Hay Foot
Hay Foot
NR | 02 January 1942 (USA)
Hay Foot Trailers

Colonel Barkley is very proud of his assistant, Sergeant Doubleday, who has a photographic memory. Doubleday shows off his book knowledge on firearms during a class given by Sergeant Ames, embarrassing him. Through a series of misunderstandings, Colonel Barkley thinks the gun shy Doubleday is an expert marksman, and he sets him up in a shooting match against Ames and Sergeant Cobb.

Reviews
Matialth

Good concept, poorly executed.

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Aneesa Wardle

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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Ava-Grace Willis

Story: It's very simple but honestly that is fine.

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Fulke

Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.

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mark.waltz

William Tracy is Dodo, the assistant to Army Officer James Gleason, a lovable old coot who wants to create closer ties between officers and the enlisted men. Sawyer's two rivals (Joe Sawyer and Noah Beery Jr.) try to outwit them in their efforts to get closer to Gleason's daughter (Elyse Knox) who is enamored of Sawyer's innocence. But don't underestimate Tracy. He's got the luck of the angels on his side and in just 45 minutes, continues to outwit his rivals and prove he's more than just a lucky guy who keeps getting a good break through no effort of his own.There's a lot of funny stuff here in one of Hal Roach's extremely long shorts (or extremely short features, depending on how you look at it), enough slapstick to fill one of Roach's earlier Laurel and Hardy gems, leaving little room for the viewer to catch their breath after continuously laughing. A very funny dinner party scene has Tracy keeping Sawyer and Beery in check by utilizing his dog as a gun guard which threatens to sink the two men's revolvers in a conveniently placed well just the day before an army shooting contest. This leads to the two vowing revenge and a very funny conclusion that may bring tears of hysterics to your eyes.

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jasonleesmith6

SGT Doubleday is smart, and the favorite of his commanding officer. He remembers everything he reads, and has an encyclopedic knowledge of the military. The only trouble is, he is unable to shoot a gun. Meanwhile, the base's two loud-mouths and sharp-shooting experts have it in for Doubleday because they think he's a know-it-all. Somehow the commander becomes convinced that Doubleday is an expert marksman. Will Doubleday be able to learn how to shoot a gun in time to compete in the sharpshooting competition and win the love of the commander's daughter? Don't ask me, the movie ends suddenly with almost no sub-plots getting resolved. No real explanation of the title, "Hay Foot" is offered either. Doing a search on the internet didn't reveal much, except that it may have been a kind of slang for a rookie recruit. Since this was the second film in the SGT Doubleday series, this doesn't make much sense though.Nevertheless, it was a pretty entertaining film.

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Michael_Elliott

Hay Foot (1942) ** 1/2 (out of 4) Third film in Hal Roach's steamliner Doubleday series has Sgt. Doubleday (William Tracy) once again getting on the nerves of the brutish Sgt. Ames (Joe Sawyer). The adventure here is that a Colonel (James Gleason) thinks that Doubleday is an expert sharp shooter when in fact he's terrified of guns. If you've see any of the other films in the series then you should know what to expect. Whether you enjoy this series or not will depend on how much you can put up with the two leads but I personally find them mildly entertaining. Sure, they're not Abbott and Costello or Laurel and Hardy but they don't have to be. Both Tracy and Sawyer are good in their roles, which they seemed born to play. THe real scene stealer here is James Gleason who delivers a fine performance as the Colonel and the father of a girl who Doubleday and Ames are after. The comedy is hit and mis throughout the film but there are enough small laughs to keep the film moving throughout its 47-minute running time.

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boblipton

This, the third in the series of Roach 'streamliners' -- short comedy features about 50 minutes in length -- about Sgt. Doubleday, the instant non-com with the photographic memory is, like the others, an unremarkable comedy, some good bits placed in a script that often seems to start and stop, but it does have one great positive value in the performance of James Gleason, a funny and highly talented comic performer for thirty years in Hollywood. Usually cast in some role that suited his lower-class New York accent -- check him out as the cab driver in THE BISHOP'S WIFE -- here he plays the regimental colonel: vain, pompous and father of a very pretty daughter who, with the issue of pistol shooting, is the core of the story.If you feel that he is not enough to make this movie worthwhile, I certainly understand. But for me he made the difference between a dull hour and a pleasant one.

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