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Mister Roberts (1955 film)

Mister Roberts is a 1955 American comedy-drama film directed by John Ford and Mervyn LeRoy featuring an all-star cast including Henry Fonda as Mister Roberts, James Cagney as Captain Morton, William Powell (in his final film appearance) as Doc, and Jack Lemmon as Ensign Pulver. Based on the 1946 novel and 1948 Broadway play, the film was nominated for three Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Sound, and Best Supporting Actor, with Lemmon winning the latter.[7]

Mister Roberts
Directed byJohn Ford
Mervyn LeRoy
Joshua Logan (uncredited)
Screenplay byFrank S. Nugent
Joshua Logan
Based onMister Roberts
(1946 novel)
by Thomas Heggen;
Mister Roberts
(1948 play)
by Thomas Heggen
Joshua Logan
Produced byLeland Hayward
StarringHenry Fonda
James Cagney
William Powell
Jack Lemmon
CinematographyWinton C. Hoch
Edited byJack Murray
Music byFranz Waxman
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • July 30, 1955 (1955-07-30)
Running time
120,[1]
123,[2] or
120-121, 123 or 126 minutes[3][4]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2.3 million[5]
Box office$21.2 million[6]

Plot edit

In the waning days of World War II, the U.S. cargo ship Reluctant operates in areas of the Pacific Ocean far from enemy action. Lt. Doug Roberts, the executive officer and cargo chief, shields the dispirited crew from their harsh captain, Lt Cdr. Morton. Roberts shares quarters with Ens. Frank Thurlowe Pulver, the laundry and morale officer, who avoids the captain so completely that Morton is initially unaware that Pulver is a crew member. Eager to join the fighting, Roberts repeatedly requests a transfer, but Morton's refusal to endorse his requests results in them being rejected.

Roberts surreptitiously requests and is granted crew liberty from one of Morton's superiors, a port captain who wishes to reward the Reluctant's crew for meeting a difficult resupply schedule. When the ship reaches an idyllic South Pacific island, however, Morton cancels the crew's shore leave. In private, Morton tells Roberts that his transfer requests and reports of low crew morale are hurting Morton's chance of promotion and that the crew will be denied leave unless Roberts submits fully to Morton's command style, ceases to request a transfer, and never tells the crew why. Roberts acquiesces, and the crew is granted liberty. The ship is kicked out of port after the crew’s raucous liberty and the angry captain, in reprimanding the crew, prods Roberts to back him.

The crew is mystified by Roberts's new strictness and deference to the captain. Morton convinces them that Roberts is vying for a promotion. When a crew member informs Roberts of a new Navy policy which could help him receive a transfer despite the captain's opposition, Roberts declines.

News of the Allied victory in Europe depresses Roberts further, as the war may end soon without his ever seeing combat, and Roberts tosses Morton's prized palm tree overboard. Morton eventually realizes Roberts is the likely culprit and summons him to his quarters and accuses him of the deed. An open microphone allows the crew to overhear their heated conversation and why Roberts changed.

Weeks later, Roberts receives an unexpected transfer. "Doc," the ship's doctor and Roberts's friend, confides to him that the crew risked court-martial by submitting a transfer request with Morton's forged signature of approval. Before he leaves, the crew present Roberts with a handmade medal, the Order of the Palm, for "action against the enemy."

Several weeks later, Pulver, who has been appointed cargo officer, receives several letters. The first is from Roberts, enthusiastic about his new assignment aboard the destroyer USS Livingston during the Battle of Okinawa. The second letter is from Pulver's college friend, Fornell, also assigned to the Livingston, which reveals that Roberts was killed in a kamikaze attack shortly after the first letter had been posted. Pulver throws the captain's replacement palm tree overboard, marches into Morton's cabin, and claims responsibility. Morton realizes his problems have not gone away.

Cast edit

Production edit

The film was originally planned to be made in 3-D but Warner Brothers later announced that it was to be made in WarnerSuperScope instead using Warner's new All-Media camera with no mention of 3-D.[8] It was eventually released in CinemaScope.

Fonda was not the original choice to star in the film version; Warner Bros. was considering William Holden or Marlon Brando for the role. The studio thought Fonda had been on stage and off the screen so long (seven years) that he was no longer a box office draw. In addition, when filming began he was 49, much older than the average lieutenant junior grade. Fonda was hired only because director John Ford insisted.

