THE DUKE OF WEST POINT - 1938 - LOUIS HAYWARD - RARE DVD
$ 6.00
The United States Military Academy at West Point was created during our Revolutionary War with Britain and has been turning out some of the finest military leaders for the United States ever since.
In this story of the cadets a Brit Limey joins the new class and turns the place on its ears. But wait . . . you tell me that no British citizen could ever gain admission to West Point, because only U.S. boys are appointed to this Military Academy? Well, here is how it happens in this story.
Every man in the Earley family has attended West Point since the Revolutionary War, and Louis Hayward plays young Steven Earley, the next Earley son to attend this prestigious academy. But Steven has grown up in England and has just graduated from Cambridge!
His father, U.S. Colonel Earley, is the Military Attaché at the American Embassy in London, so young Steven has grown up in England and attended British schools, finally graduating from Cambridge. Steven has become a British athletic star known and admired around the Empire.
Now it is time for him to join the other men of the Earley family and attend West Point at the invitation of the President of the United States. Steven's father, Colonel Earley, played by Jonathan Hale, is worried about his son heading to West Point, and with good reason. Steven has grown up in a country that is divided from America by a common language.
Although the Yanks and the Brits speak the same language, their cultures and slang and accumulated history are very, very different, and Papa Earley is worried that son Steven is mentally 'British' and will have tremendous problems fitting in with the Yank boys, . . . and boy-oh-boy, is Papa correct!
The only question is, . . . Will Steven Earley, with his British background, speech and customs, morph into a U.S. Army West Point graduate? Will Steven Earley capture the heart of a very young blonde girl, played by a very young Joan Fontaine? Will Steven Earley conquer West Point and move on into an illustrious career in the Army or will West Point chew him up and spit him out like so much gristle?
Will Steven Earley be the first man in the Earley family to be kicked out of West Point? It appears so. Pop a big bowl of white kernel popcorn with plenty of warm melted butter drizzled over it and enjoy the show.
Director: Alfred E. Green
Stars: Louis Hayward, Joan Fontaine, Tom Brown
In this story of the cadets a Brit Limey joins the new class and turns the place on its ears. But wait . . . you tell me that no British citizen could ever gain admission to West Point, because only U.S. boys are appointed to this Military Academy? Well, here is how it happens in this story.
Every man in the Earley family has attended West Point since the Revolutionary War, and Louis Hayward plays young Steven Earley, the next Earley son to attend this prestigious academy. But Steven has grown up in England and has just graduated from Cambridge!
His father, U.S. Colonel Earley, is the Military Attaché at the American Embassy in London, so young Steven has grown up in England and attended British schools, finally graduating from Cambridge. Steven has become a British athletic star known and admired around the Empire.
Now it is time for him to join the other men of the Earley family and attend West Point at the invitation of the President of the United States. Steven's father, Colonel Earley, played by Jonathan Hale, is worried about his son heading to West Point, and with good reason. Steven has grown up in a country that is divided from America by a common language.
Although the Yanks and the Brits speak the same language, their cultures and slang and accumulated history are very, very different, and Papa Earley is worried that son Steven is mentally 'British' and will have tremendous problems fitting in with the Yank boys, . . . and boy-oh-boy, is Papa correct!
The only question is, . . . Will Steven Earley, with his British background, speech and customs, morph into a U.S. Army West Point graduate? Will Steven Earley capture the heart of a very young blonde girl, played by a very young Joan Fontaine? Will Steven Earley conquer West Point and move on into an illustrious career in the Army or will West Point chew him up and spit him out like so much gristle?
Will Steven Earley be the first man in the Earley family to be kicked out of West Point? It appears so. Pop a big bowl of white kernel popcorn with plenty of warm melted butter drizzled over it and enjoy the show.
Director: Alfred E. Green
Stars: Louis Hayward, Joan Fontaine, Tom Brown