A fight to keep cavalry horses from being replaced by tanks culminates in a great race between machine and beast.A fight to keep cavalry horses from being replaced by tanks culminates in a great race between machine and beast.A fight to keep cavalry horses from being replaced by tanks culminates in a great race between machine and beast.
- Nominated for 3 Oscars
- 3 nominations total
- Sgt. Harry Ross
- (as Guinn Williams)
- Pedro
- (as Pepito)
- Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn her interview by Leonard Maltin in the December 1972 issue of Film Fan Monthly, Madge Evans gave the following testimony about the filming of "Army Girl" : "[I appeared] In a film called 'ARMY GIRL' with Preston Foster and a very good director, a very nice man named George Nicholls. Mr. Yates, who was President of Republic, had at that time decided to go into more ambitious productions, and I think we must have been all of three weeks, instead of three days. We went on location and other elaborate things for Republic."
- Quotes
Sgt. 'Three Star' Hennessy: [the arrival of the tank causes consternation] Relax, boys, relax! Here's your new mount. No saddle, no bridle, no spurs, no hay. No nothing.
Sgt. Harry Ross: What's going on around here?
Sgt. 'Three Star' Hennessy: Well, if it ain't Horse-face Harry from the Marines!
Sgt. Harry Ross: What wet rock did you crawl out from?
Sgt. 'Three Star' Hennessy: Now is that any way for a mule's chambermaid to talk?
Sgt. Harry Ross: Chambermaid?
Sgt. 'Three Star' Hennessy: Yeah. We're moving in.
Sgt. Harry Ross: Not in my stables you ain't. It's the last runaround that smelly steamroller's giving me.
Sgt. 'Three Star' Hennessy: Seems to me I heard you say that in Fort Oglethorpe and Knox and Myer.
Sgt. Harry Ross: Yeah, but when this territory gets through with that portable garbage can of yours, you can slice it up and sell it for paperweight.
Sgt. 'Three Star' Hennessy: Oh, you're bitter, Harry. You're bitter. The horse is alright with a buggy behind it but these are modern times. We got telephones and aeroplanes and tanks.
Sgt. Harry Ross: Not on this post. You see, Mister Hennessy, this is the desert. And the desert means sand. Sand that you can't get a grip on. And you sink and you slip and you slide. Why the horses'll be towing that thing out of here with its tail tucked between its legs.
- ConnectionsFeatured in S.O.S. Tidal Wave (1939)
Captain Preston Foster along with his aide M/Sergeant James Gleason are transferred to a horse cavalry fort which as progress deems is about to be turned into a place for that new mechanized warfare that tanks are bringing. The operation, repair, and maintenance of the tank will take the place of the horse. A fact resented on the post by nearly all from its commanding officer H.B. Warner on down.
Warner has a daughter in Madge Evans and Foster has a self imposed rule about dating army brats, but with a little sly trickery he and Evans are an item.
Things get serious though when on a final test the tank has an accident and both Warner and Gleason are killed. Foster is brought to court martial and nearly blows his career.
Certainly the tank proved its worth in the next year, unfortunately for the enemy. German tanks were infinitely the superior machine. The thought of that little job that Foster and Gleason drive around in going up against one of those panzer tiger tanks is laughable.
Army Girl got Oscar nominations for sound, musical score, and cinematography and did not bring anything home for Republic Pictures. And advances in mechanized warfare dated this film very quickly.
- bkoganbing
- Oct 24, 2014
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1