Sergeant Mike (1944)
A soldier becomes quite upset when he is transferred from the highly coveted machine-gun unit to the canine corps. He begins to change his opinion when he learns that his army dog Mike was a gift from an eight-year-old whose father was killed in the war. Now the soldier becomes committed to training Mike into the best army dog there ever was.
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Wonderful character development!
Absolutely the worst movie.
Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast
In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
Nothing special in this little war sleeper, but although not bad time waster. We have seen this a billion times before, an ordinary GI story about soldiers to whom we give a dog in their warfare efforts...Forgettable at the most. This is the first feature directed by Henry Levin, for Columbia Pictures, where the film maker made most of his career. It's starring Larry Parks, another faithful Levin's actor in later swashbuckler - against the "evil" George Mac Ready - and produced by Jack Frier - never heard of him... Yes, you can miss this war dog story. It could have been a police dog one, as Edward Cahn did one time. But that's another comment.