8/10
Interesting Nod to Poles
30 April 2020
An earnest attempt to boost morale during the Second World War, this 1944 trifle stars Edward G. Robinson as a modest banker who dreams of owning a fix-it shop. When the aging dreamer (Robinson playing 44 but looking every bit of his 51 years) is unexpectedly drafted, he sticks by his guns so to speak, and becomes a war hero. His sergeant, played by Richard Lane, is named Czeidrowski. Never does the film mention that he is Polish, but he turns out to be a tough but compassionate character, an all-American whom the boys in his unit call Sergeant Alphabet because his name is "pert near longer than the whole alphabet." Of course it isn't, and the spelling is odd even for Polish. Nevertheless, his character is a small nod to the fact that some 900,000 Poles were in the Armed Forces in World War II. Favorite moment: When Robinson, Lane, and two pals sing "Sweet Genevieve" a cappella.
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