The Fighting Seabees Blu-ray Review
Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, April 24, 2013
Would
you have had the guts to have called The Duke a "chicken hawk"? Most sensible people would probably
instantly answer "no", but there are recurrent legends that actual servicemen took John Wayne to task during the filming
of
The Fighting Seabees that the only "fighting" Wayne was seeing was courtesy of the rah-rah war films he was
making. The ranks of Hollywood leading men soon became
actual ranks during the war years, with a lot of major
stars enlisting in "the cause", with many of them going on to establish laudable military careers. But Wayne continued to
receive deferments through the war, something which evidently created some fiction not just with Wayne's fan base but
also within the actor himself. Perhaps that's one reason why he associated himself with films of such hyperbolic jingoistic
fervor like
The Fighting Seabees, a factually ludicrous account of the founding of the so-called Construction
Battalions (CB or Seabee for short) which started out as the building forces for the armed services but which ultimately
graduated into quasi-fighting units themselves.
The Fighting Seabees proved to be one of Wayne's most popular
features when it was released in 1944, and while it may strike some modern viewers as hopelessly corny and even
problematic, when placed within the context of its time, it's not hard to understand why it was met with such acclaim. In
the early days of 1944 the end of the war seemed a far distant horizon. Few if any knew about the nascent plans of
Operation Overlord and while Hitler's forces were beginning to get significant pushback from the Russians especially, the
Pacific theater (despite Midway) was still anyone's game.
A number of recent Olive Films releases have featured characters with shall we say
unusual names and
The
Fighting Seabees continues in that questionable tradition with stalwart hero Wedge Donovan (John Wayne), leader
of
a construction company whose men have just been decimated in a Japanese attack on an island they were sent to in
order to build an airstrip. This is one of the few elements of the film which actually has at least one foot in reality, as
these civilians were prevented from carrying arms and often were in fact sitting ducks for attacks by the enemy. Wedge
(one shudders to think what his childhood nickname might have been) is none to pleased to greet his men getting back
from their mission only to find out several
won't be coming back, as well as to see several others are badly
injured.
He finds the Navy man responsible for keeping his men from taking up arms, and finds perhaps a bit to his surprise that
Lt.
Commander Bob Yarrow (Dennis O'Keefe) is as upset over the issue as he is, asking Wedge to join him in lobbying the
Washington powers that be to arm the construction crews. Meanwhile, a woman with whom Wedge has already "met
cute" at the dockside while waiting for his guys to disembark turns out to be Yarrow's reporter girlfriend Connie Chesley
(Susan Hayward).
The Fighting Seabees then plays out in a series of episodes. The first sees Wedge storming out of a meeting
with the Washington, D.C. commander who wants Wedge's guys to undergo actual battle training before they're
armed, with Wedge saying he's going to their current island building site to make sure if the Japs (as they're called in
this film, when they're not being called worse names)
do attack, Wedge's guys are ready to fight back. On the
boat to the island, Wedge is surprised to find Connie, and even more surprised to hear that Bob is on his way to the
island himself to make sure that Wedge doesn't get himself into trouble. Trouble of course ensues, first romantically,
when Wedge impulsively kisses Connie before remembering that Connie "is Bob Yarrow's girl", and then, later, when
Wedge
does arm his guys, thereby spoiling a trap that Bob had set up for the encroaching Japanese. A rout of
the construction men results, with Wedge obviously shocked that his good intentions have led to the deaths of many of
his men. In one of the film's more ludicrous moments, Connie suddenly appears out of nowhere after the main battle
has ended, only to be shot by a barely surviving Japanese sniper (
guess whether or not she survives).
Wedge, somewhat chastened, returns to Washington, D.C. with Bob, where Wedge finds out he's been commissioned a
Lt. Commander himself and that a training regimen will be undertaken. This time Wedge doesn't argue and we get a
requisite montage showing hundreds of guys with construction backgrounds being signed up to the newly named
Seabees (the scene of the Washington commander "coming up" with the name is rather funny if you have a suitably
skewed sense of humor). Then with his newly trained battalion in tow, Wedge (along with Bob, of course) goes to yet
another island where the final act of the film plays out, with some patently outlandish battle sequences that were
obviously meant to rouse a domestic wartime audience.
The Fighting Seabees is undeniably silly at times, but it's also kind of interesting for at least a couple of
(perhaps unintentional) reasons. The love triangle between Wedge, Connie and Bob has some interesting elements,
with Connie basically ping ponging between the two characters for the entire film (Hayward got a
lot of kissing
practice in on this shoot). Connie has a fascinating little speech at the very tail end of the movie about how she could
split her affections so easily, and it's a rather telling one, given the historical context of the film. The other reason,
which won't be overtly spoiled here, has to do with Wedge's fate. Olive Films seems to be on a mini-tear of sorts
releasing Wayne vehicles that have one kind of interesting common thread among them (the other recent one in this
category is
Wake of the Red
Witch).
The film may strike some as shockingly racist at times (the Japanese are basically referred to not just with a series of
pejoratives but also dismissively as being less than human), but of course that was part and parcel of the American war
propaganda effort as put forth by Hollywood. Within six months of
The Fighting Seabees's release, the Allies
had stormed the beaches of Normandy and the Pacific theater was rapidly becoming a rout as well. Films like this made
sure the peanut gallery kept cheering while the
real fighters did the dirty work.
The Fighting Seabees Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation
My late father was one of the so-called Greatest Generation, and in fact the battalion he commanded helped take Utah
Beach on D-Day and went on to liberate most of the northwestern French peninsula, a campaign for which they were
awarded the Silver Star. The French magazine
Militaria did a big two part article on my father last year and I'm
thrilled that this summer I'm taking my own sons to revisit my father's route in Normandy courtesy of a tour put together by
the author of the article. For perhaps personal reasons, then, I tend to react with a certain lack of enthusiasm toward films
that over fictionalize true historic events with regard to World War II.
The Fighting Seabees was no doubt an
exciting film in 1944, but it appears awfully dated and even downright silly to modern eyes, especially since it spends so
much time setting up various conditions before the big battle finally unspools in the last act of the film. That said, Wayne,
O'Keefe and Hayward (as well as a large supporting cast that includes William Frawley and Paul Fix) are excellent. Wayne
fans will certainly want to check this film out one way or the other. This Blu-ray offers very good video and audio and with
caveats noted comes
Recommended.