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词条 When Willie Comes Marching Home
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Cast

  3. References

  4. External links

{{Infobox film
| name = When Willie Comes Marching Home
| image = When Willie Comes Marching Home - 1950 poster.jpg
| caption = 1950 Theatrical Poster
| director = John Ford
| producer = Fred Kohlmar
| writer = Richard Sale
Mary Loos
| story = Sy Gomberg
| starring = Dan Dailey
Corinne Calvet
Colleen Townsend
William Demarest
| music = Alfred Newman
| cinematography = Leo Tover
| editing = James B. Clark
| distributor = 20th Century Fox
| studio = 20th Century Fox
| released = {{Film date|1950|02|17}}
| runtime = 82 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget =
| gross =$1,750,000[1][2]
}}When Willie Comes Marching Home is a 1950 World War II comedy film directed by John Ford and starring Dan Dailey and Corinne Calvet. It is based on the 1945 short story When Leo Comes Marching Home by Sy Gomberg. The film won the Golden Leopard at the Locarno International Film Festival.[3]

Sy Gomberg also received an Oscar nomination for Best Motion Picture Story at the 23rd Academy Awards in 1951 but was edged out for the award by Edna Anhalt and Edward Anhalt for Panic in the Streets.

Plot

William "Bill" Kluggs (Dan Dailey) is the first in his hometown of Punxsatawney, West Virginia, to enlist in the Army Air Forces after the attack on Pearl Harbor, making his father Herman (William Demarest), mother Gertrude (Evelyn Varden) and girlfriend Marge Fettles (Colleen Townsend) proud. The whole town sees him off. Willie tries to become a pilot but washes out, although he proves to be so proficient at aerial gunnery that, rather than being sent to Europe to fight, he is made an instructor and assigned to a base near his hometown. After two years in the same place, he is branded a coward by the townsfolk, even though he continually requests a transfer into combat.

He finally gets his chance when a gunner on a B-17 Flying Fortress bomber gets sick and Bill is allowed to take his place. The plane takes off for England, but owing to fog, is unable to land and runs low on fuel. The crew is ordered to bail out, but Bill is asleep and does not parachute out of the plane until it is over German-occupied France.

He is captured immediately by the local French Resistance unit, led by the beautiful Yvonne (Corinne Calvet). While there, he sees a secret German rocket launch, which is filmed by the French. He and the film are picked up by a British torpedo boat and taken to England. There, he passes the vital information and his eyewitness confirmation on to a series of important generals, first in London and then in Washington, D.C..

During the time he is in the bomber, France, England, and Washington, he is continuously wakened when he tries to sleep, and plied with liquor as a pick-me-up or to settle motion sickness. Bill finally collapses, exhausted. He is sent to a hospital to recuperate, under strict orders not to reveal what he has done, where a doctor mistakenly puts him into a psychopath ward. When the hospital attendants believe he is crazy and try to put him in a straitjacket, Willie escapes and heads home on a freight train.

Back home, because only four days have elapsed since he left Punxatawney, his parents and girlfriend don't believe his story either. Officers from the Pentagon arrive to return him to Washington to be decorated personally by the President of the United States.

Cast

Dan Dailey as William "Bill" Kluggs
Corinne Calvet as Yvonne
Colleen Townsend as Marge Fettles
William Demarest as Herman Kluggs
  • Jimmy Lydon as Charles "Charlie" Fettles
  • Lloyd Corrigan as Major Adams
  • Evelyn Varden as Mrs. Gertrude Kluggs

Mae Marsh, formerly a successful silent-era actress appears in an unbilled role. Alan Hale Jr. and Vera Miles also appear in unbilled roles, early in their respective careers.

Hollywood precision pilot Paul Mantz performed the crash stunt in which a PT-13D Stearman shears off its wings crashing between two oak trees.[4]

References

1. ^{{cite magazine|url=https://archive.org/stream/variety181-1951-01#page/n57/mode/1up|title=Top Grosses of 1950|magazine=Variety|date=January 3, 1951|page=58}}
2. ^[https://books.google.com.au/books?id=WIZwZOz8LHsC&pg=PA212&lpg=PA212&dq=aubrey+solomon+20th+century+fox&source=bl&ots=FKmAn2szCi&sig=b7skIRQNZ1P88Dic6zd6VYPfHFU&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjUmaSf4t3NAhVRxWMKHb_lAFUQ6AEINDAF#v=onepage&q=aubrey%20solomon%2020th%20century%20fox&f=false Aubrey Solomon, Twentieth Century-Fox: A Corporate and Financial History Rowman & Littlefield, 2002 p 223]
3. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.pardo.ch/jahia/Jahia/home/Festival/History/Winners-of-the-Golden-Leopard/lang/en |title=Winners of the Golden Leopard |accessdate=2012-08-12 |work=Locarno}}
4. ^Editors, Air Classics, Challenge Publications, Canoga Park, California, July 1972, Volume 8, Number 8, page 39.

External links

{{Commons category|When Willie Comes Marching Home (film)|When Willie Comes Marching Home}}
  • {{tcmdb title|id=95515}}
  • {{IMDb title|0043129}}
{{John Ford}}{{Golden Leopard}}

13 : 1950 films|1950s comedy films|20th Century Fox films|American films|American comedy films|American black-and-white films|English-language films|Films scored by Alfred Newman|Films directed by John Ford|Golden Leopard winners|World War II films|Films based on short fiction|Military humor in film

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