Rosie the Riveter

1944
Rosie the Riveter
6.4| 1h15m| en| More Info
Released: 08 April 1944 Released
Producted By: Republic Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

In this romantic wartime comedy, four female defense plant workers share a house with four male workers. The situation is on the up and up as the men and women work different shifts and they are only making due because there is a housing shortage. Unfortunately, they soon begin to fight about who gets the house during certain hours. Romance ensues.

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MartinHafer "Rosie the Riveter" is a cute B-movie that is set during WWII. It stars Jane Frazee as the title character, a young lady who goes to work at a defense plant but has a serious problem finding a place to sleep. This actually was a serious problem during the war, as many small towns boomed--filling with thousands of workers and not enough housing for them all. It's the subject of several comedies of the day, such as "The More the Merrier" as well as this film. Well, Rosie and her friend come up with an interesting solution--share the room with a couple guys. The guys will get it one shift, they will get it the next. However, Rosie's very prim and proper boyfriend would not approve so she spends much of the film hiding it from the guy. Additionally, there is a LOT of tension between the various roommates. How it's all resolved is cute and enjoyable. Just understand...this is not nor was it intended to be anything more than a low-budget comedy with modest pretensions. It does the trick but is not exactly what I'd call a must-see film. Cute and enjoyable.
jarrodmcdonald-1 ROSIE THE RIVETER-- a musical Republic produced in 1943--features one of my favorite singing stars from the war years, Jane Frazee. Yesterday I checked the Paramount Vault page on YouTube for new uploads. Paramount controls the Republic library. And to my great pleasure, ROSIE had just been uploaded. They have done a perfect job with the restoration.The script is well written-- a hilarious romantic comedy set-up with Jane and her girlfriend Vera Vague sharing a room in a boarding house with two single men. The way the writers get around the production code is quite clever!The gals of course wind up battling and falling in love with the guys. Vera's deadpan deliveries are wonderful; there's a lot of witty dialogue from beginning to end; a marvelous supporting cast that includes Maude Eburne and Carl (Alfalfa) Switzer as a teenager. Plus, there's a great scene where the gals have no clothes on and are locked out of the boarding house in the rain and get picked up by police (you have to see it!)..and a rousing finale filmed at an aviation factory. So much to make it enjoyable.
zardoz-13 During World War II, the U.S. Government wanted Hollywood to produce movies that would help win the war. It is doubtful that "The Coconuts" director Joseph Santley's "Rosie the Riveter" could have made much of a contribution to morale. This lightweight, 75-minute, black & white, musical comedy about the widespread housing shortage in California deals with two guys and two girls who encounter complications sharing a bedroom with two beds on a rotating basis. When Rosalind "Rosie" Warren (Jane Frazee of "Buck Privates") and Vera Watson (Barbara Jo Allen as Vera Vague of "Melody Ranch")compete for the last room in town with Charlie Doran (Frank Albertson) and Kelly Kennedy (Frank Jenks), landlady Granma Quill(Maude Eburne of "The Vampire Bat" lets them rent the same room on the condition that they occupy it when the others are at work in an aircraft construction factory. The housing shortage constituted a genuine problem during hostilities as other World War II films such as "The More The Merrier" and "Pillow to Post" depicted. Actually, Granma's grand children, Buzz Prouty (Carl 'Alfalfa' Switzer of "The War Against Mrs. Hadley") and Mabel Prouty (Louise Erickson of "Meet Miss Bobby Socks")rented the room to both the guys and the gals without informing either their grandmother or their Aunt Stella (Ellen Lowe of "Pilot # 5")about their arrangements. Granma decides that the four can rent the room because they work on different shifts. The guys work the graveyard shift while the gals work the daylight shift. Eventually, Charlie and Rosier become romantically involved through a series of misadventures. Rosier runs into trouble when her boyfriend, Wayne Calhoun (Frank Fenton of "Minesweeper"), inquires into her living arrangements. He brings over a framed painting to hang in her bedroom and the girls scramble to clear Charlie and Kelly out of the room before the jealous Wayne learns about their secret.Interestingly, since the government prohibited Hollywood from showing anything that would furnish the enemy with information, "Rosie the Riveter" doesn't show anything that would be considered confidential. There are some brief scenes of Rosie and Vera wielding a rivet gun on the tail section of a bomber. Virtually everything in "Rosie the Riveter" is forgettable despite its attractive and sympathetic cast. Most of the action transpires either in the bedroom or at a police station. The high point of the hilarity occurs when the two girls come home in the rain from a dance and realize that they cannot get out in the downpour with their fur coats on without ruining them. Instead, they strip down to the slips and try to get in, only to discover that they have been not only locked up but also have locked their house keys in the car. Predictably, one of the guys slips into a uniform for the concluding scene. As a celebration of the patriot spirit of women in the workforce during World War II, "Rosie the Riveter" qualifies as trivial.
Leslie Howard Adams Defense plant workers Rosalind "Rosie" Warren (Jane Frazee) and her friend Vera Watson (Barbara Jo Allen as Vera Vague) must share, on a rotating schedule, the town's last available rental-room with Charlie Doran (Frank Albertson) and Kelly Kennedy (Frank Jenks), who work the other shift at the plant. The landlady, Grandma Quill (Maude Eburne), also has her grandchildren, Buzz Prouty (Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer) and Mabel Prouty (Louise Erickson), and her daughter Stella Prouty (Ellen Lowe)---who is on the outs with her husband Clem (Lloyd Corrigan)---living with her. Rosie doesn't tell her fiancé, Wayne Calhoun (Frank Fenton),about the living arrangements, and is also plotting with Vera to re-unite the Proutys. Rosie pawns the engagement ring Wayne gave her for money for Clem and Stella. Rosie and Charlie fall in love and get their picture in the paper. Wayne huffingly breaks the engagement and wants his ring returned. Jane Frazee sings three songs and Charlie joins the Marines...and it is a lot better than it reads here.