Except the geometric logic he used has some obvious flaws, starting with using sand and the medium for sauced strawberries and the method by which he has the stewards dish it out. Assuming 24 serving of sand equals 3 quarts (or slightly more) we are left with no more than 8 servings (and likely less than that) of sand left in the can.... to that small amount can easily start to be explained away by concluding that scooping out strawberries with a ladle is going to be heaped instead of perfectly level. So now your down to a gallon container with only a few ounces of perishables down in the bottom, most of that likely the sauce that canned strawberries is packed in. Such a container is a perfect breeding ground for mold in and hot and damp environment and the contents should be wasted and the container cleaned
4 things: 1. Bogie was awesome! 2. Having ice cream and strawberries in the middle of the Pacific theatre? A true treat, indeed. Men in North Africa were eating c-rations. 3. 128 oz/24 = 5.333... ounces per serving by volume. The ladle is 8 ounces. The mystery is why there is leftover sand. And BTW, why do they have sand? 4. Queeg ate 4 helpings and was coming back for a fifth? Damn.
The most feared ship in the US Pacific Fleet during WWII was the Pacific Ice Cream barge. Why was it so feared? If you’re fighting an enemy with enough excess tonnage that they can justify an entire ship for the production and distribution of ice cream then you’ve already lost.
I gotta say, Whittaker was really impressive in maintaining his composure despite the utter absurdity of the situation. He seems like a dedicated professional sailor.
You've got to love Bogies acting in this film. To play such a petty tyrant like this. I can't imagine how many big Hollywood names turned down playing such a character as Queeq. Bogart was a real talent. My personal favourite Bogart film will always be the Treasure of the Sierra Madre.
@@paulfroelich1024 The Big Sleep? Bogart's performances in the Caine Mutiny and the Treasure of the Sierra Madre were better. In those 2 movies Bogart had dynamic shifts in his personality. In the Big Sleep, he was portraying the same type of character as he did in many other movies.
I had a supervisor in maintenance just like that. Once we had an extra amount of garbage that required extra garbage bags, and he reacted just like Queeg. Had an investigation and everything even though we told him we used extra bags due to all the garbage we had to get rid of
This scene always makes me think about the time in my basic at Ft Benning when myself and another private were on KP and riding in the back of a truck with chow, heading to a range. We enjoyed an extra helping of the chicken parm. With the PT, marching and everything, we stayed hungry. My dad was in navy transportation at Pearl Harbor when they filmed this movie. He got to take guys out to and from the ships they used for the movie.
The movie portrays a pattern of petty behavior. However, should a blind eye be taken to someone eating up the leftover strawberries? In your refrigerator at home its a non-issue but at sea every resource is measured. The problem isn't that he's looking into it but that he 1) would have had five helpings himself; and 2) he made everyone stay up and investigate while he got shut eye. The obvious answer is that the guy scooping the strawberries split them with his mates thinking no one would care.
You are correct. The ensign played by Jerry Paris later confides in his fellow officers that yes indeed, it was the mess boys who ate the strawberries. He doesn't tell the capt. because he didn't want to get them into trouble & also because he didn't want the capt. to cancel the leave he'd bee granted to see his sick wife back in the states.
Things the officers could have done: 1) Protested vigorously that sand, because of its small granules cannot compare to strawberries for proper portion comparison, and the only way to truly gauge it properly would be with actual strawberries. 2) If they were out at sea at the time, ask the Captain where he got the sand. 3) Tell the Captain that he now has a whole gallon of sand and can eat the whole thing if he wishes.
Queeg had four helpings. Y'know, ya try to root for the captain because he's got your life in his hands. But this one just tears it. Philip Francis Queeg was a danger to the Navy, the Caine and all hands. He might've been a good officer aboard the convoy escorts in the Atlantic. But the Navy should have recognized he was in no shape to sail away by himself.
This a great scene indeed....and later when Queeg gives his "defence"....Another great scene from a Naval war movie is from Mister Roberts where the officers attempt to synthesize Scotch Whisky.
What a scene, and the little details too: * Queeg (what a great name) - 4 servings * Keefer (the snake) - 3 servings * Every other officer - 2 servings * The mess boys - 1 each (and only because Ensign Keith said it was OK)
Captain Bligh had a similar fit about coconuts. It's not about the food, it's about keeping a tight grip on the ship. If you lose discipline, you lose your ship. Take from an old squid.