The movie was directed by John Ford, Mervyn LeRoy and Joshua Logan, who was uncredited. While directing the film, Ford had personality conflicts with Fonda and Cagney.[9] When Ford met Cagney at the airport, the director warned that they would "tangle asses," which caught Cagney by surprise. Cagney later said, "I would have kicked his brains out. He was so goddamned mean to everybody. He was truly a nasty old man."[10] The next day, Cagney was slightly late on set, and Ford became incensed. Cagney cut short the imminent tirade, saying, "When I started this picture, you said that we would tangle asses before this was over. I'm ready now – are you?" Ford backed down and walked away, and he and Cagney had no further conflicts on the set.[10]

Nevertheless, Ford was replaced by LeRoy after difficulties with Fonda (Ford apparently punched Fonda in the jaw during a heated argument), and a gall bladder problem that necessitated emergency surgery. It has been widely speculated which scenes were directed by LeRoy. Jack Lemmon shed some light on this issue in his DVD commentary: "Mervyn LeRoy would watch all of the rushes that Ford had shot prior to his temporary departure and decided to shoot them the way John Ford would have shot 'em." Logan, who had directed the original stage production in which Fonda starred, re-shot major portions of the film, at Fonda's request.

The DVD release of this film includes an audio commentary by Lemmon in which he recounts stories of his experience making the film and his views on acting. During the production of the film, Lemmon began a long-term friendship with Cagney which continued until Cagney's death in 1986. Prior to his appearance in his first film, years before Mister Roberts, he started in live television. In one particular performance, Lemmon decided to play his character differently. He decided to play the character left-handed, which was opposite to his own handedness. With much practice, he pulled off the performance without anyone noticing the change. Even Lemmon's wife was fooled. A few years later, Lemmon met Cagney on their way to Midway Island to film Mister Roberts. Cagney asked, "Are you still fooling people into believing you're left-handed?" They had a great laugh and a strong friendship was born.

Fonda, in his 1982 autobiography, My Life, praised the movie but said he believed the play was even better. Mister Roberts was William Powell's final film and final acting appearance, although he lived nearly another 30 years, dying at age 91 in 1984. The film was James Cagney's last movie for Warner Bros., the studio that had propelled him to stardom in the 1930s and under which he had spent the majority of his career under contract.

USS Reluctant edit

The Navy vessel that played the role of USS Reluctant (AK-601), a.k.a. "the Bucket," in the movie's exterior shots was a former U.S. Army Freight and Passenger/Freight and Supply (FP/FS) vessel, which was originally commissioned in the Navy following World War II.[11] The USS Hewell (AG-145) is credited by the Navy as the ship assigned to the filming.[12] The official Navy history for the ship[13] notes:

In late August 1954 Hewell departed Hawaii for Midway Island, mooring at the Naval Base there on 28 August to help film the Warner Brothers movie Mister Roberts. The film, starring Henry Fonda, James Cagney, William Powell and Jack Lemmon, was partially shot on board Hewell, with underway footage filmed off Midway Harbor between 1 and 16 September. The light cargo ship then sailed back to Hawaii between 24 and 29 September and additional film was shot off Kaneohe Bay between 30 September and 7 October.

A 1994 article which appeared in the newsletter of the Keyport, Washington Naval Undersea Warfare Center, contending that IX-308[14] (another Army FS vessel converted to a Navy AKL (light auxiliary cargo) and assigned torpedo recovery duties at Keyport) was used in filming of Mister Roberts and not Hewell, created a controversy.[15] That ship had been named USNS New Bedford[16] for its service out of that port serving the USAF Texas Towers radar facilities off the east coast of the United States.[17]

All but one[16] of the Navy's AKLs were built as U.S. Army FP/FS type cargo vessels transferred to the Navy.[18] As it was, an AKL carried a much smaller crew than the USS Virgo (AKA-20) and USS Rotanin (AK-108), both of which Thomas Heggen served on during the war.[19] In the movie, Mr. Roberts says to Doc that there are "62 men" aboard which would have been far too many for an AKL.

A number of modifications to the AKL exterior appearance were made for the film. The "palm tree" was located on a "deck" built for the movie by extending the small deckhouse of the AKL and building movie set ladders to the bridge and main deck.[20] The crew, when going below to their berthing compartment, are shown in the movie to be descending into the cargo hold.

