7/10
Unusual Wayne Movie, Interesting But Not A Lot of Fun
23 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This movie mixes two genres. First, there's the sports story genre with a has been coach making a come-back with a loser team. Second, there's the single, loving father trying to prove he's a good parent and hold onto his child. In a way, we're getting two movies in one. Both of them are fine and are mildly entertaining.

The sports story and the coach character isn't far from the usual John Wayne Cowboy/Military officer role. He is quite effective in this. However as the father, in the family story, he is cool when he should be warm and he hardly registers much emotion when he realizes he might lose her. This is a part that Cary Grant would have been perfect for.

Adorable Sherry Jackson as the daughter is a lot of fun and it is easy to see why she got her long running television series with Danny Thomas. Donna Reed gives an extraordinary intelligent performance as the social worker trying to protect Jackson. It is also easy to see why she also starred in a long running television series five years later.

The setting of the movie at a small Catholic College is probably a mistake. There is just not that much humor there. Probably because the censorship office was controlled by Catholics, there was a limit on how much you could let the audience laugh at the priests. Director Curtiz does come as close to that limit as any movie of the time.

The best scene is when Wayne finds out that the football schedule for the team he has just taken over includes the toughest teams in college football. Here, Wayne lets himself go and actually registers a new emotion for him - fear.

The sexual politics in the movie is so frightening and bizarre, I don't even want to analyze it. I'll just say that at one point Wayne suddenly grabs Reed against her will and forcibly kisses her, although she has not shown the slightest interest in him before this point. He tells her that this is what she really wants and finally she admits it. One has to cringe for her and all women who had to live in the 1950's.

I think if this film had been more successful, Wayne would have broken away from the cowboy/military stereotypes and done some interesting movies in the last two decades of his life. Unfortunately, the movie wasn't that successful and he went back to the safe stereotypical tough as nails roles.
2 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed