A village butcher bickers with the postmistress in charge of World War II ration stamps.A village butcher bickers with the postmistress in charge of World War II ration stamps.A village butcher bickers with the postmistress in charge of World War II ration stamps.
Photos
Erville Alderson
- Gil
- (uncredited)
Jack Baxley
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFifth of seven films pairing Wallace Beery and Marjorie Main released by MGM from 1940 to 1949.
- GoofsIris states Majors wear maple leaves on their shoulders, when in the U.S. Army the rank insignia of a Major is a stylized gold-colored oak leaf.
- Quotes
Iris Tuttle: Get that goat outta here! She'll be sleeping on the foot of my bed next!
Ben Barton: You could do worse!
Featured review
Wallace Beery stars in this World War Two comedy programmer from MGM. It sort of starts out like W.C. Fields' IT'S A GIFT and continues on using Beery's aw-shucks blowhard dealing with the problems of the home front during World War Two: rationing and Marjorie Main.
The movie is carried on Beery's charm, which is considerable. Despite the MGM gloss and re-takes by Beery's THE CHAMP director, Norman Taurog, it's never more than good and may be too much for a modern viewer.
Aside from Beery, there isn't much star power here. The director is Willis Goldbeck, who never got that far out of the MGM shorts department before returning to writing -- for John Ford, which is not negligible. The producer is Orville Dull, surely not the most auspicious name for a producer, who mostly produced other programmers and sequels for MGM. He did win an Oscar for producing 1948s THE SECRET LAND, though.
The movie is carried on Beery's charm, which is considerable. Despite the MGM gloss and re-takes by Beery's THE CHAMP director, Norman Taurog, it's never more than good and may be too much for a modern viewer.
Aside from Beery, there isn't much star power here. The director is Willis Goldbeck, who never got that far out of the MGM shorts department before returning to writing -- for John Ford, which is not negligible. The producer is Orville Dull, surely not the most auspicious name for a producer, who mostly produced other programmers and sequels for MGM. He did win an Oscar for producing 1948s THE SECRET LAND, though.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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