- You're in the Navy Now
Infobox_Film
name = You're in the Navy Now
caption = DVD cover
writer =John W. Hazard (magazine article)
Richard Murphy
starring =Gary Cooper Jane Greer Millard Mitchell Eddie Albert John McIntire
Ray CollinsJack Webb
director =Henry Hathaway
producer =Fred Kohlman
music =Cyril Mockridge
cinematography = Joseph MacDonald
editing = James B. Clark
distributor =Twentieth Century-Fox
released =February 23 1951
runtime = 93 min.
country = USA
language = English
imdb_id = 0044224
budget ="You're in the Navy Now" is a
Hollywood film released in 1951 byTwentieth Century Fox about theUnited States Navy in the first months ofWorld War II . Its initial release was titled "USS Teakettle". Directed byHenry Hathaway , the film is a comedy starringGary Cooper as a new officer wanting duty at sea but who is instead assigned to an experimental project without much hope of success.Filmed in
black and white aboard PC-1168, an active Navy patrol craft, "You're in the Navy Now" featured the film debuts of bothCharles Bronson andLee Marvin in minor roles as crewmen. Screenwriter Richard Murphy was nominated by theWriters Guild of America for "Best Written American Comedy", basing his script on an article in "The New Yorker " written by John W. Hazard.Plot
At Norfolk Naval Base,
Lieutenant John W. Harkness (Cooper), a newly-commissioned officer, has reported aboard a U.S. Navy warship in the opening months of World War II. Only one minute after learning (to his shock) that he has not simply been ordered to his first assignment, but has been made captain of a ship of war, Harkness opens and is bewildered to read his sealed orders:Unbeknownst to Harkness, his civilian background in
engineering and hisRutgers education has elected him, by means of a hole punched in anIBM card , to head a secret project. Harkness has been given command of asubmarine chaser , a twin-screw "baby sister" of a World War I-design destroyer.Her crew all assume that Harkness is Regular Navy and an experienced seaman. Her chief boatswain's mate, Chief Larrabee (
Millard Mitchell ) is the first to greet Harkness and confesses that he has never been on anything "smaller than acruiser ". Then he confides, "Just between you and me, sir, I don't think you're gonna like this. Wait'll you see that THING in the engine room!"The "thing" is a steam engine: the Navy wants to power its convoy escorts and patrol craft with high-pressure
steam engine s to increase their speed and maneuverability. "PC-1168"'s crew are all newly-inducted civilians largely untrained to both the Navy and the sea, and her officers newly-minted "90 day wonders". With less than five minutes in command, Harkness faces his first crisis: the port commander (Ed Begley ) orders him to move the PC-1168 immediately to make room in theberth for another ship. Harkness discovers that even his engineroom chief knows little aboutsteam engine s. Because he must personally get the engine to run, Harkness is not on the bridge when his ship gets underway and rams the side of anaircraft carrier .His officers are both willing and enthusiastic but green. The exec, Lt. J.G. Barron (
Eddie Albert ), is a good-natured idea-man whose knowledge of the Navy is out of books. Theengineering officer, Ens. Barbo (Jack Webb ), has no training, education, or experience in engineering. And thesupply -Mess officer, Ens. Dorrance (Richard Erdman ), is plagued byseasickness .In
drydock to repair its badly damaged bow, Harkness and his officers meet gruffCommander Reynolds (John McIntire ), who oversees Project XP11204 as the representative ofRear Admiral L.E. Tennant (Ray Collins ). Their job is to test and develop anevaporator -condenser to provide sufficient water to make the engine feasible for sea duty. He brusquely informs them that sea trials will begin as soon as they are out of drydock, that he has come to brief them on the steam system, and that they better pay attention. When Barbo pleads that he has no engineering experience, Cdr. Reynolds replies that in his case, Barbo had better "pay very "close" attention"."PC-1168" winds up being towed into port after the distilled water runs out because of the crew's inexperience and is dubbed the "USS Teakettle". Cdr. Reynolds restricts the crew to the ship until they make the system work, but as the failures mount, fights break out between the crew members frustrated by the ridicule they endure from the crews of other ships. To further complicate his life, Harkness' wife Ellie (
Jane Greer ) has gotten a commission in the Navy and become secretary to the base commander, Captain Eliot (Harry Von Zell ). Harkness suffers pangs of jealousy over the attention and familiarity that other officers show Eliie.The morale problem aboard the Teakettle collides with its lack of success and becomes a
vicious circle , each making the other worse. The officers hit upon a scheme to enter a crewman in the baseboxing championship to raise the crew's morale. They train an engine room snipe, Wascylewski (Charles Bronson ), as the ship's champion because he bested four of his shipmates in a brawl, but Wascylewski breaks four ribs in a fall during the sea trial on the day of the fight. His replacement, helmsman Tommy Morris (Jack Warden ), literally has no stomach to fight. Ensign Barbo steps in--pretending to be Wascylewski--and surprisingly wins the championship.The film climaxes with the Official Sea Trial of the steam system in which the crew, finally together as a team, faces its greatest test yet. Admiral Tennant puts a capper on the events by revealing to Harkness that the selection of his crew was no fluke: the Navy already knew that experts could run the system; it needed to develop one that the novice sailors who made up the overwhelming percentage of the wartime Navy could quickly learn to operate.
Cast
*
Gary Cooper - Lieutenant John Harkness
*Jane Greer - Ensign Ellie Harkness
*Millard Mitchell - Chief George Larrabee
*Eddie Albert - Lieutenant J.G. Bill Barron
*John McIntire - Commander W.R. Reynolds
*Ray Collins - Rear Admiral L.E. Tennant
*Jack Webb - Ensign Tony Barbo
*Richard Erdman - Ensign Chuck Dorrance
*Charles Bronson - Wascylewski
*Harry Von Zell - Captain Danny Eliot
*Lee Marvin - uncredited role as a signalman
*Harvey Lembeck - Seaman NorelliProduction
"You're in the Navy Now" was filmed in
black-and-white on location at the Norfolk Naval Yard,Hampton Roads, Virginia , and aboard the PC-1168 based there. Except for stock footage of a boxing match, verisimilitude in the film was high. The film marked the screen debuts ofLee Marvin ,Charles Bronson , andJack Warden . "U.S.S. Teakettle" premiered at theRoxy Theater inNew York City onFebruary 23 ,1951 .External links
*imdb title|id=0044224|title=You're in the Navy Now
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