Reception edit

The film was a financial success. It grossed $21.2 million,[6] earning $8.5 million in US theatrical rentals.[21]

Awards and honors edit

Television and sequels edit

Mister Roberts was followed by a film sequel, Ensign Pulver (1964), with Robert Walker Jr. starring as Pulver. It also starred Burl Ives as Captain Morton, Walter Matthau as Doc, and in small roles, Larry Hagman and Jack Nicholson, among others. Much of the screenplay was derived from Heggen's original book.

The original film was the basis of the 1965 TV series Mister Roberts, which lasted one season, and the film was remade for television in 1984 as a live telecast shot mostly in the form of a stage play.

References edit

  1. ^ "Mister Roberts". Variety. December 31, 1954.
  2. ^ Mister Roberts at IMDb  
  3. ^ "Mister Roberts (1955)". American Film Institute.
  4. ^ Mister Roberts (1955) at the TCM Movie Database
  5. ^ "'Spirit' Soared High $7,000,000 Sez Hayward". Variety. February 27, 1957. p. 5. Retrieved June 10, 2019 – via Archive.org.
  6. ^ a b Box Office Information for Mister Roberts. The Numbers. Retrieved August 27, 2013.
  7. ^ a b "The 28th Academy Awards (1956) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved August 21, 2011.
  8. ^ "Warners Seen Quietly Dropping 3-D As Studio Hops on Scope Wagon". Variety. August 26, 1953. p. 7. Retrieved March 14, 2024 – via Internet Archive.
  9. ^ Warren, Doug; Cagney, James (1986) [1983]. Cagney: The Authorized Biography (Mass Market ed.). New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-90207-7.
  10. ^ a b Warren, page 191
  11. ^ Another of the FP/FS conversions was USS Pueblo.
  12. ^ Levy, Bill (1998). John Ford: A Bio-Bibliography. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 176. ISBN 0-313-27514-9.
  13. ^ Navy History & Heritage Command-Ships History Branch. "Hewell". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships (DANFS). Retrieved September 23, 2011.
  14. ^ Sea Bird Adventure. "USNS New Bedford the Mister Roberts Ship". Sea Bird Adventure. Retrieved September 23, 2011.
  15. ^ Jackson, Ramon. . Army FP/FS Vessels. Archived from the original on February 12, 2012. Retrieved September 23, 2011.
  16. ^ a b Priolo, Gary P. "Light Cargo Ship (AKL-17)". NavSource Naval History. Retrieved September 23, 2011.
  17. ^ National Air Defense Radar Museum. . Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved September 23, 2011.
  18. ^ Jackson, Ramon (November 27, 2007). . Ships and Places. Archived from the original on December 4, 2004. Retrieved June 14, 2008.
  19. ^ Heckman, Hugh M. (January 1979). . Sea Classics. Challenge Publications, Inc. Archived from the original on August 21, 2008. Retrieved January 16, 2010.
  20. ^ Friberg, Capt. Carl. "A Movie Seastory That Bugged Me (Detailed look at how an AKL was temporarily modified and turned into a movie set)". Views From the Upper Deck. Retrieved January 16, 2010.
  21. ^ 'The Top Box-Office Hits of 1955', Variety Weekly, January 25, 1956.
  22. ^ "Film: Foreign Actor in 1956". BAFTA Awards. Retrieved May 7, 2020.
  23. ^ . National Board of Review of Motion Pictures. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved May 8, 2020.
  24. ^ "Winners: 1995–1949". Writers Guild Awards. Retrieved May 8, 2020.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Mister Roberts at IMDb  
  • Mister Roberts at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Mister Roberts at the TCM Movie Database
  • Mister Roberts at AllMovie
  • Mister Roberts at the American Film Institute Catalog
  • Gary P. Priolo (January 24, 2008). "Light Cargo Ship (AKL): AG-145 / AKL-14 Hewell". NavSource Naval History. Retrieved June 15, 2008.
  • Capt. Carl Friberg. "A Movie Seastory That Bugged Me (Detailed look at how an AKL was temporarily modified and turned into a movie set)". Views From the Upper Deck. Retrieved January 16, 2010.

