Buck Privates (1941) Poster

(1941)

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8/10
An Optimistic Take of a Troubled Time
lawprof28 March 2004
Abbott and Costello's second feature, "Buck Privates," opened in January 1941. Peacetime conscription was in effect, voted by Congress in late 1940, and only planned to last for one year. Europe was at war, China was being raped (literally) by the Japanese. Americans were torn about the prospect of war-Lindbergh, a hero and a Nazi admirer, together with his America First movement urged isolationism.

"Buck Privates" walks a cautious line. No mention of the raging European war, the bombing of London, the success of German U-boats. No discussion of America's entering a war which, anyway, isn't even directly mentioned. The theme was high-spirited patriotism and preparation. With the Andrew Sisters, Abbott and Costello provide a light-hearted view of conscription and basic training. It almost seems like a Boy Scout experience. (I don't recall Basic Training at Fort Dix in 1965 as being any fun.)

Petty con artists, the duo mistakenly join the Army while trying to evade local police. The cop chasing them winds up as their company noncom. A rich young man and his former and now very resentful working class chauffeur are not only in the same company with the comedians, they're vying for a pretty girl who seems attracted to both. A common formula for movies.

The film tracks the transformation of average young American men from all over the country who share two qualities: they're happy to serve and they're all Caucasian.

With some film from the Louisiana maneuvers, at the time the largest combat training exercise in Army history, the thin and predictable plot develops to the singing/marching end as the now ready recruits prepare to take their places in line units.

Propaganda? Well, Hollywood was starting to get on the patriotic bandwagon but cautiously. No one gets hurt in this film worse than receiving a punch in a barracks brawl or during a prize fight.

Abbott and Costello became picture palace luminaries with this still funny but unsophisticated look at Army life. With tickets costing, usually, two bits "Buck Privates" grossed $4 million, a remarkable box office take for the time. The film drew an Oscar nomination for the Andrews Sisters and their "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" number, a huge hit.

"Buck Privates" is an interesting look at Hollywood's careful treatment of a politically sensitive issue, conscription and the path to war. It showcases two of America's funniest comedians in a series of give-and-take dialogues that became the hallmark of their collaboration. Their routines remain very funny more than six decades later.

8/10 (for its type and time).
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8/10
It's the Old Army Game
lugonian9 July 2006
BUCK PRIVATES (Universal, 1941), directed by Arthur Lubin, introduces the comedy team of Bud Abbott and Lou Costello into leading roles, following their debut as secondary characters in ONE NIGHT IN THE TROPICS (1940). With the exception of Lee Bowman's name listed first in the closing casting credits, it's obvious that this military comedy rightfully belongs to Abbott and Costello. A box-office sensation for a "B" movie upon its release, and Universal's biggest money maker at that time, BUCK PRIVATES marked a whole new beginning in a long series of popular comedies featuring the comic dual.

Prior to the opening credits, the film starts off in documentary style of current events with President Franklin D. Roosevelt signing the Draft Bill on September 14, 1940, with the enlistment of peacetime buck privates. Once the credits finish rolling on the screen, the movie gets underway first with a brief introduction of draftees Randolph Parker II (Lee Bowman), a millionaire Yale man, and Bob Martin (Alan Curtis), his now ex-chauffeur, entering the Army Recruiting Headquarters draft board, followed by a great opening with the main attractions of the evening: Marty "Slicker" Smith and Herbie Brown (Bud and Lou), former vaudevillians now Time Square street merchants selling dollar neckties for a dime. Joe Collins (Nat Pendleton), an officer of the law, goes after them for peddling without a license, a chase that leads them into an army recruiting center where they mistake it for a movie house playing "You're in the Army Now." While inside, Smith and Brown, believing they have signed up for a raffle drawing, unwittingly enlist themselves into the Army as buck privates. Once transferred to Camp Creely for basic training, guess who turns out to be their sergeant? One guess. His last name is Collins. "Ooooh, boy!!!!"

In between comic highlights by the boys, a handful of popular 1940s tunes, by Hughie Prince and Don Raye include: "You're a Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith," (sung by The Andrews Sisters); "Gee, I Wish You Were Here" (sung by Jane Frazee); "I'll Be With You in Apple Blossom Time" (sung by The Andrews Sisters); "When a Private Becomes a Captain" (sung by Lou Costello and recruits); "Boogie-Woogie Bugle Boy" (Academy Award nominee as best song) "Bounce Me Brother With a Solid Four" and "You're a Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith" (sung by The Andrews Sisters).

As much as musical interludes can become intrusions in comedy films, for BUCK PRIVATES, they are delights, especially those introduced by the Andrews Sisters (Laverne, Maxine and Patti). "Apple Blossom Time," slower in tempo, remains memorable, even today. Judy Frazee, a charming screen personality and vocalist, appeared in a great number of "B" musicals throughout the 1940s, all forgotten. Because of her association with this film, it has become the only one featuring her to remain in circulation today. Others in the cast consist of Samuel S. Hinds as Major Emerson; Shemp Howard as the Cook; Mike Frankovitch as himself/radio announcer; and the Boogie-Woogie Dancers of Company B.

