I Cover the War!
I Cover the War!
| 04 July 1937 (USA)
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Bob Adams, ace newsreel cameraman, is told by his boss, "Get the picture---we can't screen alibis." He heads for Samari, a desert hot-bed of tribal unrest in Africa, to do just that, which includes getting footage of El Kadar, bandit and rebel leader. He gets his pictures but only after a romance with the Colonel's daughter Pamela, saving his wimpy, hacked-off brother Don from being a dupe of the gun-runners, and run-ins with spies and throat-cutting tribesman. For a finale, he saves the British Army.

Reviews
Hellen

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Nicole

I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.

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Freeman

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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Sarita Rafferty

There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.

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MartinHafer

Most of John Wayne's roles before he became a big star were mostly as B-movie cowboys. However, he made a few Bs for Universal in the late 30s and early 40s and these roles were far less cowboy and far more adventure films. While none of these were great films, they were enjoyable. However, "I Cover the War!" is one I could never find until now...and it's available through YouTube.In many ways this is similar to Clark Gable's "Somewhere I'll Find You" as the leading man plays a reporter who is in competition with his brother. In this case, John Wayne plays Bob Adams, a newsreel cinematographer and his brother, Don, is SUPPOSED to be off in college but he quit school to become a newsreel guy like his brother! Both end up in a fictional British colony in North Africa* and Bob does NOT welcome Don...he wants him to have a better and more responsible job. Ultimately, an evil man posing as a newsreel man uses Don for his own ends...and nearly is responsible for wiping out the local British outpost! Can Bob somehow figure all this out, save the day AND get the girl? It's Wayne...so what do you think?!This is an enjoyable formulaic movie with modest B-movie pretenses. In other words, it's a short film with no stars (apart from Wayne) and represents the sort of productions Wayne was doing in his pre- megastar period. Worth seeing if you love Wayne, otherwise an easy one to skip.

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gordonl56

I COVER THE WAR – 1937This Universal Pictures B-film has a 30 year old John Wayne as its headliner. Wayne and his pal, Don Barclay, are newsreel cameramen who specialize in getting film on the various wars and conflicts of the era. They are sent by their boss to cover a hot spot in the Middle East.The pair are sent to Samari, a small British Protectorate, located beside Iraq. There is trouble brewing with the local Arab tribesman and their shadowy leader, who goes by the handle, Muffadhi.On the aircraft taking them to Samari, Wayne makes friends with the only female on board. The woman, Gwen Gaze, is going to see her uncle, Sam Harris, who is the officer in charge of the small British garrison. Also on the post is, her fiancé, Pat Somerset.Once Wayne and Barclay are in Samari, they discover that the men they are replacing seem to have met with a most untimely end. Their sound and film truck has more than a few bullet holes in it. Oh well, it will not be the first time the pair have been in a dangerous spot.Also in Samari are newsreel crews from several other companies. Everyone wants to be first on the scene for that big shot. Wayne and Barclay move into the only hotel in town and wait for some news to break. Running the hotel is local slime ball, Charles Brokaw.Now arriving on the scene is Wayne's younger brother, James Bush. Bush has quit medical school and wants to become a newsreel guy like big brother. Wayne is bound and determined to ship him back to school in the States. This of course leads to more than a little animosity between the brothers.While out on patrol the British come up on the village of a friendly local tribe. Everyone, men, women and children have been killed. Now Wayne and Barclay drive up with their truck and start shooting film. The British grab the film and tell Wayne that the massacre is not to be mentioned.The British are most worried because they have found empty shell cases from a heavy machine gun. This means the bad boys have heavy weapons, and this will make the British mission more difficult.Wayne's brother gets involved with a rival newsreel crew and heads out into the desert with them. The rival crew, led by Arthur Aylesworth, have a rather lucrative sideline. They are running guns to the rebel forces. Nobody suspects the camera crews would be up to anything so diabolical.It also turns out that local hotel proprietor Brokaw is really the leader of the rebel faction. He tricks Wayne and Barclay into taking a trip out to his secret camp. He wants his victory over the British to be recorded. He has an ambush planned to wipe out the British the next time they are on patrol.Brokaw and the rebels launch their assault and soon have the British force trapped. Wayne and Barclay pull a fast one on their guards and escape in their camera truck. Both are however wounded in a hail of machine gun fire.They just barely reach town with the info about the ambush. The Brits get on the horn and call up the RAF. They send in a squadron of heavy bombers the next morning. The rebels are blown all to hell and their leader, Brokaw killed.Wayne and Barclay survive their wounds and are now recovering in the military hospital. Wayne also gets the girl, Miss Gaze as her engagement to Somerset is ended.All this is done in a quick paced 68 minute runtime. Not a world beater by any stretch, but it makes a decent low rent time-waster.The director here is Arthur Lubin. Long-time Universal Pictures helmsman Lubin worked mainly on "B" films with the odd lower end "A" film thrown in. He was the number one moneymaking director at Universal for several years. He scored with a series of early Abbot and Costello films. These, as well as several of the popular Jon Hall and Maria Montez films made Universal a bucket of cash.The cinematographer on this film was the two-time Oscar nominated Stanley Cortez. Screenplay was by writer, producer and director George (The Wolfman) Waggner. Waggner would end up directing Wayne in several later films.

