“So
Proudly We Hail” was inspired by the nurses in the Philippines at the beginning
of WWII. Director Mark Sandrich read a
story about ten nurses who escaped from Corregidor. He and screenwriter Alan Scott ( who received
an Academy Award nomination for his script) interviewed the ladies and even
hired Eunice Hatchitt as technical adviser.
Hatchitt did a lot of eye-rolling over the petulant behavior of the
three leading ladies in the film. The
movie was based on the book by Juanita Hipps (“I Served on Bataan”). The “Angels of Bataan” served first on Bataan
and then Corregidor before the lucky few were evacuated and the unlucky majority
were imprisoned for the rest of the war.
The movie had the cooperation of the War Department, the Army Nurses
Corps, and the American Red Cross. The
movie was a box office hit and was nominated for four Oscars (Best Supporting
Actress, Cinematography, Original Screenplay, and Visual Effects).
Colbert, Goddard, and Lake |
The
film opens in May, 1942. Eight nurses
are in the Philippines. Lt. Janet “Davy”
Davidson (Claudette Colbert) has been wounded.
Suddenly they are on a cruise ship.
We’ve jumped to the end of the war and Davy has lost her will to
live. A doctor prescribes flash
backs. We are introduced to our trio of
celebrity nurses as they sail to the Philippines. Davy is the mother hen, Joan (Paulette
Goddard) is the slutty one, and Olivia (Veronica Lake) is the vengeance –minded,
Jap hating war widow. Davy is
romantically involved with Lt. Summers (George Reeves eight years before
Superman) and gets to bathe him so the ladies in the audience might consider
joining the nursing corps. Meanwhile
Joan is flirting with a hayseed named Kansas (Sonny Tufts). Olivia is being unsociable, even with the other
nurses. What a bitch! They don’t realize the Japs killed her
husband. At a Christmas party on board
the ship, a Chaplain gives a speech to the audience telling them to have faith
in the things America stands for.
When
they reach Bataan, they are assigned to a hospital. Olivia gets herself assigned to the Japanese
prisoner ward. Will she cold-bloodedly
murder? John shows up. Unwounded. What the…? John and Davy go on a moonlit walk and spend
the night in a dugout – wink, wink. The
Japanese show up before the girls can bug out.
Olivia lets her peek-a-boo hair down and pulls a grenade out of her
bra. That is not a euphemism.
Put that hair down, put those hands up |
At
the new hospital, John ( what is this guy? a hospital groupie?) gives Davy a
monkey that of course is named Tojo (because they look alike). The head nurse’s son dies after having his
legs amputated. She represents all the
moms who have lost sons in the war. The
damned war keeps intruding on the romantic subplots. “I don’t know if that’s an air raid warning
or mess call. Either way it’s a warning”. LOL
Those bastard Japs even bomb the hospital with the huge red cross on it. We wouldn’t do that.
The
gals are evacuated to Corregidor. So is
John, who has finally managed to get himself wounded. A doctor removes his shrapnel (“it’s probably
good American steel” – non-Greatest Generation, this is a reference to scrap
iron sold to Japan before the war). The
hospital is located in the Malinta Tunnel.
There is a plug for Red Cross blood.
One nurse gets the “heebie jeebies”.
Davy and John honeymoon by a howitzer before he goes on a suicide
mission to get quinine. “I’ll be back”. Liar.
Joan says goodbye to Kansas. “So
long, kid”.
Davy and John in the Honeymoon Suite |
“So
Proudly We Hail” is better than you would expect. It is fairly realistic in depicting the lives
of nurses in the Philippines. They were
in fact very sexy and had romances with soldiers. Actually, according to the movie, two thirds
of nurses had affairs and one third were married to soldiers who were killed in
the war. And they were able to keep
their hair perfectly coiffed. The movie
is entertaining in a 1940s war movie aimed at females sort of way. There
is some pretty good humor and some of it is even intentional. The dialogue is better than average for this
type. It is only occasionally schmaltzy. The speeches did not make me throw up in my
mouth. Surprisingly, the movie deserved
its visual effects nomination. The bombing
scenes are well done. There are some
effective pyrotechnics. The acting is
good and no one embarrasses themselves. The
three ladies are fine (and I do mean fine).
Goddard got a Best Supporting Actress nod. She plays 1940s trollop well. Colbert
is her usual solid self. Lake is not much of an actress, but I don’t think
anyone cared. Excuse me, is that a
grenade in your bra? Oh, and there are
some men in the cast as I recall. One of
them played Superman.
Classic
or antique? Classic because of the
recognition for the nursing corps. This
is what sets it apart from other wartime war movies. It could have been much worse.
Good to read for this post. Thanks for share
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