Bud and Lou actually participate more on their comic supplements than in the story, such as it is, which goes to Lee Bowman and Alan Curtis. Bowman is the millionaire playboy drafted into the army while his mother (Nella Walker) makes every effort to get him released within a week, however, it is his father (Douglas Wood) who arranges in keeping his pampered girl-chasing son in boot camp for a year in order to make a man out of him. Curtis plays Randy's chauffeur, now enlisted and placed in the same regiment. No longer obligated to his employer, he gives Parker his two week notice with a sock in the jaw. Both men become rivals, especially for the love and affection of Judy Craig (Jane Frazee), Bob's girlfriend, now working as army hostess. A cliché subplot was revamped for Laurel and Hardy's own military comedy, GREAT GUNS (20th-Fox, 1941), but due to the freshness and appeal of Abbott and Costello, BUCK PRIVATES is by far, a better film, thanks to these now famous routines: the dice game; the rifle drill; the boxing match with Costello in the ring with a muscular fighter with their sergeant (Pendleton) as referee; along with several of their other notable skits such as "Go ahead and play," that would be repeated again and again in their future comedies. An almost perfect yet dated comedy, the only dull spot in BUCK PRIVATES is the overlong maneuver sequence near the end where the focus becomes more on Bowman and Curtis than Abbott and Costello.

Because BUCK PRIVATES was such a sensation, it was later reissued in theaters through Realart, and found popularity to a new generation on television and later video cassette by the 1980s. Cable broadcast history consists of American Movie Classics where it premiered New Year's Day 2001 as part of its "Who's on the First" Abbott and Costello marathon, and later on Turner Classic Movies starting in July 2004.

A sequel, BUCK PRIVATES COME HOME (1947) brought forth Bud and Lou, with Nat Pendleton reprising their roles in a highly entertaining comedy that centers upon the characters returning to civilian life, with Pendleton in fine comedic form as their former sergeant returning to his old beat as a cop and after the twosome selling neckties on the street again. So before attempting to watch the sequel, be sure to catch the original, both currently available on DVD. (***)
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7/10
"We're getting a fine group of men, more teeth and less flat feet."
classicsoncall27 November 2004
Warning: Spoilers
Repeat viewings of "Buck Privates" deliver a warm nostalgia for a time gone by when things were simpler and patriotism was a cherished ideal. After a supporting role in their first movie "One Night in the Tropics", Abbott and Costello scored in a big way in this 1941 film, and Universal Studios had a comedy machine on their hands. The boys jump right into their comic bits including a crap game, a money change routine and a military rifle drill, all with flawless comic timing.

And there's a lot going on around them as well. There's a love triangle involving socialite Randy Parker (Lee Bowman), his ex-chauffeur Bob Martin (Alan Curtis) and Judy Gray (Jane Frazee). Nat Pendleton serves as comic foil, first as a cop on the beat and later as the hapless sergeant who can't control Costello's antics. Shemp Howard is also on hand in a comic mess scene. But the real entertainment is provided by the joyous Andrews Sisters, showcasing an array of popular tunes including "You're a Lucky Fellow Mr. Smith", "I'll Be With You in Apple Blossom Time", and their signature song - "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy".

The "Buck Privates" theme worked so well that Abbott and Costello eventually found their way into other branches of the military, their next film was "In the Navy", followed by "Keep 'Em Flying" and "Buck Privates Come Home" a few years later.

Jane Frazee proved to be a versatile entertainer, doing a song of her own in this film - "Gee But I Wish You Were Here". She made movies in a number of different genres including Westerns, along with five Roy Rogers titles in the late 1940's.

"Buck Privates" is a great starting point whether you're just getting familiar with Abbott and Costello, or a long time fan wishing to relive their memory. If your tastes go for the classic Universal horror characters, their best offering is "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein". Whatever the venue, the boys always entertain, and remain one of the best and most successful comedy teams of all time.
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Excellent Wartime Comedy
CHARLIE-8924 December 2001
I have seen only a few of the Abbott and Costello films, and find in most of them that the films themselves are but an excuse for them to do their (hilarious) routines, with some uninteresting story added in for padding. Since they made no bones about this, and it generally worked, because they did not disguise it (unlike Laurel and Hardy). With many of A&C's pictures, their scenes are always great. I find their TV show to be the purest representation of their humor. BUCK PRIVATES must surely rank not only as the best Abbott and Costello movie, but also as one of the best comedy films of all time. On top of this, it is like an 84-minute slice of American history. The romantic sub-plot in this film is very relevant to audiences of the day and is not trivial or silly (like those in the films of the Marx Bros. and Laurel and Hardy). Lou Costello is hilarious as ever here. Abbott is in full form too. The supporting cast is perfect, especially Nat Pendleton, not to mention a brilliant series of music numbers by the great Andrews Sisters. Their main number, "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," is truly a historical moment, and it's a great performance to boot. It's easy to see how this was the most popular comedy of it's day. All in all, I was very impressed by this film. I hope it gets shown more often on TV so new audiences can enjoy this rousing and hilarious movie.
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7/10
"How'd you get to be so stupid?" "It comes natural!"
Hey_Sweden27 June 2018
Legendary comedy duo Bud Abbott and Lou Costello play sidewalk salesmen / con artists Slicker Smith and Herbie Brown, who get into trouble with the law. To avoid being arrested, they cut into a line which they think is for a movie showing. Surprise, surprise...they're now on their way to enlist in the Army! Resigning themselves to their fate, they get another surprise when the cop who tried to arrest them, Michael Collins (Nat Pendleton), turns out to be their drill sergeant!

