Army buddies help Private Trevor court the daughter of their commanding officer.Army buddies help Private Trevor court the daughter of their commanding officer.Army buddies help Private Trevor court the daughter of their commanding officer.
Photos
Robbie Vincent
- Pte. Enoch
- (as Robbie Vincent {Enoch})
Antoinette Lupino
- Jean Rivers
- (as Tonie Lupino)
Percival Mackey Orchestra
- Themselves
- (as Percival Mackey and his Orchestra)
Gus Aubrey
- Pte. Lofty
- (uncredited)
Tony Bazell
- Captain Brown
- (uncredited)
Clifford Buckton
- Col. Rivers
- (uncredited)
Robin Burns
- Soldier ib Sergeants Mess
- (uncredited)
Evie Carcroft
- Mrs. Korris
- (uncredited)
Clifford Cobbe
- Dental M.O.
- (uncredited)
Ernest Dale
- Pte. Dale
- (uncredited)
Arthur Denton
- Charlie the Lodger
- (uncredited)
Nora Gordon
- Matron
- (uncredited)
Bryan Herbert
- Cpl. Reed
- (uncredited)
Vi Kaley
- Maid in Sketch
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFilming was interrupted by a strike when Frank Randle tried to bind the actors to his contract rather than Mancunian's.
- GoofsDuring the final song "All Aboard For Victory", Frank Randle and Harry Korris take their seats in the audience twice.
- Quotes
Sgt. Korris: [Randle is riding a donkey on parade] Randle! What do you think you're doing?
Pvt. Randle: Sitting on me ass!
- ConnectionsFollowed by Somewhere on Leave (1943)
- SoundtracksAll Aboard for Victory
(uncredited)
Music by Albert W. Stanbury
Lyrics by Arthur Mertz
Sung by John Singer and Antoinette Lupino
Featured review
It's a sequel to SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND, with Frank Randle, Harry Korris, and their Northern Music Hall crew doing exactly the same sort of brief skits that used to play in burlesque in the United States. To eke it out, there are several musical numbers, including a performance of the recently cleaned-up "Bless Them All".
Unlike other Randle movies, the romantic subplot involving private John Singer and Colonel's daughter Antoinette Lupino -- yes, one of the innumerable Lupino clan, niece to Lupino Lane and cousin of Ida Lupino -- is not handwaved away for the inevitable flag-waving end number (here titled "All Aboard For Victory"), but actually is closed out in a decent, although improbable manner.
Even so, the point of the movie is to watch Randle & company do the sort of low comedy that made them so popular in the cheaper halls, and banned on the BBC. It's not the sort of stuff I enjoy, unless done at the sort of speed that Abbott & Costello could manage, but it does show what ordinary people liked in Britain in the 1940s.
Unlike other Randle movies, the romantic subplot involving private John Singer and Colonel's daughter Antoinette Lupino -- yes, one of the innumerable Lupino clan, niece to Lupino Lane and cousin of Ida Lupino -- is not handwaved away for the inevitable flag-waving end number (here titled "All Aboard For Victory"), but actually is closed out in a decent, although improbable manner.
Even so, the point of the movie is to watch Randle & company do the sort of low comedy that made them so popular in the cheaper halls, and banned on the BBC. It's not the sort of stuff I enjoy, unless done at the sort of speed that Abbott & Costello could manage, but it does show what ordinary people liked in Britain in the 1940s.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Riverside Studios, Hammersmith, London, England, UK(studio: made at Riverside Studios, London, England)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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