mister, roberts, 1955, film, mister, roberts, 1955, american, comedy, drama, film, directed, john, ford, mervyn, leroy, featuring, star, cast, including, henry, fonda, mister, roberts, james, cagney, captain, morton, william, powell, final, film, appearance, j. Mister Roberts is a 1955 American comedy drama film directed by John Ford and Mervyn LeRoy featuring an all star cast including Henry Fonda as Mister Roberts James Cagney as Captain Morton William Powell in his final film appearance as Doc and Jack Lemmon as Ensign Pulver Based on the 1946 novel and 1948 Broadway play the film was nominated for three Academy Awards including Best Picture Best Sound and Best Supporting Actor with Lemmon winning the latter 7 Mister RobertsTheatrical release posterby Bill GoldDirected byJohn FordMervyn LeRoyJoshua Logan uncredited Screenplay byFrank S NugentJoshua LoganBased onMister Roberts 1946 novel by Thomas Heggen Mister Roberts 1948 play by Thomas HeggenJoshua LoganProduced byLeland HaywardStarringHenry FondaJames CagneyWilliam PowellJack LemmonCinematographyWinton C HochEdited byJack MurrayMusic byFranz WaxmanDistributed byWarner Bros Release dateJuly 30 1955 1955 07 30 Running time120 1 123 2 or 120 121 123 or 126 minutes 3 4 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 2 3 million 5 Box office 21 2 million 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 USS Reluctant 5 Reception 6 Awards and honors 7 Television and sequels 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksPlot editIn the waning days of World War II the U S cargo ship Reluctant operates in areas of the Pacific Ocean far from enemy action Lt Doug Roberts the executive officer and cargo chief shields the dispirited crew from their harsh captain Lt Cdr Morton Roberts shares quarters with Ens Frank Thurlowe Pulver the laundry and morale officer who avoids the captain so completely that Morton is initially unaware that Pulver is a crew member Eager to join the fighting Roberts repeatedly requests a transfer but Morton s refusal to endorse his requests results in them being rejected Roberts surreptitiously requests and is granted crew liberty from one of Morton s superiors a port captain who wishes to reward the Reluctant s crew for meeting a difficult resupply schedule When the ship reaches an idyllic South Pacific island however Morton cancels the crew s shore leave In private Morton tells Roberts that his transfer requests and reports of low crew morale are hurting Morton s chance of promotion and that the crew will be denied leave unless Roberts submits fully to Morton s command style ceases to request a transfer and never tells the crew why Roberts acquiesces and the crew is granted liberty The ship is kicked out of port after the crew s raucous liberty and the angry captain in reprimanding the crew prods Roberts to back him The crew is mystified by Roberts s new strictness and deference to the captain Morton convinces them that Roberts is vying for a promotion When a crew member informs Roberts of a new Navy policy which could help him receive a transfer despite the captain s opposition Roberts declines News of the Allied victory in Europe depresses Roberts further as the war may end soon without his ever seeing combat and Roberts tosses Morton s prized palm tree overboard Morton eventually realizes Roberts is the likely culprit and summons him to his quarters and accuses him of the deed An open microphone allows the crew to overhear their heated conversation and why Roberts changed Weeks later Roberts receives an unexpected transfer Doc the ship s doctor and Roberts s friend confides to him that the crew risked court martial by submitting a transfer request with Morton s forged signature of approval Before he leaves the crew present Roberts with a handmade medal the Order of the Palm for action against the enemy Several weeks later Pulver who has been appointed cargo officer receives several letters The first is from Roberts enthusiastic about his new assignment aboard the destroyer USS Livingston during the Battle of Okinawa The second letter is from Pulver s college friend Fornell also assigned to the Livingston which reveals that Roberts was killed in a kamikaze attack shortly after the first letter had been posted Pulver throws the captain s replacement palm tree overboard marches into Morton s cabin and claims responsibility Morton realizes his problems have not gone away Cast editHenry Fonda as Lieutenant junior grade Douglas A Doug Roberts James Cagney as Lieutenant Commander Captain Morton William Powell as Doc Jack Lemmon as Ensign Frank Thurlowe Pulver Betsy Palmer as Lieutenant Ann Girard Ward Bond as Chief Petty Officer Dowdy Ken Curtis as Dolan Philip Carey as Mannion billed as Phil Carey Nick Adams as Reber Perry Lopez as Rodrigues Robert Roark as Insigna Harry Carey Jr as Stefanowski Patrick Wayne as Bookser Frank Aletter as Gerhart Tige Andrews as Wiley Martin Milner as Shore Patrol Officer Harry Tenbrook as Cookie Kathleen O Malley as Nurse Gregory