We're in the Legion Now (1936) Poster

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5/10
Who would have thought of pairing Reginald Denny with Vince Barnett?!
planktonrules22 July 2016
Reginald Denny was a dandy British actor...and the epitome of sophistication in films. Vince Barnett was an American supporting actor....and the epitome of a boob or jerk. In style, they were about as different as different can be. So why did the producers of "We're In the Legion Now" put these two guys in a film and make them buddies? It's certainly strange...and reason enough to give the film a view.

In this comedy, the pair are both crooks--rich ex-bootleggers living it up in Europe. Dan (Denny) and Spike (Barnett) play exactly the sort of characters you'd expect...sophisticated and dopey, uncouth comic relief, though Dan is supposed to be an American! Things are getting rather hot for the duo and so to hide out they come up with an insane idea...to hide in the Foreign Legion! So, for the next five years, they'll be completely incognito in North Africa! In many ways, the film actually plays a bit like an Abbott & Costello or a Laurel & Hardy movie (both did Foreign Legion pics). In other words, they're insubordinate idiots who are constantly in trouble with their commanding officers. And, being crooks, they also aren't above offering bribes or shooting their way out of tricky situations. Eventually, all this catches up to them and they are sentenced to prison. Can they STILL manage to somehow make good?

While I wouldn't consider this a great or especially memorable film, it also was never intended as anything much more than a cheap B-movie--running only 56 minutes. Oddly, however, the picture was originally in color--something you'd never expect for a B. The version I watched on YouTube, however, was in black & white....and not an especially great print as well. As far as the plot goes, it's not especially memorable (though it has its moments) nor offensive and the biggest strength of the film is its strangeness. In other words, you might just want to see it because the two leads are so incredibly mismatched.
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6/10
Worth seeing! Just!
JohnHowardReid26 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Producer: George A. Hirliman. Executive producer: Edward L. Alperson.

Copyright 13 January 1937 by Grand National Films, Inc. No recorded New York opening. U.S. release through Regal Film Distributors: 16 January 1937. 56 minutes.

Re-issue title: The Rest Cure.

SYNOPSIS: Two bungling, petty bootleggers flee to Paris after the repeal of Prohibition. In order to escape a hired assassin, they join the French Foreign Legion.

NOTES: Magnacolor (or Hirlicolor, as it was billed in some ads) later changed its spots to Cinecolor. COMMENT: Aside from the use of an early two-strip color system called Magnacolor (the muted tones of which lend some pleasing effects to these otherwise tiresomely knockabout and/or rather strained proceedings), this Grand National "B" has little to recommend it. Reginald Denny, forsaking his usual "silly ass" roles, plays the hero with only a feigned enthusiasm, while Vince Barnett (indulged in gross close-ups by writer/director Crane Wilbur) impishly over-enacts the comic relief.

The girls are none too well treated either. Silent star Esther Ralston looks pinched and plain, Claudia Dell acts as a well-dressed nonentity, whilst Eleanor Hunt, in a smallish role (that we wish were larger), manages to exhibit a fair degree of charm despite Stengler's unflattering photography. Robert Frazer seems uncomfortable in his role, although he does what he can with his lousy lines and the script's thoroughly predictable situations. As it happens, however, the acting honors belong firmly to Rudolph Anders who, almost singlehandedly, makes the movie worth seeing. (Admittedly, his bribe-taking sergeant has some piquant material to work with, but he shines it up no end).

Behind-the-camera credits do not inspire confidence. The direction is scrappy, the film editing inept, and the use of real locations decidedly odd. We assume that the studio acquired some cheap travelogue footage and built the story (such as it is) around it.

Helen Rose receives a credit for designing the dance costumes, but don't blink. This sequence lasts about twenty seconds.