Bud & Lou earned this initial feature film vehicle for Universal due to their success on radio, and they really make the most of it. These guys really were naturals at their craft, and perform their material breathlessly. In order to get things to feature length, some time is devoted to musical numbers - especially by The Andrews Sisters - and a major subplot about spoiled rich boy Randolph Parker III (Lee Bowman) butting heads with his former employee Bob Martin (Alan Curtis) while they both aggressively pursue camp hostess Judy Gray (the very lovely Jane Frazee). But the movie is never more entertaining than when Bud & Lou are on screen. Some real hilarity comes from the way that they frustrate Collins with their antics; there are inspired moments of silliness. Bud is also a joy as he keeps devising ways to get Lou into trouble - note his ingenious method of helping Lou shed one pound so Lou can meet the maximum weight requirement.

Lively and engaging, "Buck Privates" is directed with brio by Arthur Lubin, features some catchy music ("Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy"), and wraps up in a traditional "misfits make good" manner. The supporting cast also includes folks like Samuel S. Hinds, Harry Strang, Nella Walker, Carleton Young, Tom Tyler, and Shemp Howard. It's good fun, and paved the way for further Bud & Lou big screen adventures.

Seven out of 10.
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7/10
"I was only lookin' at her to see if she was lookin' at me to see if I was lookin' at her."
utgard1425 September 2015
Fun wartime comedy starring Abbott & Costello. It's just their second film (and their first as the stars) but it has a freshness about it that some later films of theirs don't have. The energy level is high in this one and the musical numbers don't feel as intrusive as they sometimes did in the duo's early films. The plot has Bud and Lou accidentally enrolling in the US Army while trying to escape from a policeman and finding themselves at boot camp with the same policeman now as their drill sergeant. Funny routines from the boys include the famous drill routine, the craps game, and "you're 40, she's 10." Great songs from the Andrews Sisters include "(I'll Be with You) In Apple Blossom Time," "Bounce Me Brother with a Solid Four," and the timeless "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy." The only negative for me is the lame love triangle involving Alan Curtis, Jane Frazee, and Lee Bowman. Bud and Lou are in great form here. Nat Pendleton is fun as the drill sergeant. It's not one of Abbott & Costello's best but it is entertaining.
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7/10
Buck Privates (1941) **1/2
JoeKarlosi6 July 2005
Abbott and Costello's first major success, this film was a tremendous hit in its day and wound up beating 'great' films like CITIZEN KANE and HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY when 1941's box office receipts were counted up for the end of the year. There is not doubt that BUCK PRIVATES feels extremely out of touch with today's times, but then again why shouldn't it? This is a movie that's supposed to be taking place in the early 1940's, not the 21st century. It's like a period piece that means only to portray the times in which it was made.

The comedy duo accidentally enlist in the U.S. Army (an overdone cliché perhaps, but what the heck) and we're treated to humorous routines and some merry song and dance, making it feel like this was the place to be in 1940. Now, for fans of Abbott & Costello, there are plenty of good gags that are perfectly rendered at this early phase of the team's movie career. Gems include: "You're 40, she's 10", "Dice Game", "Don't Play That Radio!!," and "Let Me Borrow 40 Dollars And You Owe Me 10". There's also a classic skit with Abbott commanding a hilarious army drill, and Costello becomes involved in a boxing match with a big brute. Both comedians were at the peak of their powers at this point, and so they're right on the money in all their routines.

As good as the boys are, there are other staples to contend with, which would be an ongoing factor throughout many of their 1940s films. There are several musical numbers strewn amidst the comedy, here courtesy of The Andrews Sisters. In comedies such as this, these performances definitely tend to weigh things down and one's mileage will definitely vary as to whether they're a help or a hindrance. While I have to say that I personally don't find the homely Andrews' gals to be that much to look at, I do think they've got charisma and sing well. So I don't mind their sweet harmonizing every so often, plus the songs themselves aren't bad (I can't dislike "The Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy"). This was made at a time where going to the theatre was a full night out; not only to experience the funny antics of Bud and Lou, but also to enjoy a set of music and dancing for your money, too. All the same, there were future films (for me) where the musical interludes weren't so hot and did become extremely annoying. Somehow, it all gels pretty well within the "Happy Army" atmosphere of BUCK PRIVATES.

