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词条 A Wave, a WAC and a Marine
释义

  1. Cast

  2. Production

  3. Reception

  4. See also

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Infobox film
| name = A WAVE, a WAC and a Marine
| image =
| caption =
| director = Phil Karlson
| producer =
| writer = Hal Fimberg (original screenplay)
| starring =
| music =
| cinematography =
| editing =
| distributor = Monogram Pictures
| released = 7 October 1944
| runtime = 70 min.
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget =
}}

A WAVE, a WAC and a Marine is an American 1944 musical comedy film directed by Phil Karlson (his directorial debut) for low-budget Monogram Pictures.

Less the wartime comedy promised by the title than an inside-Hollywood story interrupted by musical numbers, Sally Eilers runs a talent agency and sets out to put a couple of Broadway stars under contract. Her bumbling employee (Henny Youngman) signs their understudies instead.

One of the film's listed producers, Sebastian Cristillo, was actually the father of comedian Lou Costello. Costello himself produced the film, but as a gesture to his father—a diehard movie fan, who used the family's actual last name—he listed his dad as a producer so he could see his own name on the screen. The other listed producer, Edward Sherman, was Costello's manager.

Cast

  • Elyse Knox as Marian
  • Ann Gillis as Judy (as Anne Gillis)
  • Sally Eilers as Margaret Ames
  • Richard Lane as Marty Allen
  • Marjorie Woodworth as Eileen
  • Ramsay Ames as Betty
  • Henny Youngman as O. Henry Brown
  • Charles 'Red' Marshall as Red (as 'Red' Marshall)
  • Alan Dinehart as R. J., the Producer
  • Billy Mack as Himself
  • Cy Kendall as Mike
  • Aileen Pringle as Newswoman
  • Jack Mulhall as Bartender
  • Mabel Todd as Nurse
  • Milt Bronson as Himself
  • unbilled players include Mel Blanc and Connie Haines

Production

Phil Karlson got to know Lou Costello when worked on Abbott and Costello films at Universal as an assistant. Costello tracked down Karlson and told him he wanted to produce a film with Karlson directing. According to Karlson, Costello asked him what did he want to make, and "I said I don't know. By this time I'm so flabbergasted that I had no idea what I wanted to do. But he put up the money and we decided on the crazy story A Wave, a WAC and a Marine."[1]

Reception

Karlson called the film "probably the worst picture ever made.... It was a nothing picture, but I was lucky because it was for Monogram and they didn't understand how bad it was because they had never made anything that was any good."[1] However it did launch Karlson's directing career.

See also

  • List of American films of 1944

References

1. ^Todd McCarthy and Richard Thompson. “Phil Karlson: Interview, November 19, 1973” Kings of the Bs; Working Within the Hollywood System, eds. Todd McCarthy and Charles Flynn (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1975), pp. 327-345. Rpt. Cine Resort, Oct. 7 2014

External links

  • {{IMDb title|id=0037448}}
{{Phil Karlson}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Wave, a WAC and a Marine}}{{musical-comedy-film-stub}}

5 : 1944 films|American films|Films directed by Phil Karlson|Monogram Pictures films|1940s musical comedy films

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