Ned Trumpet, the chief pilot of a Navy blimp, is given to weaving accounts of the fighting prowess of his non-existent son. His friendship with widow Maude Weaver and her son Jess in effect ... Read allNed Trumpet, the chief pilot of a Navy blimp, is given to weaving accounts of the fighting prowess of his non-existent son. His friendship with widow Maude Weaver and her son Jess in effect sets him up with a real family.Ned Trumpet, the chief pilot of a Navy blimp, is given to weaving accounts of the fighting prowess of his non-existent son. His friendship with widow Maude Weaver and her son Jess in effect sets him up with a real family.
Noah Beery
- Joe Hodum
- (as Noah Beery Sr.)
Dick Crockett
- Sparks
- (as Richard Crockett)
Carlyle Blackwell Jr.
- Mechanic
- (uncredited)
Ralph Brooke
- Minor Role
- (uncredited)
Keye Chang
- Minor Role
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
Great William A. Wellman Film
This film was very enjoyable because it deals with Naval Blimps and shows how they are launched and the methods used to secure them to the ground. Wallace Beery, (Ned Trumpet) plays the role of a Chief Petty Officer with plenty of service along with James Gleason who is his co-pilot. There is plenty of action with Japanese Planes attacking the blimp and also comedy and romance. Jan Clayton, (Dorothy Cortland) is introduced to Tom Drake, (Jese Weaver) which was arranged by Ned Trumpet who wanted his adopted son to meet an attractive young gal. Ned Trumpet had a bad habit of telling so many lies that all his friends were doubtful about anything he said. Wallace Berry & James Gleason both gave an outstanding performance and made this into a great film to watch and enjoy. William A Wellman the director was one of the first director's who was able to create classic airplane films dealing with actual stunt-men flying the planes. Enjoy.
A neat little film about the Navy's LTA operations.
Not many movies were made about the Lighter-Than-Air (LTA) aspect of aviation, but this is one of them and it's damn good. Just a fun film to watch.
Most of the movie takes place at the Navy blimp operations at NAS Lakehurst (with NAS Tustin playing the role). Wallace Beery plays a likable but Munchausen-like Senior Chief Ned Trumpet, an enlisted pilot, whose tall tales have gotten so frequent nobody really believes him. Half the fun is near the end of the movie when events start proving that most of his more outlandish tales are actually true.
Set during WWII, the main plot centers around bachelor Trumpet wooing a local widow only to end up having a father-son relationship with the widow's crippled son, Jess. Told he would never walk without crutches by doctors, Chief Trumpet pulls some strings and a Navy flight surgeon helps in restoring the lad's crippled leg. Jess goes on to join the Navy to become a flight officer, flying blimps back at Lakehurst and facing a whole new set of challenges.
A very well-done movie, albeit not without some corny Hollywood dialogue slipping past the technical advisers, and Beery's apparent inability to march in step. Otherwise this movie gets good grades for technical accuracy, and gives a rare look into the Navy's LTA operations. The Cash Register Scene, an exchange between Trumpet and Jess's future love interest Cathy, is an absolute hoot.
Most of the movie takes place at the Navy blimp operations at NAS Lakehurst (with NAS Tustin playing the role). Wallace Beery plays a likable but Munchausen-like Senior Chief Ned Trumpet, an enlisted pilot, whose tall tales have gotten so frequent nobody really believes him. Half the fun is near the end of the movie when events start proving that most of his more outlandish tales are actually true.
Set during WWII, the main plot centers around bachelor Trumpet wooing a local widow only to end up having a father-son relationship with the widow's crippled son, Jess. Told he would never walk without crutches by doctors, Chief Trumpet pulls some strings and a Navy flight surgeon helps in restoring the lad's crippled leg. Jess goes on to join the Navy to become a flight officer, flying blimps back at Lakehurst and facing a whole new set of challenges.
A very well-done movie, albeit not without some corny Hollywood dialogue slipping past the technical advisers, and Beery's apparent inability to march in step. Otherwise this movie gets good grades for technical accuracy, and gives a rare look into the Navy's LTA operations. The Cash Register Scene, an exchange between Trumpet and Jess's future love interest Cathy, is an absolute hoot.
This man's family
Only Wallace Beery could have sold this film even to wartime audiences for MGM. In This Man's Navy Beery plays an old time sailor with the dirigible lighter than air unit of the navy relegated to a lot of minor support duties.
