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FRANCIS
Rating:
USA. 1950.
Director Arthur Lubin, Screenplay/Based on the Novel by David Stern, Producer Robert Arthur, Photography (b&w) Irving Glassberg, Music David Skinner, Art Direction Bernard Herzbrun. Production Company Universal-International.
Cast:
Donald OConnor (Peter Sterling), Chill Wills (Voice of Francis), Patricia Medina (Marie Geldur), Zasu Pitts (Nurse), Ray Collins (Colonel Hooker), John McIntire (General Stevens), Edward Franz (Colonel Pepper)
Plot: Bank clerk Peter Sterling is questioned by his superior and asked to explain certain rumours circulating about him. He relates what happened to him as an army lieutenant in Burma during the Second World War. Wounded in combat and lost in the jungle, he was saved by a talking mule, Francis. When he told others what happened, he was committed to the psych ward. Released and appointed to the intelligence division, he was again aided by Francis who provided him with information that allowed him to capture a Japanese outpost. But his continued attempts to explain about Francis kept ending him back in the psych ward.
Its hard to think that a film about a talking horse would ever get people very excited. But Francis proved inexplicably popular enough when it came out, enough to inspire six sequels (see below) and imitators like the even more popular Mr Ed tv series (1961-6), even modern antecedents like the awful Hot to Trot (1988). It is an incredibly lame effort. The plot is predictable and repetitive it is only really a one-gag story. No explanation is given as to how Francis talks, what a mule with a Yankee drawl is doing in the Burmese jungle or even how it gets its information. Donald OConnor gives one of the cringing underdog performances favoured of these types of films. Patricia Medinas accent is atrocious.
The sequels were Francis Goes to the Races (1951), Francis Goes to West Point (1952), Francis Covers the Big Town (1953), Francis Joins the WACS (1954), Francis in the Navy (1955) and Francis in the Haunted House (1956). Donald OConnor appears in all but the last where he was replaced by Mickey Rooney. Chill Wills also voiced the role of Francis in all but the last film.
Copyright Richard Scheib 1999-2012
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