One thing that does irk me is whenever another character we're not all that concerned with gets too much screen time when it's mainly A&C we're hoping to see. In this case, a little too much footage is devoted to the side story of a couple of other male leads who are at odds with one another yet manage to also enlist in the army along with Bud and Lou. But we also get an appearance by Shemp Howard (one of the Three Stooges) as a cook, and that's never a bad thing. **1/2 out of ****
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9/10
You're In The Army Now
bkoganbing7 December 2005
My uncle who later served in France during the second World War was one of those whose lives was interrupted by the peace time draft before the USA entered World War II. It was with some touch of irony that he will mention to this day he never saw any camp hostesses like Jane Frazee or the Andrews Sisters.

But Buck Privates is an Abbott and Costello film, not a serious drama about the first peace time draft in American history. Bud and Lou got in the short run of this film several of their classic routines.

When Universal signed Abbott and Costello on the strength of their running appearances on Kate Smith's Radio Show, they were expecting to do a series of B programmers with them. They never dreamed that these two burlesque comedians would become the national icons that they did.

Shot on a shoestring the film made an exponential profit for Universal studios. Without the usual Hollywood ballyhoo that would have accompanied a major Hollywood production, Buck Privates returned many times the cost of production.

And through the serendipitous casting angel, Buck Privates also included the Andrews Sisters who got to sing three of their standards in this, I'll Be With You In Apple Blossom Time, You're A Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith, and the immortal Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy from Company B.

There are in fact so many musical numbers and so many A&C routines in this short film, there's barely room enough for a plot which involves a playboy Lee Bowman, his former chauffeur AlanCurtis, and Jane Frazee the camp hostess they both want to get better acquainted with. But because of that the film doesn't drag for a second.

Buck Privates set the standard for the films that Bud and Lou did for Universal. No doubt about it, their best work was in the early Forties and Buck Privates is the best of all.
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6/10
The music makes it, not A & C's values
scootmandutoo10 December 2005
I like Abbott & Costello enough to have purchased the first 2 A&C collections (16 flicks) plus A&C Meets Frankenstein, but it wasn't until this film that I am coming to realize that one aspect of their humor seriously disturbs me.

Okay, we know the shtick is Costello being the dummy who is constantly exploited by Abbott's straight man, but this film should really open up the question of what masochist would ever want Bud Abbott as a friend.

Emblematic of Abbott's horrendous behavior is a night-time barracks scene where Abbott goads Costello into behavior with a radio that causes Costello to take physical abuse from the sergeant. Sorry, to me it was not funny, but sadistic and abusive. It wasn't good-natured at all. And it made me think that if somebody did something similar to another alleged friend in real life, remaining friends would reveal a true weakness of self-image from the one being victimized.

One of the messages in this movie is that bullies like Bud Abbott and the sergeant do not face any consequences for their meanness. That's a disturbing message.

Additionally, war here is treated like one giant game, without any deference given to the real-life consequences of battle.

My father fought in World War 2 and it was a battle America was right to participate in. But this film was like a giant ad for the virtue of machismo, without any sobering reality to counter the stereotyping that is done throughout.

Thankfully, some great tunes by the Andrews Sisters redeemed the film, but I still find some of the messages to be perverse. Especially the one about how alleged friends can treat one another so shabbily and maintain their credibility as friends.
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10/10
I LOVE Abbott & Costello movies...and this one was no exception!
coastalsonshine4 September 2004
This movie contains the famous bantering and mind games that Bud Abbott always pulled on Lou Costello...this adds to the entertainment value and it is great to watch a movie that is just plain entertaining! This movie also contains the Andrews Sisters, who are so great! I love singing in a movie and the use of it is very well done. This movie also gives you a pretty accurate account of "going into the service" for that time era.The military point of view of "Buck Privates" shows the innocence of so many of our young men and women that enter the service of Uncle Sam.It is very interesting to see how things have changed in the last 60 years,as well,not only in T.V and movies, but in the service, too. Abbott and Costello bring humanity to the stiffness of military regimen in "Buck Privates". The cast that was chosen shows a great chemistry with the comedians. A "must- see" for movie buffs that appreciate the old black & white movies.
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7/10
Bud And Lou Report For Duty
slokes30 January 2012
The most remembered sequence in any Abbott & Costello film is in one of their less remembered movies, "The Naughty Nineties." But perhaps the second- and third-most remembered can both be found here, in the comedy team's first starring vehicle.

The first is the famous drill routine, where Bud tries to impart some martial discipline on a directionally challenged Lou. It's a showcase for masterful editing (much of it pulled from cutting-room scraps) as well as A&C's split-second timing, with Bud's imperious whip-cracking and Lou's chronic balking.

"Get your chest out!" Bud yells. "Throw it out!"

"I'm not through with it yet," Lou answers back.

Abbott and Costello don't appear in the other sequence. Here, the Andrews Sisters (Patty, Maxene, and LaVerne) perform their hit song "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," with Patty singing like Ella and mugging like Satch. It's a scene that showcased a sense of national pride and rhythm as America prepared for the War Years, and like the drill routine, still holds up as sensational entertainment 70 years on.

