This Is the Army
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 1943
- 121 min
- 214 Views
WOMAN [SINGING] :
It's your country and my country
With millions of real fighting men
It's your duty and my duty
To speak with the sword, not the pen
If Washington were living today
With sword in hand
He'd stand up and say
For your country and my country
I'll do it all over again
ALL:
It's your country and my country
With millions of real fighting men
It's your duty and my duty
To speak with the sword, not the pen
If Washington were living today
With sword in hand
He'd stand up and stay
For your country and my country
I'll do it all over again
[CHEERS AND APPLAUSE]
[APPLAUSE]
[SINGING]
A little rascal knocked at my door
It's Cupid that I'm speaking of
I'm in love, so in love
I must admit that right from the start
I went and lost my heart
Wait till you see me with my sweetie
Showing her off to the crowd
Looking so dreamy at my sweetie
Feeling so terribly proud
She makes a specialty
Of looking good to me
She ought to be right in Tiffany's window
She's a jewel
I know that you will agree
Wait till I'm married to my sweetie
How happy I'll be
I've got the bungalow paid for
I've had it specially made
For my sweetie
Sweetie-eetie-eetie
My sweetie and me
[APPLAUSE]
Even the matinees, he kiIIs them.
That's why he's a great performer.
WeII, he can get ready for the greatest
performance of his Iife. This just came.
Oh, thanks. I'II take it.
[APPLAUSE]
-Hi, sweetie.
-Look, honey, from the president.
-Huh?
-Command performance?
The president of the United States?
WeII, open it up. See what he says.
[APPLAUSE CONTINUES]
Yeah, Iet's see it. What is it? What is it?
HoIy smoke,
it's a command performance.
Oh, that's wonderfuI, Jerry, but what--?
-Aren't you excited? What'd he say?
-I Iove you.
-Oh, thanks--
-WiII you marry me?
-What?
-WiII you marry me tonight?
-WeII, of course, but--
-WonderfuI.
CongratuIations. Starting tomorrow,
you're a war bride. Look.
I've just been drafted.
-Goodbye, Mama.
-Oh.
Oh, Maxie, Iisten to Mama.
I owe it to him. He heIped us
when we came to America. Now I heIp him.
But it was from fights and troubIes
we run away.
We didn't we start this one.
It's up to us Americans to finish it.
Look, Mama, see what it says?
"I want you for the United States Army."
UncIe Sam has his finger on me.
-Goodbye, Ma.
-Goodbye.
Goodbye, my son, and take care of you.
Be a good boy and don't fight.
Yes.
WOMAN:
Mrs. DibbIe?
Mrs. DibbIe? Oh, Mrs. DibbIe?
ROSE:
Yes, Mrs. O'Brien.
Say, they teII me your Eddie's
Ieaving for the war.
Yes, and the Army's gIad
they've got him.
Oh, so am I. Now maybe
we can get some sIeep around here.
Up--
[PLAYING BADLY]
AII the time pIaying that cornet.
[SOBBING]
I know it'II be hard on you, but teII me,
aren't you tiny bit proud?
I don't see what the Army wants with you,
you'II never make a good soIdier.
I can try it for a few months
and see how I Iike it.
-If I don't Iike it--
-What?
I couId try it a few more months.
Oh, it aII comes from your wanting
to march in parades and pIay in a band.
It's aII the fauIt of that darn cornet.
WeII, it won't be a cornet any Ionger.
From now on, it'II be a bugIe.
[PLAYS BUGLE CALL]
[SOBBING]
[BUGLE CALL PLAYING]
So that's the bugIer, huh?
Now I know the first guy I wanna kiII
in this war.
Does that mean we shouId get up?
Five-thirty? That can't be for us.
I didn't Ieave any caII for 5:30.
I'm gonna roII over
and get another 40 winks.
[BLOWS WHISTLE]
Get out of the beds!
I want this joint cIeaned up
before breakfast.
Get out of there, you.
Up.
The C.O.'s gonna give these barracks
a white-gIove inspection today.
So rise, my IittIe beauties,
and start to shine.
Ahh.
-HeIIo.
-HeIIo.
-Hi.
-AII right, hi.
We're the new feIIas.
We just got in Iast night.
-You sIept weII?
JERRY:
Oh, yes, sure.You know, this bed's got the softest
mattress I ever sIept on the fIoor next to.
Say, Iisten, chum,
there's a war waiting for you.
But I ain't. Now roII out of them sacks
before I bust your ankIes at the knees.
-Now, get out of there. You too.
-AII right. AII right.
You, my IittIe white IiIy, up!
-You too.
-He's drunk with power, ain't he?
Hey, what is this 5:30 business?
MAN 1 :
Left shouIder. Turn!
-Left, Ieft. Left!
MAN 2:
Hey.PIatoon, haIt.
MAN 1 :
Right shouIder. Turn!
Too fast.
What is the matter, can't you hear?
I'm teIIing you what foot to Iay down.
-Don't you know your Ieft foot from right?
-I know they're sore. I wish they were fIat.
Shut up.
Oh, so the Army don't agree with you?
In some ways,
I don't agree with the Army.
Is it too much of a strain?
WouIdn't be if they kept sensibIe hours
Iike civiIians.
-What did you do as a civiIian?
-Danced.
-What wouId you Iike to do in the Army?
-Dance.
Forward march.
I kept teIIing them you don't get no soIdiers
out of no draft.
So heIp me, when I asked what he'd Iike
to do in this war, he comes back quickIy.
" Dance," he says, " dance."
Just Iike that.
Heh. WeII, Jones was
One of the best too.
How am I gonna get over to a dope Iike that
so that this here is a war?
Sergeant, there's a very necessary eIement
with soIdiering.
It goes by various names,
but Iet's caII it moraIe.
I ain't saying he's a dame chaser, sir.
Heh. No, sergeant. What I mean is that war
is a pretty grim business...
...and sometimes a song or a smiIe
is just as vitaI to an army as food.
-Hmm? Sir?
-Teach your men to fight, naturaIIy.
But don't discourage their attempts
to entertain one another.
As a matter of fact, encourage them.
Do you foIIow me, sergeant?
Yes, sir. Ahem.
Is there anything bothering you?
You can speak quite freeIy, of course.
No, sir, onIy as far as I'm concerned,
we just Iost this war.
-What?
-Sir. Uh--
CHORUS [SINGING] :
Poor little me
I'm a KP
I scrub the mess hall
On my bended knee
Against my wishes
I wash the dishes
To make this wide world
Safe for democracy
That was sweII. Don't forget to keep
scrubbing the pots whiIe you're singing.
And you move in behind a IittIe sooner.
That fiddIe, it couId stand a IittIe
rehearsaI too. WeII, what do you think?
Ah. Guys putting on a show
give me a pain in the stomach.
Good. I was afraid you might Iike it.
Get those copies made as fast as you can.
-How's this, Jerry?
-Oh, that Iooks fine, fine.
But tone it down a IittIe.
This is for the Army.
When you finish that, make me a sketch
of the kitchen just the way it is.
-I wanna use it for the KP number.
MAN:
Jerry.Coming right over. Got a match, sarge?
-Here's the copies for the new numbers.
-Oh, fine.
I'II run over those in a coupIe of minutes.
Gotta get something snappy for the opening.
That Iooks great. That Iooks good enough
to waIk down 5th Avenue aII aIone.
[PIANO PLAYING SLOW DANCE TUNE]
No, no, wait a minute, feIIas.
Wait a minute.
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"This Is the Army" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/this_is_the_army_21799>.
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