Stometer
Save your money for something good and enjoyable
AshUnow
This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.
Hattie
I didn’t really have many expectations going into the movie (good or bad), but I actually really enjoyed it. I really liked the characters and the banter between them.
Bob
This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
bkoganbing
Characters that were introduced by Hal Roach in Tanks A Million come back here and the film is an exercise in oneupsmanship. William Tracy is back again as new recruit Dodo Doubleday who is the tormentor of old sergeant Joe Sawyer and his friend Noah Beery, Jr. Doubleday is blessed with a photographic memory and two right feet, bad for the military because you start on your left and that confuses Tracy.I can understand Sawyer's frustration. He's a career soldier who earned his rank and because the brass was so impressed with Tracy memorizing the army's book of rules and regulations they make him a sergeant. Of course that couldn't happen in real life, but it's still funny.In this film Tracy having memorized the book can assemble and disassemble a weapon sight unseen on the first try. Actually firing the weapon is another matter.The key to these films is no matter what Sawyer does to trip up Tracy it always redounds to Tracy's advantage. Sawyer does a marvelous slow burn, he could have understudied Edgar Kennedy. Especially with Tracy becoming Colonel James Gleason's fairhaired boy. Gleason is no mean scene stealer himself. Funniest of all is the entire sequence at Gleason's house where all three sergeants come calling on his daughter Elyse Knox. Can't describe it, you have to see how Tracy keeps Sawyer and Beery at bay.Very funny film from the laugh master Hal Roach.
jasonleesmith6
SGT Doubleday is smart, and the favorite of his commanding officer. He remembers everything he reads, and has an encyclopedic knowledge of the military. The only trouble is, he is unable to shoot a gun. Meanwhile, the base's two loud-mouths and sharp-shooting experts have it in for Doubleday because they think he's a know-it-all. Somehow the commander becomes convinced that Doubleday is an expert marksman. Will Doubleday be able to learn how to shoot a gun in time to compete in the sharpshooting competition and win the love of the commander's daughter? Don't ask me, the movie ends suddenly with almost no sub-plots getting resolved. No real explanation of the title, "Hay Foot" is offered either. Doing a search on the internet didn't reveal much, except that it may have been a kind of slang for a rookie recruit. Since this was the second film in the SGT Doubleday series, this doesn't make much sense though.Nevertheless, it was a pretty entertaining film.
MartinHafer
I was very surprised a while back when I watched TANKS A MILLION. I really didn't expect to like this low-budget short comedy about the army, but it was surprisingly fresh and interesting. So much so that I have now seen about 6 or 8 of them. However, I've gotta admit that the quality of these films is quite variable. Some, like the first, are exceptional and some are pretty bad. This one, while not among the worst, sure is a huge disappointment--you'd expect better in a second film in the series.Part of the reason for not liking it as much is that Sgt. Doubleday is starting to come off, at times, like more of a know-it-all instead of a sweet guy. In the first section of the film, for once, I felt sorry for his perennial foe (Sgt. Ames), as Doubleday completely ruins a demonstration Ames is conducting--even though Ames is an extremely accomplished marksman with a pistol. Doubleday, though knowing the mechanics of the gun, is a complete novice. The scene where he shoots madly (practically killing everyone around him) illustrates this and made ME want to hit Doubleday! Aside from this poor section, the rest of the film is practically all the standard formula, though for once, there is another foe--a sergeant played by Noah Beery, Jr.. Overall, a pleasant time-passer, but the magic is starting to already look a bit thin.
boblipton
This, the third in the series of Roach 'streamliners' -- short comedy features about 50 minutes in length -- about Sgt. Doubleday, the instant non-com with the photographic memory is, like the others, an unremarkable comedy, some good bits placed in a script that often seems to start and stop, but it does have one great positive value in the performance of James Gleason, a funny and highly talented comic performer for thirty years in Hollywood. Usually cast in some role that suited his lower-class New York accent -- check him out as the cab driver in THE BISHOP'S WIFE -- here he plays the regimental colonel: vain, pompous and father of a very pretty daughter who, with the issue of pistol shooting, is the core of the story.If you feel that he is not enough to make this movie worthwhile, I certainly understand. But for me he made the difference between a dull hour and a pleasant one.