Johnny Doughboy

1942 "JANE'S GOT A HEAVY DATE...WITH THE ARMY!"
5.5| 1h3m| NR| en
Details

As sixteen year old Ann Winters begins a relationship with an older actor to further her career, lookalike fan Penelope Ryan is recruited by a group of former child stars to perform in a USO show.

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Reviews

Lovesusti The Worst Film Ever
VividSimon Simply Perfect
Claysaba Excellent, Without a doubt!!
Mathilde the Guild Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.
MartinHafer The star of "Johnny Doughboy" is Jane Withers though she is assisted with several has-been child actors...kids who, in the film, are essentially called has-beens and lament that the studios don't want them any more! Talk about sad and depressing!!The story begins with Jane Winters (Withers) tiring of her life as a celebrity and she wants some time off from making films. So, this headstrong (and somewhat unlikable) lady disappears. Her agent (William Demarest) handles this by having an EXACT double pretend to be Winters. But when a group of has-been child actors approach her (assuming she is Jane) and want her to help out with the show, this double doesn't know what to do. In the meantime, the real Jane gets involved with a VERY creepy situation....she goes to live with a 40-something year old man! Talk about weird!!Apart from seeing a few children having a last hurrah, there isn't a lot to love about this film. And, some of the kids were a bit sad to watch as well...with Bobby Breen talking in such a high pitched teenage voice he sounded like he'd just inhaled helium and Alfalfa singing like he used to...which is sad when you're no longer young and cute. Overall, it's not terrible...but it's also not very good and has too many song and dance numbers and perhaps I would have enjoyed NOT seeing these awkward out of work children once more.
boblipton I think Zanuck fired Shirley Temple and Jane Withers almost simultaneously ... or maybe he just decided not to pick up their options. Miss Temple went to work for David Selznick. Miss Withers went to Republic. She plays a child star who wants to play adult roles.... fourteen at least. No dice. So she drives into the mountain and falls in love with reclusive writer Henry Wilcoxon. Meanwhile, in walks her exact double from Kansas, who is promptly recruited to impersonate her. A troupe of washed-up child stars want to do camp shows for the USO, but the Army wants Miss Withers, so.....Miss Withers is good as always. She sings a couple of numbers and gets to dance in a big production number at the end with Jack Boyle Jr. If they are not Donald O'Conner & Peggy Ryan, they certainly do well, and the picture garnered a reasonable Academy Award nomination for Best Scoring by Walter Scharf.What is unnerving about this movie is its exploitation angle: ex-child-stars, washed up by the time they hit puberty: Bobby Green, Carl Switzer (still singing -- yikes!), Spanky MacFarland, even Baby Sandy, a has-been at 4. It's positively ghoulish. It turns a pleasant B picture with a sock-o finish into a bit of an ordeal.
mark.waltz This Republic propaganda musical is second rate and often ridiculous. The film is good intended but often cloying as it deals with Hollywood's biggest teen star (Jane Withers...well her character is supposed to be anyway) who is sick of playing "baby" parts and escapes agent William Demarest and camps out at the home of middle aged Henry Wilcoxin, gets a crush on him in trying to be "adult" and turns down the opportunity to lead a show featuring "has been" Hollywood kids. The fact that as she escapes her agent and secretary (Ruth Donnelly), her lookalike shows up and takes her place for a few days, eventually confronting her in the mountains. Withers is far from the rambunctious pre-teen that she was in all of those 20th Century Fox programmers, and comes off rather cold and unfeeling. The lookalike really has no purpose other than to give Withers a likable side here, almost too nice to be believable."Our Gang" members Carl (Alfalfa) Switzer and Spanky Mc Farland (still appearing in shorts at MGM) are certainly not forgotten, and poor Bobby Breen makes you wonder why he was ever pushed on movie audiences. Of course, Withers pulls her real self out for the big finale, but it seems almost like an outtake from another movie. She's not a bad dancer and certainly not as whiny as Shirley Temple was as a teen, but she's no threat to Judy Garland or Deanna Durbin either.This is a time capsule of Hollywood propaganda at its gooiest, and in spite some good moments with Demarest, Donnelly and the sweet Etta McDaniel (Hattie's sister, playing a saintly housekeeper), this is instantly forgettable. Alfalfa spoofs his high pitched squeak but unlike the shorts he starred in a decade before, he's completely annoying here and deserves the thrashing he gets for making dogs bark on the other side of the Hollywood Hills. There was a better way to involve the teenagers in the war effort, as evidenced by what Mickey and Judy were doing at MGM and in public appearances.
Anthony This movie really got to me. seeing those kid stars almost begging for a job and singing about their career ending did not help me enjoy the rest of the film. They were given a small part and then they were seen no more..even at the end when the show is done for the troops the kids are not even in it...very bad ending indeed..this movie does not put a smile on your face at all.Bobby Breen gave his last appearance in this film. Spanky too faded away after this..Alfalfa did last for other movies but we all know how he ended in 1959..most of these child stars are not even talked about today..This has been the Hollywood curse for many years. and was worst back then.