6/10
Lots of future big names in this rather routine wartime action film...
20 December 2022
...from Universal Pictures, producer Howard Hawks, and director Richard Rosson. The story follows the adventures of the crew of the title ship, the smallest class of naval battleship, this one operating out of Canada and escorting merchant vessels across the dangerous North Atlantic. Captain MacClain (Randolph Scott) tries to keep his men rallied and ready, although young officer Lt. Cartwright (James Brown) is having confidence issues. Also featuring Ella Raines, Barry Fitzgerald, Noah Beery Jr., Andy Devine, Fuzzy Knight, Richard Lane, Thomas Gomez, David Bruce, Walter Sande, Frank Faylen, Peter Lawford, Charles McGraw, Cliff Robertson, Milburn Stone, Ian Wolfe, and Robert Mitchum.

There's little to distinguish this from most of the other naval-based war pictures of the day. You have the usual assortment of characters among the crew, with the square-jawed captain leading the day. The movie has several notable actors very early in their career, such as Lawford, McGraw, Robertson, and Mitchum, here playing one of the many lower-ranked sailors.

The most memorable scene in this is when a group of officers are learning battle plans back at headquarters. They are all seated around a long dining table which is covered in a map. The man in charge is seated in an elevated chair above the table, and sailors slowly move the chair along the length of the table as the chief is pointing out tactics. The movie earned an Oscar nomination for Best Black and White Cinematography, which is I can't comment on due to the poor quality of the print I watched. As with most movies produced by Hawks, he's rumored to have actually directed much of this himself.
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