A young man must complete his work at a Navy Officer Candidate School to become an aviator, with the help of a tough Gunnery Sergeant and his new girlfriend.A young man must complete his work at a Navy Officer Candidate School to become an aviator, with the help of a tough Gunnery Sergeant and his new girlfriend.A young man must complete his work at a Navy Officer Candidate School to become an aviator, with the help of a tough Gunnery Sergeant and his new girlfriend.
- Won 2 Oscars
- 9 wins & 15 nominations total
Mara Scott-Wood
- Bunny
- (as Mara Scott Wood)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDirector Taylor Hackford purposely kept Louis Gossett Jr. living in separate quarters from the rest of the cast to further his character's intimidating presence as a drill instructor.
- GoofsJust before the officer candidates take the oath and graduate, a recruit announces, "All officers present." The candidates' swords are up on their shoulders, but in the next shot, the swords are in their scabbards.
- Crazy creditsWith special thanks to Art Kulman of the Washington State Dept. of Commerce & Economic Development, Fort Worden State Park, Gus Gustafson, Brent Shirley, and the people of Port Townsend, Washington.
- Alternate versionsNBC cut 6 minutes from this film for its 1986 network television premiere.
- SoundtracksUp Where We Belong
Sung by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes
Lyric by Will Jennings
Music by Jack Nitzsche and Buffy Sainte-Marie
Recording produced by Stewart Levine
Featured review
I went to Navy OCS (for ship drivers, not aviators) a year after this movie came out. A lot of us considered it one of the best movies ever made. Despite the fact that there is some serious license taken with reality, the movie captures the intensity and high stakes of OCS, and how people who barely know each other become bonded so quickly; how the least likely candidates sometimes become the star performers; how some people are changed beyond recognition by the experience. There was never a lack of old hands like Sid's father, telling you you had it easy because of some difference in the rules he didn't enjoy 10 years earlier. DOR is translated by Foley as "drop on request". In 1983, the terminology was DE, which meant dis enroll. I always wondered what happened to the candidates in my class who DE'd. The ones who graduated I kept running into in the fleet, sometimes in places like the Philippines. The most unrealistic thing about the movie was the premise that local girls want to marry officer candidates. Not so in Pensacola or Newport RI, where OCS was in those days. The locals actually called us behind our backs "cockroaches" because we wore all black and had to run away to our barracks by 10 pm. The second most unrealistic thing was the foul language. That comes later, in the fleet, but not in OCS. No we did not have martial arts duels. All in all, however, the essence of the experience, if not the specifics, is found in the movie. One of our marching songs went "left right left right / you HAD a good job and you LEFT / you're RIGHT!" We really did have nowhere else to go. I say 10 stars. The VHS version gets only 8 because of changes to the soundtrack songs.
- elvismanson
- Feb 17, 2005
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Ein Offizier und Gentleman
- Filming locations
- The Tides Inn - 1807 Water Street, Port Townsend, Washington, USA(Motel scenes, Zack & Paula stayed in room #10, while Sid & Lynette used room #12, the latter being the same room where Sid committed suicide.)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $7,500,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $129,795,554
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $3,304,679
- Aug 1, 1982
- Gross worldwide
- $129,795,890
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