldridge, Leslie Brooks, Georgia Carroll, Marguerite Chapman, Peggy Diggins, Jack Haley, Claire James, Jack Oakie, Martha Raye, and Ann Sheridan in Navy Blues (1941)
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