"Buck Privates" didn't just break Abbott and Costello; it made them overnight sensations and set the template for more than 30 movies to come. It's here you get Bud & Lou mixing their trademark routines, honed in burlesque, with the kind of surreal goofiness that made them nirvana for kids like me discovering them on local television more than a generation later.

Bud tries to smoke Lou at craps just to find Lou knows more than he lets on.

Lou breaks into song while peeling onions, with Shemp Howard as his rumba partner.

Lou goes into the ring to do battle with a tattooed giant, and a ref who tries to count him out with "2-4-6-8-10" because he says he doesn't like odd numbers.

Bud and Lou play the title characters, who become Army recruits while running from the law. Like a lot of later Bud and Lou pictures, they are a pair of conniving if good-hearted fellows. The Army struggles to square them out. The main plot, what there is of it, focuses on two other soldiers, a rich boy and his former valet, who find themselves rivals for the affection of pretty Army hostess Jane Frazee. The rich guy (Lee Bowman) needs a serious attitude adjustment.

Most like me will find this stiffly-acted love triangle to be the fuzzy end of the lollipop, but it frees Bud and Lou from having to carry as much of the story as their later films would require. I think director Arthur Lubin and his team saw it the same way. Here the pair are given room to perform extended routines and fade-out bits that established their unique form of patter comedy, filling most of the time without having to carry the story. If not as magically zany as their next service comedy, "In The Navy," "Buck Privates" leaves you happy and wanting more.

As much as I love Bud and Lou, I think the Andrews Sisters steal much of this film, with great performances of "Bugle Boy" as well as the moving, lilting "(I'll Be With You In) Apple Blossom Time," a slightly bigger hit than "Bugle Boy" in its day. "Bounce Me Brother With A Solid Four" was probably their coolest song on the studded soundtrack. Patty's irrepressible face and the girls' smooth synchronicity in voice and body set a high bar for every musical act that would follow them in Abbott & Costello movies. Few were up to the challenge - including the Andrewses in the next two films.

Wartime was a year away for the United States, and "Buck Privates" set a tone for positive thinking through laughter that feels like the right prescription for victory down the road. That's true even if the Japanese used the film for their own propaganda: Maybe that way a few enemy soldiers saw through their government's hate campaign in getting a chance to laugh along with Bud and Lou. I'd like to think so: Laughter can be a pretty effective weapon.
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8/10
Bud and Lou in top form
frankfob6 January 2003
While this was the Abbott & Costello's second feature, and only Abbott's second film (Costello had appeared in several films as a stuntman and background extra in the late '20s), you sure couldn't tell, as the pair handled themselves like veterans. They are so assured and confident here that they appear to be making up their routines as they go along, although in reality they had polished them to near perfection during their years in vaudeville, burlesque and on the Broadway stage. This film is a terrific example of the flawless timing that not only convulsed their audiences but astounded other comedians (Steve Allen said that he had never seen anyone who could match them). Some criticism has been directed at the duo for the insertion of superfluous and usually second-rate musical numbers in most of their films--a decision made by Universal Pictures which the team had no control over--and while that may be true for several of their subsequent efforts, it isn't here. The numbers are well staged and the songs, especially "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," are infectious. The "plot" about a spoiled rich boy and his servant who enlist in the army is lame, but it doesn't really matter. This is a showcase for Bud and Lou's talents, and they don't disappoint. Director Arthur Lubin said that he pioneered the use of two cameras to cover scenes mainly because Costello was so off-the-wall and bounced all over the place so much that one camera simply couldn't contain him, so he ordered up another camera and had it trained exclusively on Costello. The boys do their best routines here--The Crap Game, The Ten/Forty routine, the Drill routine--and they are a joy to watch. Anyone who thinks that Bud Abbott wasn't the best straight man in the business should watch the Drill routine and check out how he consistently and skillfully reins in Costello whenever Lou's manic energy takes him too far outside the skit while still allowing him the freedom to employ the ad-libs and improvisations he was famous for. Abbott never really got as much credit as he deserved, and this scene alone shows why he deserved it.

Abbott & Costello did make some films that were beneath their talents, and some that were just plain unfunny, but this is definitely not one of them. This is a tremendously enjoyable film. Highly recommended.
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6/10
Recruitment Propaganda
AAdaSC15 March 2015
A & C inadvertently join the army while trying to escape police sergeant Nat Pendleton (Collins) who is chasing them for street selling without a licence. Once they arrive at their training camp, they are put through their paces in the same unit as spoilt rich kid Lee Bowman (Randolph) and his former chauffeur Alan Curtis (Bob). These two have a hatred for each other that is heightened by their affections for Jane Frazee (Judy). Who will get the girl…..? And will everyone be happy about going to war…..?