Beery brags about his non-existent family so when put to the test once by his pal James Gleason, Beery comes up with a pretend wife in Selena Royle and son Tom Drake whose farm he visited after bailing out of a balloon. The two of them amazingly enough are flattered by Beery's attention and Drake likes having a father figure almost real.
In the end Beery gets to rescue Drake when both are serving in China although let us say despite his praise of dirigibles the weakness of them in combat is rather graphically exposed.
Beery and Gleason are a fine team and play well off each other. This Man's Navy is also an opportunity to see both Wallace and Noah Beery, Sr. in the same film. Noah who played in a gazillion B westerns usually as a villain, was reputed to be a nice man unlike Wally who may not have had two friends in Tinseltown. His screen image was a total fabrication.
This Man's Navy was an entertaining wartime propaganda film, but except for Wallace Beery fans does not hold up all that well today.
Beery brags about his non-existent family so when put to the test once by his pal James Gleason, Beery comes up with a pretend wife in Selena Royle and son Tom Drake whose farm he visited after bailing out of a balloon. The two of them amazingly enough are flattered by Beery's attention and Drake likes having a father figure almost real.
In the end Beery gets to rescue Drake when both are serving in China although let us say despite his praise of dirigibles the weakness of them in combat is rather graphically exposed.
Beery and Gleason are a fine team and play well off each other. This Man's Navy is also an opportunity to see both Wallace and Noah Beery, Sr. in the same film. Noah who played in a gazillion B westerns usually as a villain, was reputed to be a nice man unlike Wally who may not have had two friends in Tinseltown. His screen image was a total fabrication.
This Man's Navy was an entertaining wartime propaganda film, but except for Wallace Beery fans does not hold up all that well today.
Bunny Comes Home
Bunny Comes Home 'This Man's Navy' deserves more credit than it gets, a clever script by Borden Chase, directed by 'Wild Bill' Wellman, the film has just the right feel for early post WW11 euphoria and goodwill, and none of the blind terror that came into play few years later. Produced in 1944, the Japanese defeated, the battle scenes a little déjà vu, Tom Drake's melancholy attraction for radiant young Jan Clayton has solid chemistry, plays real and validates Drake's career at Metro. The following year Jan opened on Broadway in 'Carousel.' Wally Beery, a little bleary-eyed, boasts to an always incredulous Jimmy Gleason
his memories an improvement over reality, and give Beery a Ulysses-like shadow to play against. The Navy LTA (Lighter Than Air) shots are authentic, photographed at Tustin and Lakehurst, and the P-38 squadron is out of March AFB. Lot 3 doubled for India, and Bunny's U-turn
Bunny Comes Home
gives back to Beery an authentic slice of his past, something he had wanted to believe was true
then, the future we spin into again is fantastical
now on a grander scale, a newly designed Navy LTA with launch capabilities for a reconnaissance plane
how expensive, blissfully optimistic
still, "You got to believe in it, that's the way you make things come true
"
Two movies in one
"This Man's Navy" is, as other comments have indicated, a rare and well-filmed look at Navy lighter than air (LTA) activities. The LTA crews were justly proud that the convoys they shadowed never lost a ship to submarine attack. And the filming at the various NAS locations give a valuable glimpse at a type of aviation that is long gone. However, the first half of the movie is all about Beery, his relationship with his service pals, and him meeting the Tom Drake character and his mother, and getting Drake's leg fixed. Only then does the second film start. The second film is mostly LTAs in action, taking on a surfaced sub, guys get killed and much damage is caused. The look is fairly gritty and realistic, I imagine. Then we shift to Southeast Asia. Did the Navy have LTAs there? Never mind, this part is really wild, with a blimp being used to extract some downed aircrew from the jungle. And the Japs are shooting like mad. Shades of Vietnam, except the getaway is oh, so leisurely. This is a blimp we're talking about. In the end, a feel-good WWII drama about a very unusual part of the war.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Jess calls in his position over the radio of 98 deg. East and 26 deg. North, that would place him about 12 miles northeast of Chipwi, Burma (now Myanmar) in the far northern state of Kachin.
- GoofsAt the beginning of the film, when the dirigible is landing at Lakehurst, New Jersey, the starboard engine is not running. After landing and mooring, Ned gets off the ship and the starboard engine is running.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The War: When Things Get Tough (2007)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Air Ship Squadron No. 4
- Filming locations
- Marine Corps Air Station Tustin, Tustin, California, USA(former Naval Air Station Santa Ana)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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