The West Point Story

The West Point Story

1950 "A Song-Spangled Colors-Flying Salute to Uncle Sam's own cadets!"
The West Point Story
The West Point Story

The West Point Story

6.2 | 1h47m | NR | en | Comedy

A Broadway director helps the West Point cadets put on a show, aided by two lovely ladies and assorted complications.

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6.2 | 1h47m | NR | en | Comedy , Music | More Info
Released: November. 25,1950 | Released Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

A Broadway director helps the West Point cadets put on a show, aided by two lovely ladies and assorted complications.

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Cast

James Cagney , Virginia Mayo , Doris Day

Director

Charles H. Clarke

Producted By

Warner Bros. Pictures ,

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HotToastyRag After James Cagney won his Oscar for Yankee Doodle Dandy, he acted in a few other show biz films to continue to show off his tap dancing talents. His performance in The West Point Story was so awful, I can only suppose he was sick and tired of being cast in musicals and wanted to embarrass himself so much the studios would never cast him in one again. His character was supposed to throw frequent temper tantrums, but he spent the entire film over-acting, over-gesturing, and over-yelling. If I wasn't convinced of his ulterior motives, I would have felt very sorry for him.In the movie, James Cagney is a washed-up theater director put in charge of a rinky-dink variety show at West Point. He brings his best gal, Virginia Mayo, along, but despite his horrible treatment of her and the sudden appearance of dozens of handsome uniforms, she only has eyes for Jimmy. It doesn't make any sense, but neither does the rest of the screenplay. The romances are contrived and uninspired, and the obstacles are resolved in unrealistic, far from poignant paths. When James Cagney "sang" the production number "B'klyn," my mom and I groaned and buried our heads in our hands. "I'd rather listen to 'The International Rag'!" my mom lamented, referencing our favorite love-to-hate song from Call Me Madam. Even with Doris Day, Gordon MacRae, Gene Nelson, and Virginia Mayo rounding out the supporting cast, there isn't even one good number to make the movie worthwhile. There's no reason for you to rent this one, unless you have a low opinion of James Cagney and want to keep it that way.
calvinnme ... but just forget that and have fun with it. Cagney is Elwin "Bix" Bixby who is a washed up Broadway director, not because he is bad at his job, but because he crossed producer Eberhart (Roland Winters) by getting dancer/singer Jan Wilson (Doris Day) out of the chorus where he felt she was misused, and into a Hollywood contract by teaching her everything he knew.Bix has a chance to square things with Eberhart and his increasingly impatient fiancée (Virginia Mayo as Eve) by taking a job at West Point directing a show written by Eberhart's nephew, cadet Tom Fletcher (Gordon McRae). What Eberhart really wants is his nephew to leave the army and go on Broadway, where he feels his talents won't be wasted. Bix takes the job, and is soon agreeing with Eberhart's assessment - Tom has the looks, can sing, dance AND wrote the show. Bix can't figure why Tom wants to work for minor duckets in the Army when he could clean up and be famous on Broadway. Why doesn't he just quit West Point? Now Bix is not a bad guy. He's got great courage, he just has a problem with rules, doesn't quite get the concept of camaraderie, and he has an unruly temperament - would you expect less from a Cagney role? Bix just doesn't get these cadets only showing up for rehearsal when their classes and the academy rules permit it, and then one day he punches a cadet and is out of a job UNLESS he becomes a cadet, living the life a cadet along with the uniform, the haircut, and the plebe status. At this point Bix's war record is brought up. Like I said before he had great courage, even saving his platoon in Italy in WWII, but he went AWOL so many times that if this film was true to life he'd actually be in Leavenworth turning big rocks into little ones. This is one of many times you are just going to have to suspend your beliefs.How does Doris Day figure into all of this? Well it turns out Day, as the girl Bix rescued from the chorus line years ago, is in town, so Bix gets permission to try and get her to come to West Point for an appearance AND he tries to talk her into being the princess in the play. If not they are stuck with Alan Hale Jr. as the princess and romantic lead to Gordon McRae's character. There is only so much suspension of belief that an audience can take! All of this is just a chance for Bix to learn the importance of rules and teamwork he never learned in the war, for some patriotic numbers and speeches that didn't do a movie studio any harm in 1950 in the age of HUAC, and for Warner Brothers to "pass the baton" as you might say to their new generation of singers and dancers, embodied by McRae and Doris Day. Don't worry though, there is enough of Cagney's great dancing to satisfy.The weirdest thing for me - seeing Cagney and Mayo play a rather functional couple after seeing them together in 1949's White Heat where they had the kind of love life you would expect between a psychopath and a gun moll with wandering eyes.
Neil Doyle James Cagney really gives his all (and that's plenty of talent) to the role of a rambunctious song-and-dance man who takes over a show at West Point, with the help of a talented cast including Virginia Mayo, Doris Day, Gordon MacRae and Gene Nelson. Cagney struts around getting angry and defiant as only he can, bringing lots of much needed life to a tiresome script. It's one of his best as a song-and-dance man, making one wish he had done even more musical films.But this one could have used Technicolor and a wittier script with better songs. All of the talent cannot overcome the story's limitations and the overuse of rear projection photography for many of the outdoor scenes. Alan Hale, Jr. gets some good chuckles out of his "Princess" role and there's a light-heartiness about the whole film that keeps it entertaining enough for the most part.Doris Day is missing from the first third of the movie, but once she shows up she demonstrates why she became such a cheerful Warner Bros. star. She and Gordon MacRae do nicely by a couple of forgettable songs.Summing up: Worth seeing for Cagney alone. He's in fine shape for some energetic dance routines.
vincentlynch-moonoi The Pros: It's sorta fun! Cool watching James Cagney strut! Cons: The plot is far-fetched. But okay, this is a film to savor for the (as usual) slightly over-the-top performance of James Cagney, particularly in regard to his dancing. There's something unique and special about Cagney's hoofing. A Fred Astaire he ain't, but he's still darned entertaining. A friend of mine from Pakistan, having once watched a Cagney film, said he just didn't get it. Why did Americans think he was such a great actor? I didn't (and still don't) know how to answer. But Cagney was something special.Virginia Mayo is swell as Cagney's love interest. Gordon MacRae fine (and in fine voice) as the talented West Point Cadet. If you're watching for Doris Day, you might be a little disappointed. She's not even in the first third of the film (except for a photo in a frame). Alan Hale, Jr. is "cute" as a cadet who plays a princess, but apparently the studio didn't think he could talk well...he has few lines, despite his character being somewhat important to the story (he pales in comparison to his dad, but is likable enough).For quite a bit of the movie, it is lacking in...something. And then as you move into the second half of the film you realize what WAS lacking, but has suddenly developed...having a "heart". The music here is not particularly great, considering it's a musical, although there is one wonderful patriotic number. The dancing is somewhat better, and, as mentioned previously, watching Cagney dance is a wonderful experience because he did it differently...and he has one particularly good dance number (despite his voice) later in the film (in a zoot suit, no less).This is an entertaining film, though not a great film. Nice to see camera work actually done at West Point, although my guess is the stars went through their paces in Hollywood. Worth a watch, but perhaps not one for your DVD shelf.