Well, I can answer that last question. Given that this is a blatant recruitment film, yes, everyone seems happy enough. In fact, it looks like quite a laugh with singing and dancing aplenty. Due to the nature of the film, nearly all the songs are war-related with some truly terrible lyrics about Uncle Sam and nonsense about loving the Constitution. However, as these songs are delivered by the Andrews Sisters it makes for good entertainment as we get to see the legends themselves performing 2 classics – "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" and "Bounce Me Brother With a Solid Four" which also includes some great Lindy Hop dancing.

A & C perform some routines and there are occasional funny moments as provided by Costello in between the shouting that Abbott seems to constantly engage in. He is rather an unpleasant character. Still, the film was better than I thought it would be despite the required sections of marching (yawn) and the flimsy storyline. Jane Frazee seems a bit of a slag in this. But maybe that's what soldiers needed to see to motivate them. Whatever girl you want, you can have her. Just join the army.

"You're a Lucky Fellow, Mr Smith" ….er, says who? I don't think so. Much better to learn to Boogie Woogie. They should have settled the war with a Lindy-Hop and Boogie Woogie contest. The enemy wouldn't have had a chance.
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5/10
A Day In The Life Of A Recruit.
rmax30482322 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
There must have been dozens of these training camp comedies put out by the studios about the time World War II began and for some years afterward -- "See Here, Private Hargrove," "To The Shores of Tripoli," "Great Guns." Often, as here, they involved a comedy team being drafted along with some spoiled millionaire who had to learn how to become a man. There are usually some gorgeous girls hanging around the camp somewhere, and a couple of songs to be shoehorned in. Perhaps the least calcified example, and certainly the one with the most striking ladies, is Danny Kaye's "Up In Arms." In "Buck Privates" the songs aren't bad either. The Andrews Sisters resurrect "Apple Blossom Time" from 1920 and introduce "The Boogie-Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B." The trio get considerable screen time and I always sort of enjoyed their rhythmic sense and obstinately chipper attitude.

The following year, in another Abbott and Costello venture, "Ride 'Em Cowboy," a silly flick, Dick Foran introduced another pretty tune, "I'll Remember April." Victor Young composed the rhapsodic "Stella By Starlight" in a 1944 film, and David Raksin wrote "Laura" for the 1945 mystery of the same name. They had CRAFTSMEN in those days, by God! Where did they all go? The Academy Award for Best Song in 1986 went to the dismal "Take My Breath Away." What can we expect NEXT year -- "You Be My Bitchin Ho"? (Sob.)

Well, I'm glad I got that off my chest. There's something else I want to get off my chest. Abbott and Costello go through a kind of Basic Training that looks nothing like the grueling experiences I had in boot camp. Where did all those women come from? We had some women, too, of course, and the young Swedish maids were attractive enough with their blond curls and dainty aprons, but there seemed to be no exact translation of what we, in English, call "medium rare." What we see on screen here is a picnic compared to what I went through. Oh, it was rough.

I really can't say too much about Abbott and Costello. I enjoyed movies like this when I was a kid but now the gags seem tired and juvenile, unpacked in their pristine condition from vaudeville skits. And I don't like to see Bud Abbott slap Lou Costello in the face. It's just not amusing. The Three Stooges do that poke-in-the-eye business even more often but the sound effects render them painless. But with A and C you can hear every slap of Lou's chubby face. It's like watching a child being beaten.

Many of these training camp comedies end with war games involving two armies of different colors, and the marginalized characters redeem themselves through acts of self sacrifice. ("The Dirty Dozen" is a training camp movie exemplar except for the final assault on a real target.) "Buck Privates" follows the same format.

However, it was Abbott and Costello's first movie and it led to something of a career for the two of them, at times keeping Universal Studios afloat. The quality declined, as series will, until they were refurbished after the war with "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein," which, I can say honestly, I get a kick out of seeing once in a while.
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Bud & Lou's stars-making vehicle
george.schmidt28 February 2003
BUCK PRIVATES (1941) **** Bud Abbott and Lou Costello in their first starring film (their debut in "One Night in the Tropics" were supporting comic foils) catapulted them into the stratosphere of movie stardom as the premiere comedy team of the 1940s and this film was the lifesaver for their home studio Universal which was precariously close to bankruptcy until the release of this comic masterpiece with the boys in over their heads as unknowing volunteers in the US Army. Uproariously funny particularly their drill instruction scenes with Bud and Lou improvising ("What time is it?" "None of your business!") Look for frequent co-stars the musical singing siblings The Andrews Sisters (who sing the smash "The Boogie-Woogie Bugle Boy") and also look for Shemp Howard, of The Three Stooges, in the mess sequence with Lou.
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7/10
A big improvement over their first film...
planktonrules11 August 2009
BUCK PRIVATES was the second movie with Abbott and Costello. In the first, ONE NIGHT IN THE TROPICS, the boys were purely there for comic relief and played a very small part in the film. They didn't even bother creating characters for them, as each went by their real names. While in BUCK PRIVATES their roles are thankfully bigger, they still are in supporting roles--though the studio stuck their names at the top of the credits to capitalize on their success in the last film. Despite the billing, Lee Bowman and Alan Curtis played the real leads in the film. This, combined with lots of singing and a romance in which neither Abbott nor Costello is involved with is why BUCK PRIVATES really can't be among the team's best films. It's very good, but far from perfect.