Except that what author Herman Wouk brought to light initially in his novel was that OCD in a commanding officer is counterproductive to morale, proper seamanship and efficient teamwork. Wouk served in the Navy during WW2 and knew a “Queeg” type.
I don't think of Queeg as a tyrant. If he were around today, he would be diagnosed with PTSD Too much pressure and too little support. Everyone has a breaking point.
This movie cemented Fred McMurray as an A list protagonist and also Bogart as a versatile , dark character only before seen in Treasure of the Sierra Madre . Thus was an outstanding film and Tarantino said he based the court scene in 'A few good men" on Bogarts character coming unraveled at the end like Col .Jessup did.
You mean Rob Reiner. He directed A Few Good Men. And yes, he admitted he filmed the close up on Nicholson's monologue the same way Bogart's close up was done in Caine Mutiny.
@@Crunkboy415 He pushed Caine and nearly paid for it with military prison.. Just simply accusing. A ranking officer of this could lead to another man's dismissal. Without evidence...stuck a stick in the eye of Naval law by challenging mutiny clause....pretty protagonist in nature
MARVELous Meyer Because it’s one more reason for the senior officers to suspect the ship’s captain is overly concerned with minutia and is showing signs of paranoia. It’s in the original novel.
@@historybuff66 Yes, I read the novel, twice. The movie only shows the "scoop of sand" part, once. Queeg really did this at least 3 times. And I believe, if Bogart just screamed in a high voice like a woman, like Queeg did, he would've won another Oscar.
Officers were able to have more than one portion of food, since they had many more responsibilities. There were 8 officers, 2 portions each (except for Keefer, he had 3 naturally) not a lot IMO. Oh, and Queeg had 4. But he was a sick man anyway.
They also loved their “Hopalong Cassidy” films. And when the Captain took that away from the crew it was getting their guts ripped out. When your out in the middle of the Pacific for a year amid tedium and boredom, peppered with air attacks and typhoons, little things like Cowboy pictures and ice cream become your shrine.
During WWII, small warships in the middle of the Pacific did not have delicacies such as strawberries on ice cream every night. Can you blame them for indulging when they were available?
@@historybuff66 Are you referring to the movie, and the novel "Mister Roberts"? Ensign Pulver in the movie is reading Roberts letter, saying the "boredom becomes a faith, and a terrible form of suicide." That's at the end of the movie, but its taken from the beginning of the novel itself, describing the crew on the "Reluctant" ( or Bucket) ship.
I know in the day of sail sand was dump on the floor of the surgeons table to keep from slipping on the blood. It’s also used as a scouring agent on copper pots
Another possible use was ash trays (well buckets) for cigarettes..... people now a days forget that back in the day public ash trays were filled with fine grain sand
@@juanmonge8 yup that pretty much what nonskid is, paint mixed with large grain sand. It would be stored separately them combined when applied..... In the book during the changing of command there is even a conversation between the two Captain about the most common make work job in the navy, chipping old paint and putting new on.
I ate the strawberries! I ate the duplicate key too! I ate the yellow dye marker! I ate the cable! I ate the target! I ate the cheese! 🎵Now I've got the yellow stain blues. 🎶
People would think this is weird behavior if done in real life, but if it was done as part of a religious ceremony people would believe it was a good thing that people had faith and rituals in their lives.
I just noticed something... he says he had 4 portions, then mumbles about 2, and... He potentially ate the rest himself and became incensed about the ship being all out of strawberries. What a mad man!
World War II ships carried sandbags for a variety of reasons - makeshift deck anchors, improvised gun positions during battles (such as a tripod machine gun), and repair of battle damage.
Humphry bogart could play good guys very powerfully . He played a defense attorney defending a young innrr city gang hoodlum...he also played a crusading newspaper editor fighting organized crime...
I have experienced factory bosses like this that have made a big issue over something trivial eg. People sneaking off to break time a few minutes early, talking in work’s time, taking a long time over a comfort break. Some of these tyrant bosses are so bureaucratic; once they get on the case they don’t know when to stop.
Did you watch the movie? Guess you missed the part where Queeg told Keefer that there was a war on and that all novel-writing on board ship would stop. Did you also miss the landing craft scene - you know, the one where the ship was being shot at? So did you watch the movie or just the RUclips outtakes?