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zardoz-13

John Wayne plays a newsreel photographer in director Arthur Lubin's "I Cover The War" with his usual reckless bravado. Ray Adams (John Wayne) works for an outfit headquartered in London. He winds up in the thick of the action in North Africa where the Arabs stage an uprising against British colonial authority. The British are depicted with respect, honor, and dignity, and "Operation Pacific" scenarist George Waggner and Lubin treat us to one of the earliest examples of the impact of aerial bombing. The scene in question shows the Royal Air Force flying like the cavalry to the aid of their out-numbered colleagues who are trapped by an army of Arabs. Wayne's performance here seems more easy-going than in his other films outside Universal. Lubin must have made him feel comfortable in front of the camera because he was just as affable in Lubin's "California Straight Ahead." "I Cover The War" never wears out its welcome. This madcap adventure comedy was Universal Pictures beat MGM to the big screen with this madcap adventure comedy, but it didn't score at the box office like Jack Conway's "Too Hot to Handle" with Clark Gable, Myrna Loy, and Walter Pidgeon.

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bkoganbing

John Wayne and Don Barclay are a couple of daredevil and irreverent newsreel cameramen, as adept at driving their boss crazy as Clark Gable and Walter Pidgeon were in Too Hot To Handle. They've drawn a lovely assignment, cover a war brewing in Iraq. A mysterious Red Shadow like leader named Maffadi is stirring up all kinds of problems with the British puppet government running things in Baghdad. Nobody even knows who this Maffadi character is.In addition to his newsreel assignment, Wayne's got a romance brewing with Gwen Gaze the daughter of the British colonel Sam Harris. And a younger brother played by James Bush who wants to follow the Duke into the newsreel business. Bush's eagerness to show up Wayne make him an easy mark for a couple of unscrupulous gunrunners who are arming Maffadi and his tribesmen. It's up to the Duke to straighten all things romantic, political and familial before the 68 minute running time of I Cover The War.I Cover The War is done in the same tongue in cheek vein as MGM's Too Hard To Handle. It's not as good a film, on the other hand MGM spent a lot of money on their movie, far more than Universal did on I Cover The War.Charles Brokaw who plays Maffadi is a clever and unscrupulous villain who comes pretty close to winning. It would be interesting what point of view a film like I Cover The War would take today.I Cover The War is one of six films Wayne did with Universal in 1936-1937, none of them westerns, but all of them action films in an effort to broaden his casting potential. This is neither the best or the worst of them.

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