The film begins with rich blow-hard Bowman getting a draft notice. Since he's so spoiled, he assumes his family will pull some strings to get him either out of the military altogether or into officer's training school. But, his father sees things differently--boot camp and serving as an enlisted man will be a great chance to teach him character. Along the way, he and Curtis vie for the same girl and are rivals throughout the film.

Abbott and Costello join the army--mostly because they are running from the cops. Naturally, Costello ends up being the lamest excuse for a soldier there is and if the US military REALLY had accepted such cretins in the service, they would have undoubtedly lost WWII! There were several good skits involving the boys and while not their best work, it still is pretty fresh and well worth watching.

In addition to all this, the Andrews Sisters are on hand to sing. Some may love their songs, such as the famous "Boogie, Woogie Bugle Boy", but as for me, I thought the music was a huge distraction and I sped through these numbers--I'd already heard them when I'd seen the movie when I was a kid--and I'd already suffered enough! Why, oh why, did studios insist on saddling comedies with singing in the 30s, 40s and 50s?! Overall, a much better script than the last film but the duo still take a backseat to the action. Good, but they were capable of better.

By the way, in the comedy boxing scene, Lou Costello probably had to work hard to look bad, as in real life he had been a boxer in his youth--and a pretty good one from what I've read.
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7/10
Abbott & Costello strike it rich
vincentlynch-moonoi1 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
It took Martin & Lewis 4 films to get their on-screen act together, even though Martin & Lewis were a more complete comedy team, with both members of the team being talented and crucial to the success of the team. On the other hand, Abbott & Costello struck it big their second time out with a whopper of a pay day for Universal Pictures.

The film is interesting because the ongoing plot didn't really involve Abbott & Costello directly, yet it was clearly Abbott & Costello's film. The main plot line involves a spoiled rich boy -- Lee Bowman -- who learns the hard way what it means to love one's country and how to treat women. Meanwhile, Abbott & Costello carry the comedy, and that's the main feature of this film.

And, for good balance, the Andrews Sisters have 3 superb numbers of the era -- "Apple Blossom Time", "You're A Lucky Fellow Mr. Smith", and "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy". And they were so good, and this may very well be their best film appearance.

Costello carries the comedy very well here. slap stick is supreme, and was especially effective during the fight sequence.

This is one of the best Abbott & Costello films, and especially impressive because it was their first starring roles. Lots of laugh, though slightly light on plot; a fine service comedy.
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7/10
completely silly, but the good kind of silly
lee_eisenberg13 June 2005
If you've seen enough Abbott and Costello movies, then you should know that the actual plot is unimportant; the whole movie is really just an excuse for Bud and Lou to get into embarrassing situations and be silly. You'd better believe that they do that in "Buck Privates". They play a pair of street vendors who inadvertently end up in the army. To make matters worse, their drill sergeant is the cop who went after them. Once on the military base, Abbott tries to be serious, while Costello somehow manages to do everything wrong, often incurring their drill sergeant's wrath.

Aside from Abbott's irritation and Costello's gaffs, there's some extra entertainment by the Andrews Sisters, as they sing "Boogie Woogie Boy in Company B", among other songs. But like I said, the whole movie is really all about Costello making a mess of everything.

Just how many movies can there be about some goof-ball joining the army and raising Cain?
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8/10
Universal Soldiers
Spondonman5 September 2008
This is one of my favourite outings from Bud & Lou, the start of their phenomenally successful career in the service comedies and one of a series of smile-jerkers from them and Universal. This was also the one that made it for them in the movies and turned them into America's no. 1 box office stars during the War.

They're a couple of street tie-selling con artists who unwittingly join the Army (along with playboy Lee Bowman) in trying to escape the clutches of the Law in the shape of cherubic Nat Pendleton. It's not so easy to escape ones duty however, and so follows a series of unconnected inconsequential adventures learning to be soldiers or lovers all with that special lighthearted wartime Universal treatment. A&C went through their routines with impeccable timing and a professionalism that belied all the slapstick. Favourite bits: playing unintelligible (to me) clubhouse dice; Abbott inoculated and Costello's reaction; the mathematics of borrowing USD 50; the historic performance of Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy by the Andrews Sisters and then the sudden end to the boogie-woogie boxing match; the unusual deadpan arrangement to Jane Frazee's I Wish You Were Here. The Voice Of Hellzapoppin returns! No kidding but what chance did the Japanese and Germans really have - sorry for identifying who the enemies were in these socially inclusive times, because they weren't in the film - to pit themselves against all this? The American War Machine was awakening, with the might of Hollywood behind it and A&C playing their part with their entertaining flagwavers the same as George Formby did on a smaller scale for the British War effort.

