Carry on, Sergeant! explained

Carry on, Sergeant!
Director:Bruce Bairnsfather
Producer:Bruce Bairnsfather
Music:Ernest Dainty
Cinematography:Bert Cann
Runtime:117 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:English (silent)

Carry On, Sergeant! is a 1928 Canadian World War I drama, and is considered to be one of the earliest Canadian feature-length motion pictures. Costing to make, it certainly was the most expensive.

Plot

Carry On, Sergeant! is the story of four friends who join the army to fight in the First World War. After years of trench warfare, one of the men (Hugh Buckler) meets a French woman (Louise Cardi) working the taverns. He sleeps with her, but is overcome with guilt and is later killed in battle. His wife (Nancy Ann Hargreaves) back home believes he died a hero and remembers him with love. This sentimental film, which doesn't back away from the unpleasant – it was harshly criticized for the affair between a Canadian soldier and a 'prostitute' – was released at the end of the silent era and after only a brief theatrical run it disappeared from view. It was revived in the 1970s when the National Archives of Canada struck a new print.[1] [2]

Release

The film premiered on 10 November 1928, in the Regent Theatre in Toronto.

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Wise. Wyndham. Take One's Essential Guide to Canadian Film. 2001. University of Toronto Press. Toronto. 0-8020-8398-6. 38.
  2. Censored! Only in Canada by Malcolm Dean, Virgo Press, 1981.