Rise and Shine (1941) Poster

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7/10
A Pass On Academics
bkoganbing6 February 2012
I doubt that James Thurber would recognize his story from this film and Thurber purists would protest about Rise And Shine. But taken on its own merits this is one funny film with its centerpiece Jack Oakie once again playing his patented lunkhead college football player which he started portraying back with College Humor.

Clayton College seems to have one reason for existence, its football team built around Oakie who gets along with all the other football players the pass on academics. Check out the scene where he's taking a final in order to keep his eligibility. But more than the college have a vested interest in Oakie.

Gambler and nightclub owner Sheldon Leonard has some heavy money he wants to lay down so he sends one of his entertainers George Murphy out to the small town where Clayton College is to keep tabs on Oakie. In doing so, Murphy, Raymond Walburn, and Ruth Donnelly move next door to where Oakie is staying.

Oakie is domiciled at Professor Donald Meek's house with Meek's lovely cheerleader daughter Linda Darnell and her Grandpa Walter Brennan. Of course Murphy and Darnell fall for each other. And of course Leonard shows his hand as he tries to keep Oakie from the big game.

By the way Oakie in addition to academics seems to suffer from narcolepsy. That's quite the challenge for all concerned.

Outside of any number of Frank Capra films I doubt you will come across a cast as rich in colorful supporting players as in Rise And Shine. Look at the ones I've already mentioned and in addition to them Donald MacBride as the choleric football coach, William Haade as a dumb henchman, Paul Harvey as the always interfering alumni booster, and even a young Milton Berle as another Leonard flunky who has a laugh like a horse whinny. They call him Seabiscuit.

With a cast like this there is no way you will not enjoy Rise And Shine.
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7/10
Amusing
myriamlenys14 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
"Rise and shine" is based on some anecdotes from the book "My life and hard times" written by James Thurber. It is not a faithful adaptation of the book as a whole, but then it needs to be said that the work functions as a loose series of tongue-in-cheek "memoir" recollections. ("My life and hard times" still makes for a good read, so if you're looking for something to keep you awake on the beach...)

In the movie, an amiable but dim student called Bolenciecwcz represents the great football-playing hope of his generation. The college where he studies venerates his very sneakers, but here's the rub : in order to remain eligible to play football, he needs to obtain passing grades. He also needs a strict regime of lively training alternating with healthful sleep. What follows is a screwball comedy plus satire where group A wants him to win an important game while group B wants him to lose it. Characters include a crime boss running a betting operation, a stubborn grandpa mentally stuck in the Civil War and a well-respected professor fond of magic tricks. The plot is accompanied by singing and dancing, often of a strikingly original nature. (Check out the "Making a play" courtship scene involving a pair of bicycles.)

Nearly all actors and actresses supposed to represent the carefree youth of America seem way too old for the role, which is a defect seen in a lot of movies. Aliens who only know our planet through its entertainment media could be forgiven for thinking that every human being goes to school until age forty.

Although made in the 1940's, the movie cleverly dissects a phenomenon seen to this day in American institutes of higher learning, to wit the presence of hulking young giants who play sports like demigods but who think that Cicero invented the milkshake. Normally such creatures should be shown the door with a gentle yet firm hand, but since they bring in the money...
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A lot of fun
Nozz28 September 2001
Evidently this started out based on Thurber's "My Life and Hard Times," but all that's left is the college football hero Bolenkowitz who needs a passing grade in order to play and thus mightily ponders the easiest question the prof can think of. Still, who cares? Everyone is entertaining, there's music, there's a gang of amusingly caricaturical bad guys, and it's all simple enough for a ten-year-old...
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9/10
Hilarious comedy with great music
opsbooks12 December 2021
Although Jack Oakie gets top billing, he doesn't do much. What makes this movie is the cracking script, great cast and terrific music. I'd been looking for one particular song for decades and this is the movie in which George Murphy puts it over so well. There are some dead spots mid-stream but overall, this is guaranteed to cheer you up.
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