Walcott as Shore Patrolman James Flavin as Military Policeman Jack Pennick as Marine Sergeant Duke Kahanamoku as Native ChiefProduction editThe film was originally planned to be made in 3 D but Warner Brothers later announced that it was to be made in WarnerSuperScope instead using Warner s new All Media camera with no mention of 3 D 8 It was eventually released in CinemaScope Fonda was not the original choice to star in the film version Warner Bros was considering William Holden or Marlon Brando for the role The studio thought Fonda had been on stage and off the screen so long seven years that he was no longer a box office draw In addition when filming began he was 49 much older than the average lieutenant junior grade Fonda was hired only because director John Ford insisted The movie was directed by John Ford Mervyn LeRoy and Joshua Logan who was uncredited While directing the film Ford had personality conflicts with Fonda and Cagney 9 When Ford met Cagney at the airport the director warned that they would tangle asses which caught Cagney by surprise Cagney later said I would have kicked his brains out He was so goddamned mean to everybody He was truly a nasty old man 10 The next day Cagney was slightly late on set and Ford became incensed Cagney cut short the imminent tirade saying When I started this picture you said that we would tangle asses before this was over I m ready now are you Ford backed down and walked away and he and Cagney had no further conflicts on the set 10 Nevertheless Ford was replaced by LeRoy after difficulties with Fonda Ford apparently punched Fonda in the jaw during a heated argument and a gall bladder problem that necessitated emergency surgery It has been widely speculated which scenes were directed by LeRoy Jack Lemmon shed some light on this issue in his DVD commentary Mervyn LeRoy would watch all of the rushes that Ford had shot prior to his temporary departure and decided to shoot them the way John Ford would have shot em Logan who had directed the original stage production in which Fonda starred re shot major portions of the film at Fonda s request The DVD release of this film includes an audio commentary by Lemmon in which he recounts stories of his experience making the film and his views on acting During the production of the film Lemmon began a long term friendship with Cagney which continued until Cagney s death in 1986 Prior to his appearance in his first film years before Mister Roberts he started in live television In one particular performance Lemmon decided to play his character differently He decided to play the character left handed which was opposite to his own handedness With much practice he pulled off the performance without anyone noticing the change Even Lemmon s wife was fooled A few years later Lemmon met Cagney on their way to Midway Island to film Mister Roberts Cagney asked Are you still fooling people into believing you re left handed They had a great laugh and a strong friendship was born Fonda in his 1982 autobiography My Life praised the movie but said he believed the play was even better Mister Roberts was William Powell s final film and final acting appearance although he lived nearly another 30 years dying at age 91 in 1984 The film was James Cagney s last movie for Warner Bros the studio that had propelled him to stardom in the 1930s and under which he had spent the majority of his career under contract USS Reluctant editThe Navy vessel that played the role of USS Reluctant AK 601 a k a the Bucket in the movie s exterior shots was a former U S Army Freight and Passenger Freight and Supply FP FS vessel which was originally commissioned in the Navy following World War II 11 The USS Hewell AG 145 is credited by the Navy as the ship assigned to the filming 12 The official Navy history for the ship 13 notes In late August 1954 Hewell departed Hawaii for Midway Island mooring at the Naval Base there on 28 August to help film the Warner Brothers movie Mister Roberts The film starring Henry Fonda James Cagney William Powell and Jack Lemmon was partially shot on board Hewell with underway footage filmed off Midway Harbor between 1 and 16 September The light cargo ship then sailed back to Hawaii between 24 and 29 September and additional film was shot off Kaneohe Bay between 30 September and 7 October A 1994 article which appeared in the newsletter of the Keyport Washington Naval Undersea Warfare Center contending that IX 308 14 another Army FS vessel converted to a Navy AKL light auxiliary cargo and assigned torpedo recovery duties at Keyport was used in filming of Mister Roberts and not Hewell created a controversy 15 That ship had been named USNS New Bedford 16 for its service out of that port serving the USAF Texas Towers radar facilities off the east coast of the United States 17 All but one 16 of the Navy s AKLs were built as U S Army FP FS type cargo vessels transferred to the Navy 18 As it was an AKL carried a much smaller crew than the USS Virgo AKA 20 and USS Rotanin AK 108 both