The Spirit of Culver (1939) Poster

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7/10
About What You'd Expect
Maliejandra30 May 2014
It's the Depression; we're greeted with scenes of men and kids jumping from train to train, standing in breadlines trying to get by. These kids are tough, world-weary brats with smart mouths but good hearts underneath. Jackie Cooper stands in line for soup and bread and gets himself a job working with Tubby (Andy Devine) as a dishwasher. What he lacks in manners he makes up for in hard work, and soon Tubby learns that this kid is Doc Allen's son, a medic he knew during the war. Tom (Cooper) carries his father's medal around, "But you can't eat it," he says. Tubby's respect for Doc Allen leads him to get Tom a scholarship to go to Culver, a military school where he can excel.

Tom takes time to warm up to the other kids, especially his roommate Bob (Freddie Bartholomew) but when he does he does wholeheartedly and soon he's a "gee whiz"-saying, uniform-wearing, cake-sharing member of the gang. And then Doc Allen shows up looking dazed and hungry to Tubby's station, and a wrench is thrown in the whole set-up.

If you like child stars and MGM's brand of idealism, you'll love this movie. It isn't a classic but it isn't bad, and it features some great stars.
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7/10
Cute if you like Jackie and Freddie
HotToastyRag29 June 2020
During the heart of the Great Depression, Andy Devine runs a soup kitchen for homeless kids. His heart goes out to one tough boy, Jackie Cooper, when he learns his father was an old army buddy who died in the war and received the Medal of Honor. He talks to his friends that run a military academy and they agree to award Jackie a scholarship to honor his father. Jackie's not too keen on the idea of charity, but he is glad to have a roof over his head and three meals a day.

His roommate at school is Freddie Bartholomew, someone very excited to be there but sometimes ridiculed because of his English upbringing. Gene Reynolds is another student, and he's very homesick. Everyone dislikes Jackie, but when he starts to change his mind and appreciate his education and training, is it too late for his fellow cadets to change their minds about him?

This is a cute, heartwarming movie if you're a fan of the two adorable child actors Jackie and Freddie. Freddie still has his sweet innocence and Jackie still has his tearful pout, but they're both a little older in this movie. Freddie has a huge crush on a nightclub singer, and Jackie enters the boxing ring to settle a dispute. If you like this one, check out The Devil Is a Sissy or Dinky next!
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6/10
They'll teach him honor if they have to beat it in to him.
mark.waltz26 November 2020
Warning: Spoilers
It's your typical tough boy tamed story with a much more believable performance by Jackie Cooper than Mickey Rooney in the similar "Boy's Town". Cooper is first seen as one of many teen vagabonds, an orphan whose father he believes died in the military, losing his mother soon afterwards, and very embittered by it. Thanks to the good will of soup kitchen operator Andy Devine, Cooper ends up with a scholarship to Culver where he ends up with roommate Freddy Bartholomew, a prim and proper British lad.

Cooper is rebellious, and doesn't follow the honor system, basically being the bully he's always been and ultimately ignored by the other students. But he quickly turns around and proves himself to be a good cadet, finding out the shocking truth about his pop and aiding others in need as he matures. There's also Jackie Moran as a sensitive young cadet whose loss of his own mother wins Cooper's sympathy and Walter Tetley as the rambunctious cadet who seems to be a younger male version of comic Patsy Kelly with his bellowing speech.

In spite of the sentimentality of this film, it is actually really enjoyable and features believable, honest performances. At times, it does escape into something cartoonish but then returns to the humanity that it had established at the beginning with the lovable character played by Devine. His character is a heart and soul of the film, a complete contrast to all those overly enthusiastic sidekicks in dozens of Universal programmers of the early 40's.

Cooper and Bartholomew, reunited from several MGM films, play well off each other, and the way Cooper is allowed to change is far more believable than Rooney's over the top performance in the more well-known "Boy's Town". Tetley's presence will delight fans of the Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoon fans when they realize that he was the voice of Sherman from the Mr. Peabody segments. Kathryn Kane provides a brief feminine distraction from the masculinity of the main story and even gets a little musical number. But this is about the boys, and they are worth following.
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