Hee haw, it’s Burl, here to review a movie
about the most famous talking mule there is, Francis! Now, fame-wise I’m not
sure how he stacks up against Mr. Ed, his greatest competitor, but I’m pretty
sure these days, seventy years after his cinematic debut, he’s still better
known than Don, the horse that was voiced by John Candy in Hot to Trot!
Of course there was only one Hot to Trot, and there must have been a
half-dozen Francis movies! The
picture I’m reviewing for you today was the first of them, and while it doesn’t
explain how the irascible mule gained the power of speech, it does detail the initial
meeting between Francis and the human who would become his closest chum, 2nd
lieutenant Peter Stirling, played by the amiable hoofmeister Donald O’Connor!
Ha ha!
Now, O’Connor is of course best known for
his spectacular work in Singin’ In the
Rain, but a little-known fact is that he can also be seen in The Big Fix, palling around with Francis
in footage from Francis Joins the Navy!
He’s really the perfect guy for this role - halfway between Mickey Rooney (who
got his own horse movie later, The Black
Stallion) and Eddie Bracken! Of course Rooney and Bracken were both fine
comedians capable of playing exactly the sort of gormless milquetoast Stirling
is meant to be, but somehow O’Connor hits those notes while still projecting a
sort of protean competence that leads you to believe he actually might have
risen to the rank of Lieutenant during wartime without being either fragged or
simply killed in combat! Even Don Knotts couldn’t have pulled that one off!
We first meet Stirling in his post-war
occupation as a bank teller, but there is a whisper campaign being conducted
against him, and his boss threatens to fire him! The boss gives Stirling a
chance to tell his tale, which occurred when he was stationed in Burma during
the war! On getting separated from his patrol, and under heavy enemy fire,
Stirling comes across a placid army mule who gives him advice on how to
survive, and then, when Stirling receives a minor shrapnel wound to the leg,
carts him to an aid station!
From there the picture adopts a structure
of repetition, in which Stirling tries to persuade his colonel that a talking
mule saved his life; Francis refuses to talk to the colonel; Stirling is thrown
into the psychiatric ward and made to weave baskets by jolly nurse Zasu Pitts; Francis
gives Stirling some crucial bit of information about a Japanese observation
post, or a hidden patrol, or a sneak air attack; Stirling becomes a hero but is
pressured to tell the colonel where he got his information; rinse and repeat! Ha
ha, with its host of eccentric characters, its focus on the impenetrable logic
of rear-echelon army brass, its dazed hero caught in the machinations of
illogic imposed by war, it almost reminded me of Catch-22! Eventually, Francis, to prevent his new friend being
tossed in the booby hatch for life, deigns to talk for someone other than
Stirling - a three-star general, in fact
, played by John McIntire from Psycho, Cloak &Dagger, and Herbie Rides Again
- but it only causes more trouble!
The perpetually irascible Francis speaks in
the voice of Chill Wills from Fireball 500, and his attitude is essentially that of the dogfaces in a Bill Mauldin
cartoon: grousing about army brass in general, and 2nd lieutenants
in particular, for whom he seems to have a particular hate-on! But at the same
time he’s a hyper-patriotic equine and wants to do his bit to win the war!
Eventually the picture concludes with what seems like a tragic denouement, but
director Arthur Lubin (who would later go on to direct a hundred and fifty
episodes of Mr. Ed - ha ha, talk
about a niche!) and novelist/screenwriter David Stern have one last trick up
their sleeves! After all, if Francis died in a plane crash, how could he ever
join the WACS? Ha ha!
The picture is done in the Universal low-budget
house style, which is a comforting style to ol’ Burl! Those Burmese jungles are
probably the same palm fronds later prowled through by the Creature from the
Black Lagoon, ha ha! Though there’s a lot of unfortunate talk about “Japs,” and
that same casual racism you find in many pictures of the period, particularly
war pictures, it wasn’t ladled on quite as heavily as I’d feared! The picture
is a bit slow and talky for a children’s comedy, and anyway the intended
audience seems more to be men for whom wartime service was still a recent
memory, who can chuckle and nod along with Francis’s jabs at army life and the
officer class! I give Francis the Talking
Mule two tails standing at attention!
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