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He's My Guy

He's My Guy (1943)

March. 26,1943
|
6
|
NR
| Comedy Music

The former members of a vaudeville team meet up again in a defense plant during WW II.

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Reviews

TrueJoshNight
1943/03/26

Truly Dreadful Film

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SteinMo
1943/03/27

What a freaking movie. So many twists and turns. Absolutely intense from start to finish.

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Senteur
1943/03/28

As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.

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Gary
1943/03/29

The movie's not perfect, but it sticks the landing of its message. It was engaging - thrilling at times - and I personally thought it was a great time.

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mark.waltz
1943/03/30

Overshadowed by a certain redhead during the 1950's as the queen of TV sitcoms, Joan Davis could create laughs out of the silliest of situations. Her movie career had her as sidekick to leading ladies such as Alice Faye, Loretta Young and Ginger Rogers in "A" pictures, and as a leading lady in second features, she rivaled Lucille Ball as queen of the B's. Ball, however, only did a handful of comedies and only a few emulated her sitcom character. With Joan, however, she played the same type of crackpot on the screen that she did on TV, only rivaled by Judy Canova as a big screen female comedian. In this film, she's the best friend of singer Irene Hervey, accidentally interrupting Hervey's big musical number through an accident along side her partner, Fuzzy Knight. As a result of the comic mishap, Hervey and her pianist husband (Dick Foran) are fired, and separate after a fight. Hervey, Davis and Knight get jobs in a war plant and decide to put on their own show. When the estranged hubby reappears, he must pretend to be Davis's husband to prevent Hervey from being fired as secretary to the HR manager. While the songs are mediocre and the formula war musical plot predictable, Davis makes this worth while. It's nothing different than any of the many other B patriotic musicals of the time, and of course, putting a show on in a factory means it turning into the Hollywood idealized version of what they thought a factory common room would look like. At least there's an outdoor shot of the plant for historical purposes, one of the rare times I recall such a shot being used.

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