400
700
900
Mister Roberts

Mister Roberts – Mr Roberts

Warner Brothers (1955)
DVD
PG-13
085391669227
comedy | drama | WWII
USA | English | Color | 02:03

Comedy-drama about life on a not particularly important ship of the US Navy during WW2.

AMG Plot:. Henry Fonda returned to films after an eight-year absence in this masterful adaptation of the actor's Broadway hit Mister Roberts. Written and partially directed by Joshua Logan, the film stars Fonda as Lt. Doug Roberts, chief cargo officer of the supply ship "Reluctant." WW2 is in its last few months, and Roberts is itching for combat duty. But the Reluctant's surly, despotic captain (James Cagney), anxious to use Roberts to expedite his own promotion, refuses to sign any of Roberts' transfer requests. Helping to brighten Mister Roberts' humdrum existence are his best friends, Ensign Frank Pulver (Jack Lemmon, in an Oscar-winning performance) and the ship's philosophical doctor (William Powell, in his final film appearance). Most of the laughs are provided by Pulver, officer "in charge of laundry and morale." When he isn't wheeling and dealing to bring a bevy of beautiful nurses on board the Reluctant, Pulver is concocting elaborate schemes to avenge himself against the Captain — even though he's spent 14 months on the Reluctant without ever meeting his nemesis. The film's highlights include the efforts by Roberts, Pulver, and Doc to mix a bottle of Scotch from Coca-Cola, Iodine, and other vital ingredients; and Mister Roberts' (and later Ensign Pulver's) assertion of manhood by tossing the Captain's precious palm tree overboard. Halfway through shooting, legendary director John Ford was replaced, ostensibly because of illness, by Mervyn LeRoy. One of the finest service comedies ever made, Mister Roberts spawned a less amusing sequel, Ensign Pulver (1964), as well as a 1965 TV sitcom. — Hal Erickson

AMG Review Mister Roberts was one of the more thoughtful, reflective films from the 1950s to deal with World War II. It was a reflection of the distance filmmakers as well as the public had come from the war, a distance which allowed for a more sophisticated dramatic treatment of the conflict and the people involved. Other films during this era also reflected the new maturity, among them, The Caine Mutiny, Between Heaven and Hell, and The Naked and the Dead. Mister Roberts was the most successful of them all, and for good reason — though getting it made properly took real work. It stood to figure that John Ford was ideal for the project, since he loved the United States Navy more than almost anything else in his life (he retired from the reserves as a rear admiral). With Mister Roberts, however, Ford may have been too close to his subject and slightly too old to do justice to the script, and he butted up against the competing personality of star Henry Fonda. Fonda had scored a huge hit on Broadway in the stage version of Mister Roberts, but he'd given up hope of ever doing the movie, since he hadn't been on-screen in eight years and major studios weren't convinced that he was still a box office draw. As a condition of directing the film, Ford insisted on Fonda to star — but the two were at loggerheads from the beginning of the production, mainly over the director's tendency to inject rough-house comedy into his movies. Such an approach breathed life into Ford's somber cavalry movies, such as Fort Apache, but Mister Roberts was a character-driven story with very little real action, and Fonda thought the director's emphasis on laughs would destroy the integrity of the material. Ford's demanding, dictatorial directing style — exacerbated by his excessive drinking — created tension between the two, which erupted into a fistfight after only a few weeks' work. Ford left the production and was replaced by Mervyn LeRoy, who essentially asked the cast to use their best judgement and make the kind of movie Ford would've made. The end result is a finely textured character study that captured the best dramatic moments of the play as it interspersed an effective, new comic element. Fonda, who'd previously performed in four films for the director, would never work with Ford again; the director would only make one more navy film after Mister Roberts, the successful Donovan's Reef. — Bruce Eder


Cast View all

Henry Fonda Lieutenant Roberts
James Cagney The Captain
William Powell Doc
Jack Lemmon Ensign Pulver
Betsy Palmer Lieutenant Ann Girard
Ward Bond Dowdy
Philip Carey Mannion
Nick Adams Reber
Perry Lopez Rodrigues
Ken Curtis Dolan
Robert Roark Insigna
Harry Carey Jr. Stefanowski
Patrick Wayne Bookser
Frank Aletter Gerhart
Tige Andrews Wiley
Fritz Ford Lindstrom
Jim Moloney Kennedy
Buck Kartalian Mason
Denny Niles Gilbert
William Henry Lt. Billings
Frank Connor Cochran
William Hudson Olson
Shug Fisher Johnson
Stubby Kruger Schlemmer
Danny Borzage Jonesy

Trailer

Edition details

Edition Special Edition
Packaging Snap Case
Nr Discs 1
Screen Ratios Anamorphic Widescreen (2.35:1)
Audio Tracks ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
FRENCH: Dolby Digital Mono
Subtitles English | French
Distributor Warner Home Video
Layers Single side, Single layer
Edition Release Date Dec 22, 1998
Regions Region 1