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Caught in the Draft (1941)

Caught in the Draft finds Bob Hope as an egotistical movie star who may be subject to the draft so he’s going to do the unthinkable, get married and get a deferment. But you’d think the last person he’d try that with is a daughter from a military family. Yet Hope pursues Dorothy Lamour in his usual wolfish Hope way, but the net result is he winds up still single and actually enlisting in the army when a Sting like con game backfires on him.

But I will say Hope has loyal friends, his agent Lynne Overman and general factotum Eddie Bracken also enlist. To say they don’t exactly have the makings of Audie Murphy is to put it mildly. Still what they won’t do for a pal. I know I didn’t have friends like that back in the day.

Caught in the Draft has the usual run of service comedy situations and Hope while not as hopeless a soldier as Lou Costello, still he gets his usual laughs. It’s a dated film in the sense we haven’t had a draft in this country for almost 40 years, but I still think audiences can appreciate it today.

Look for good supporting performances by Clarence Kolb as Lamour’s father and Hope’s commanding officer and Paul Hurst as the eternal tough training sergeant.