of which Thomas Heggen served on during the war 19 In the movie Mr Roberts says to Doc that there are 62 men aboard which would have been far too many for an AKL A number of modifications to the AKL exterior appearance were made for the film The palm tree was located on a deck built for the movie by extending the small deckhouse of the AKL and building movie set ladders to the bridge and main deck 20 The crew when going below to their berthing compartment are shown in the movie to be descending into the cargo hold Reception editThe film was a financial success It grossed 21 2 million 6 earning 8 5 million in US theatrical rentals 21 Awards and honors editAward Category Nominee s Result Academy Awards 7 Best Motion Picture Leland Hayward Nominated Best Supporting Actor Jack Lemmon Won Best Sound Recording William A Mueller Nominated British Academy Film Awards 22 Best Foreign Actor Jack Lemmon Nominated National Board of Review Awards 23 Top Ten Films 3rd Place Writers Guild of America Awards 24 Best Written American Comedy Frank S Nugent and Joshua Logan WonTelevision and sequels editMister Roberts was followed by a film sequel Ensign Pulver 1964 with Robert Walker Jr starring as Pulver It also starred Burl Ives as Captain Morton Walter Matthau as Doc and in small roles Larry Hagman and Jack Nicholson among others Much of the screenplay was derived from Heggen s original book The original film was the basis of the 1965 TV series Mister Roberts which lasted one season and the film was remade for television in 1984 as a live telecast shot mostly in the form of a stage play References edit Mister Roberts Variety December 31 1954 Mister Roberts at IMDb nbsp Mister Roberts 1955 American Film Institute Mister Roberts 1955 at the TCM Movie Database Spirit Soared High 7 000 000 Sez Hayward Variety February 27 1957 p 5 Retrieved June 10 2019 via Archive org a b Box Office Information for Mister Roberts The Numbers Retrieved August 27 2013 a b The 28th Academy Awards 1956 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved August 21 2011 Warners Seen Quietly Dropping 3 D As Studio Hops on Scope Wagon Variety August 26 1953 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2024 via Internet Archive Warren Doug Cagney James 1986 1983 Cagney The Authorized Biography Mass Market ed New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 90207 7 a b Warren page 191 Another of the FP FS conversions was USS Pueblo Levy Bill 1998 John Ford A Bio Bibliography Westport CT Greenwood Press p 176 ISBN 0 313 27514 9 Navy History amp Heritage Command Ships History Branch Hewell Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships DANFS Retrieved September 23 2011 Sea Bird Adventure USNS New Bedford the Mister Roberts Ship Sea Bird Adventure Retrieved September 23 2011 Jackson Ramon Not the USS Hewell AKL 14 in the movie Think again Army FP FS Vessels Archived from the original on February 12 2012 Retrieved September 23 2011 a b Priolo Gary P Light Cargo Ship AKL 17 NavSource Naval History Retrieved September 23 2011 National Air Defense Radar Museum The Texas Towers Archived from the original on April 2 2012 Retrieved September 23 2011 Jackson Ramon November 27 2007 Army FP FS Vessels Ships and Places Archived from the original on December 4 2004 Retrieved June 14 2008 Heckman Hugh M January 1979 The Story and Memories of the USS VIRGO AKA 20 AE 30 USS Virgo and Mr Roberts Sea Classics Challenge Publications Inc Archived from the original on August 21 2008 Retrieved January 16 2010 Friberg Capt Carl A Movie Seastory That Bugged Me Detailed look at how an AKL was temporarily modified and turned into a movie set Views From the Upper Deck Retrieved January 16 2010 The Top Box Office Hits of 1955 Variety Weekly January 25 1956 Film Foreign Actor in 1956 BAFTA Awards Retrieved May 7 2020 Awards for 1955 National Board of Review of Motion Pictures Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved May 8 2020 Winners 1995 1949 Writers Guild Awards Retrieved May 8 2020 Bibliography edit Warren Doug Cagney James 1986 1983 Cagney The Authorized Biography Mass Market ed New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 90207 7 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Mister Roberts 1955 film nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mister Roberts 1955 film Mister Roberts at IMDb nbsp Mister Roberts at Rotten Tomatoes Mister Roberts at the TCM Movie Database Mister Roberts at AllMovie Mister Roberts at the American Film Institute Catalog Gary P Priolo January 24 2008 Light Cargo Ship AKL AG 145 AKL 14 Hewell NavSource Naval History Retrieved June 15 2008 Capt Carl Friberg A Movie Seastory That Bugged Me Detailed look at how an AKL was temporarily modified and turned into a movie set Views From the Upper Deck Retrieved January 16 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mister Roberts 1955 film amp oldid 1213716627, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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