A companion piece is Captain Calamity.
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Lightweight Foreign Legion Comedy in early color process!
trw333200021 March 2002
Here is a very obscure Grand National Picture filmed in an early 2-color process. 20 years ago, I had the good fortune of owning a 35mm nitrate color print of this film under its original title: "We're in the Legion Now"

Reginald Denny had a long career in silent pictures, talkies and tv. Always the inimitable English gentleman, he plays off the illiterate and bumbling Vince Barnett very well, as a couple of American gangsters on the run wind up in Morocco in the French Foreign Legion. They're in the stockade more than they are out during the story as it unfolds. Barnett appeared in countless films as comic relief in westerns, gangster pictures and comedies.

Since most of the Grand National library dispersed to the four winds in the 1940s, it is unclear if this picture survives in its original color version. Hirlicolor was a play on words using the name of George Hirlman, an executive and producer at the studio. The actual color process is Magnacolor aka Cinecolor, which utilized 2 basic colors to combine to make the picture, unlike Technicolor's later 3-color process. The result is a pleasant warm color tone you would associate with the sun on the desert. Late 1940s 16mm television prints were printed in black & white.
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3/10
Road to Morocco
wes-connors5 October 2010
In Paris on a bender, debonair Reginald Denny (as Dan Linton) wakes up next to bald-headed Vince Barnett (as Spike Conover). Mr. Denny notes that Mr. Barnett has taken the bride's side of the bed. The heterosexual pals are American gangsters on the run, and join the "French Foreign Legion" to hide out from a mob boss. They needle each other, and admire the same beautiful women. First up are blonde sisters Esther Ralston (as Louise) and Claudia Dell (as Yvonne).

After being stationed in Morocco for some time, Denny and Barnett begin to date entertainer Eleanor Hunt (as Honey Evans), who has those eye-catching seams running up the back of her thighs. Possibly noticing the movie wasn't working as a comedy, it becomes a serious drama when Denny and Barnett are sentenced to labor camp. Then, they find themselves playing dramatic war heroes. It's directed by silent screen star Crane Wilbur, in long gone "Magnacolor".

*** We're in the Legion Now (12/13/36) Crane Wilbur ~ Reginald Denny, Vince Barnett, Esther Ralston, Claudia Dell
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8/10
A very interesting piece of early color film history
cynthiahost9 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I happen to be a fan of early color and experimental odd color classic films.Years ago a friend of mine loan me a v.h.s version of this film.It was on the Sinister cinema label.The tape had a sound glitch, not the sound of the film itself,just the video.It was good movie.Years later I notice some one had it on you tube.The color was gone.I had started to wonder what happen to it.Well I finally found the d.v.d version of it from sinister cinema.No sound glitch and taken from the original 35 mm nitrate color print.It was shot in a two color process call Magna color, another venison of cine color.This process was being used ,in the same year, at republic pictures with their bigger budget Bold Caballero.This movie stars two veterans of early Technicolor productions.Eleanor Hunt,who played Mary in the 1930 musical film production Whoopee, and Claudia Dell, who starred ,in the now black n white,Sweet Kitty Belair.Reginald Denny and Vincent Barnett,who was in a Star is born ,a year later,play crooks running way from a gang in New York ,who is after them.They hide in Paris.In a street café they meet Esther Ralston and Claudia Dell,home Ralston is Married to Captain of the foreign Legion,played by Robert Frazer.When two of the gangster rudely join the other three,Reginald asks Claudia what the best place to go to escape from the city.She states the desert.As a joke she suggest the foreign legion.Both Reginald and Vince realize this is the best way to hide from the gang,but it no cup of tea.They get themselves so much in trouble ,especially with Honey Evans.played by hunt .In the ends The two end up in prison dealing with a sadist guard ,who looks like that actor I seen in the little rascals.Well after the prisoners beat him up and they try to get rid of Frazer and Claudia and Esther,An escaped criminal with his tribe,played by Francisco Maran,are attacking all of them.The two Barnett and Denny save the day.When this film was released there were very few color features being produced.Surprisingly from a low budget company,Grand National,although they did do a James Cagney Musical.This was probably the studio's only color feature film they produce.The d.v.d contains a trailer from another feature produced by Grand national ,about the Navy,23 an 1 half hours leave,1937. 05/10/13
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