Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. See Here, Private Hargrove is a 1944 black-and-white comedy film from MGM, produced by George Haight, directed by Wesley Ruggles, and starring Robert Walker, Donna Reed, and Keenan Wynn. The film was adapted from the 1942 memoir of the same name by Marion Hargrove.

    • George Haight
    • March 18, 1944
  2. See Here, Private Hargrove: Directed by Wesley Ruggles. With Robert Walker, Donna Reed, Keenan Wynn, Grant Mitchell. Journalist Marion Hargrove enters the Army intending to supplement his income by writing about his training experiences.

    • (544)
    • Comedy, Romance, War
    • Wesley Ruggles
    • 1944-03
  3. Overview. Journalist Marion Hargrove enters the Army intending to supplement his income by writing about his training experiences. He muddles through basic training at Fort Bragg with the self-serving help of a couple of buddies intent on cutting themselves in on that extra income.

  4. Based on Marion Hargrove's lively memoir of his misadventures in Army boot camp, MGM's See Here, Private Hargrove (1944) stars Robert Walker as the bumbling GI who finds himself in perpetual hot water, often literally, with constant KP duty.

    • Wesley Ruggles
    • Robert Walker
  5. In 1944 the book was made into a movie of the same name, starring Robert Walker, Donna Reed, Keenan Wynn, Chill Wills and Robert Benchley. This was followed the next year by What Next, Corporal Hargrove?. The book mentions fellow North Carolinian and journalist Lloyd Shearer, who later became a gossip columnist.

  6. Synopsis. Journalist Marion Hargrove enters the Army intending to supplement his income by writing about his training experiences. He muddles through basic training at Fort Bragg with the self-serving help of a couple of buddies intent on cutting themselves in on that extra income. Watch at home.

  7. Synopsis by Hal Erickson. Newspaper reporter Marion Hargrove's best-selling novel was adapted to the screen by MGM as a vehicle for Robert Walker. The story is basically a series of humorous anecdotes about Hargrove's tenure at boot camp in the early days of World War II.