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Mchale's Navy Joins Air Force by Edward Montagne
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Product detailsActor: Billy Sands, Bob Hastings, Gary Vinson, Joe Flynn, Tim Conway Director: Edward Montagne Cinematographer: Lionel Lindon Producer: Edward Montagne Editor: Sam E. Waxman Producer: Si Rose Writer: John Fenton Murray Writer: William J. Lederer Edition: VHS Tape Audio: English (Original Language), Analog Format: Closed-captioned, Color, HiFi Sound, NTSC Running Time: 90 minutes Release Date: 1998-03-31 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Publisher: Universal Studios Studio: Universal Studios
VHS Movie Reviews of Mchale's Navy Joins Air ForceMovie Review: Mostly for fans of the t.v. show Summary: 5 StarsEven though this movie doesn't include the main character in the television series (Ernest Borgnine), I enjoyed this a great deal. The Ensign Parker (Tim Conway) and Captain Binghampton (Joe Flynn) interactions are as well done as any in the T.V. series. Think of the movie as McHale's Navy starring Tim Conway and you will be close to what this movie is all about. Another plus is the fellow that plays the leader of the Russian sailors was chief Uhuru (sp?) in the t.v. series. I have it on vhs tape and the picture and sound quality are first rate. I think I paid around $10 for it and watch it more often than many of the movies in my video collection.
Movie Review: HILARIOUS Summary: 4 StarsBelieve it or not, this is a really underrated comedy. Good script, and Joe Flynn and Tim Conway have so much room to stretch out their characters and really push the comedy envelope. Hilarious from beginning to end. I highly recommend it to any fan of the show, or a Joe Flynn or Tim Conway fan. This is arguably their best work.
FYI: The reason why Ernest Borgnine wasn't present for this sequel, is because he was in the desert outside Yuma, Arizona shooting Robert Aldrich's Flight of the Phoenix. That's forgivable.
Movie Review: A "McHale's Navy" movie without McHale? Sure. Why not? Summary: 4 StarsIf you thought it was strange that the ABC situation comedy "McHale's Navy" was given the opportunity to make a theatrical film in 1964, then you might not know what to make of the decision the following year to release another film in which the title charcter played by Ernest Borgnine does not appear. Granted, Borgnine's character always seemed to working on a different level than his hair brained crew and the inept base commander, but you would have to think that having their Academy Award winning star (for "Marty") skip this sequel would have been a fatal flaw. The two reasons it is not is because Tim Conway, as Ensigh Charles Parker and Joe Flynn as Captain Wallace B. Binghamton are still engaging in their zanny antics. The rather strange title comes from the idea that Parker is mistaken for a hot shot fighter pilot in the Air Force (which, of course, was still the Army Air Corps during World War II, but for some reason historical fidelity was not high on the producer's list). Of course, every time Parker screws up he gets promoted. Obviously, with Borgnine apparently on vacation (the series would air through 1966), Parker and Flynn get more slapstick to do, but the script by John Fenton Murray, based on William J. Lederer's story, actually slips in some satire to go along with the physical comedy. Is 1965's "McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force" better than the 1964 "McHale's Navy" film? Well, yes and no. This one is actually funnier because of the free reign Conway and Flynn have, which is a good thing, but getting so far away from the original series (and its star) still bugs me. But despite that potentially fatal flaw this odd little film is actually an enjoyable experience for fans of the series. For others it is a reminder of what military situation comedies were like between "Sgt. Bilko" and "Hogan's Heroes" (i.e., before "M*A*S*H"). Actually, that last aside should be more specific in reference to the early couple of seasons for "M*A*S*H" when the series was very much in the mold of Bilko/McHale/Hogan. It was not until the classic episode "Sometimes You Hear the Bullet" that we first saw how "M*A*S*H" could become television's first true dramedy.
Movie Review: Flynn and Conway are hilarious turn in a classic performance Summary: 4 StarsI had seen this movie when I was a kid, but I had forgotten HOW funny it was. I laughed myself silly. The opening scene is a little contrived, with Binghamton blowing his cool and pushing the crew one by one into the water. But the real laughs begin when the crew, along with "Old Leadbottom," arrive in port is Australia. One of the movie's highlights is the scene with Parker trying to take Binghamton's picture and then trying to help him up the ladder. The action progresses quickly, and then next thing we know (or so it seems), Parker is the "navigator" on a DC-3, with Binghamton also stuck on board. The laughs don't stop until the movie is over.
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