The box office success - and critical praise too - of this took Universal by surprise and they didn't make nearly as much money as they could have, a mistake they never made again with A&C. Recommended, an antidote to now and to me always a joy to behold and hear.
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7/10
Mr. Smith may be a lucky fellow, but Sgt. Pendleton isn't.
mark.waltz18 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
The comedy team of Abbott and Costello became leading stars with their second feature, doing early on what pretty much every comic would do: end up in the military and turn everything upside down. This is one of the best of those formulatic plots, filled with hood natured comedy, some action, and of course, the Andrews Sisters!

It starts accidentally for the duo who are trying to hide from police officer Nat Pendleton when they duck into a movie theater and end up signing for active duty instead where they end up in the troop commanded by Sgt. You- Know-Who. America wasn't yet in the war, but it was obvious considering everything that was going on over in Europe and the Pacific that it was only a matter of time.

Abbott and Costello's comedy surrounded an alleged friendship that was pretty one sided. As much trouble that Bud gets Lou into, it remains very funny, especially when Bud gets Lou into trouble over playing a radio in the barracks after lights out. The Andrews sisters get to sing four songs, including the lively "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" and the poignant "Apple Blossom Time". If I were to go off to war and not know if I was coming back or not, I'd want to be leaving Grand Central Station with the Andrews Sisters singing " You're a Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith".

A subplot involving wealthy Lee Bowman not taking his enlistment seriously and preferring to flirt with hostess Jane Frazee thanks to his coddling by society matron mother Nella Walker is a minor distraction from the antics of the comedy duo and the sister's songs. However, it doesn't dilute the more memorable comedy sequences, which includes a cameo by Shemp Howard as a crabby chef.
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10/10
Slick, well-made comedy which stands the test of time.
opsbooks26 December 2004
Like other reviewers, I've acquired the remastered DVD version of 'Buck Privates'. Bud and Lou fit into the story pretty well, far better than their stint in 'One Night in the Tropics'. The story rolls along at a breakneck pace and I especially enjoyed the steam loco shots as the train transported the boys to boot camp. The Andrews Sisters as usual are fabulous with some great songs.

What really impressed me was the photography, perhaps not something people would normally comment on in an A & C movie. Previous copies I've viewed have been grainy and washed out whereas this new print is visually great to look at. It was interesting for the first time to be able examine characters in the background, see facial expressions more clearly and especially, watch Lou 'working' both Bud and the crew off screen.

Clearly, Lou, like Stan Laurel and Buster Keaton, was a genius of comedy timing, the likes of which we may never see again.
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7/10
Abbott and Costello steal it
SnoopyStyle24 December 2020
Slicker Smith (Bud Abbott) and Herbie Brown (Lou Costello) are two sidewalk petty con men selling neckties. A policeman chase them to arrest them. They hide in a line thinking that it's a cinema but in reality, it's enlistment in the army.

This movie turned Abbott and Costello into big time stars. It's also a patriotic wartime movie featuring The Andrews Sisters. The guys are doing great bits like owing $10. They are a part of the collective cast but not necessarily its leaders. There is a main story about a playboy recruit. It's nothing interesting. Abbott and Costello really steal the show. The girls provide some musical breaks. Suddenly, Shemp Howard shows up in one scene. This is a funny part of the war effort if only the legendary comedy duo be the story leads.
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10/10
Great film, great dancing
sarahtar3 January 2001
This is fantastic for Abbott and Costello's first feature film. They are quite funny, and their interactions with the other cast members are great. This is the film that got me hooked on Abbott and Costello! It IS an unrealistic portrayal of the Army (and everything else, really!), but it's a comedy - not a documentary!

The Andrews Sisters are lovely as always, especially in their first appearance in the film, when they sing "You're a Lucky Fellow Mr. Smith." This film also features Dean Collins and his dance team in one of the most famous Lindy scenes ever.
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6/10
One of their best!
www11254 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
BUCK PRIVATES was a major hit when it came out back in 1941, and it is still one of the funniest movies of all time. Bud and Lou are at the beginning of their film careers, and in top form. This film was so successful, and inspired similar military comedies, such as Laurel and Hardy's film GREAT GUNS, as well as YOU'RE IN THE ARMY NOW with Jimmy Durante and Phil Silvers, and the Abbott and Costello films that followed, IN THE NAVY & KEEP 'EM FLYING. Abbott and Costello both have perfect timing in this film, particularly in the Drill scene, in which Costello suddenly ad-libs "What time is it", and not missing a beat, Abbott remarks, "None of your business!" This film is of course worth seeing for the drill routine alone. See it as soon as you can!
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5/10
Buck Privates in A Country Headed to War **1/2
edwagreen26 June 2006
Predictable cute farce about life in the army.

To avoid capture by the police, Abbott and Costello unintentionally join the army.

Lee Bowman plays a play-boy who is too busy with the women to be part of this man's army.

The Andrews Sisters belt out their familiar 1940 songs. The boys are zany and generally a good time is had by all. Bowman shows himself to be good at the rifle range. When he ducks out of a shootout,in order to be with a female, the guys rightfully turn on him. Naturally, Bowman has a change of heart. When he turns down Officers Candidate School to remain in the outfit, he shows himself to be a true American. It's all mom and apple pie after that.
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