Not necessarily. Lots of Naval Reserve junior officers were called up in WW2, many in their 30's to early 40's. Career officers (like Queeg) who had served in WW1 were often in their 40's to early 50's.
@@leestamm3187 interesting; I did not know that. In the book, DeVries is described as being in his 30s; he looks much older to me in the movie. I would just expect there would be at least one other officer who looked to be in his 20s, even late 20s- even the enlisted men looked old to me in the movie.
So, to be clear: someone was Bogarting the strawberries.
Don't Bogart that fruit, my friend.
Pass it over to me.
My favorite part of this scene is that Queeg ate double the amount of strawberries as everyone else.
In the book he eats ice cream and junk food constantly, I think as a symptom of his apparent “combat fatigue”
And would have eaten more 😂😂😂
nope the rat had three
@stevenhannigan5791 so you're saying I might have combat fatigue? I probably caught it rewatching Blackhawk Down.
Proof that rank has its privileges......
Love Bogie's obsessive concentration on the sand.
Maybe he was a fan of "The Days of Our Lives".....
@@jubalcalif9100 ahahahaha
I wonder where all that sand came from out in the middle of the ocean 🤔
The polar opposite of Anakin Skywalker, lol.
A scene that sticks in my mind, 30+ years after I first saw this film.
He proved his point through geometric logic, but he admitted having more than anyone, AND asked for more later!
Captain's prerogative. Being the captain has its perks.
Rank has it privileges. Bwaaahahahahahahahahahahaha
Except the geometric logic he used has some obvious flaws, starting with using sand and the medium for sauced strawberries and the method by which he has the stewards dish it out. Assuming 24 serving of sand equals 3 quarts (or slightly more) we are left with no more than 8 servings (and likely less than that) of sand left in the can.... to that small amount can easily start to be explained away by concluding that scooping out strawberries with a ladle is going to be heaped instead of perfectly level. So now your down to a gallon container with only a few ounces of perishables down in the bottom, most of that likely the sauce that canned strawberries is packed in. Such a container is a perfect breeding ground for mold in and hot and damp environment and the contents should be wasted and the container cleaned
He proved his point by not turning a blind eye to something so petty as a few scoops of missing strawberries 🍓.
@@MrSheckstr Different viscosity and density ...cannot make a really exact comparison....need another can of strawberries..,uh oh...
Just a masterpiece of a scene and movie .
In spite on the inane aspect of the inquiry, a great scene and great acting.
Queens stupidity was a masterpiece for real.
@@charleswest6372Paranoia and obsessive nature, not necessarily stupidity
It's not about strawberries vs sand and the volume of each. It's about the continued downward spiral of the Captain
4 things:
1. Bogie was awesome!
2. Having ice cream and strawberries in the middle of the Pacific theatre? A true treat, indeed. Men in North Africa were eating c-rations.
3. 128 oz/24 = 5.333... ounces per serving by volume. The ladle is 8 ounces. The mystery is why there is leftover sand. And BTW, why do they have sand?
4. Queeg ate 4 helpings and was coming back for a fifth? Damn.
Sand for fire
I bet you would have had 5 things except you ran out of strawberries. I demand an inquiry!
@@HanginInSF Will take care of it first thing in the morning.....
The most feared ship in the US Pacific Fleet during WWII was the Pacific Ice Cream barge.
Why was it so feared? If you’re fighting an enemy with enough excess tonnage that they can justify an entire ship for the production and distribution of ice cream then you’ve already lost.
sand could also be fore the deck
The great character actor James Edwards playing the Steward's mate here.
I gotta say, Whittaker was really impressive in maintaining his composure despite the utter absurdity of the situation. He seems like a dedicated professional sailor.
🙄
@@John-lp5xhyeah he became Patton’s orderly
So many good things in this movie..."Fred M. being so quick-witted and sarcastic.
Real acting in a fantastic film which has no peer in 2022.
Agreed.
Amazing scene. Shows perfectly how obsessed Queeg was. Lots of people like that out there unfortunately.
And allot of those people end up in positions of power too
And extremely unfortunate when the get a position of authority. AKA Unca' Joe Plugs.
@@sam.lipchutz Yeah I called him Dad,
many people are sought specifically for this characteristic, banks in particular.
I'm almost 60 years old, and watching both Whittaker and Keith, I find myself wishing I was thin like them lol!
You've got to love Bogies acting in this film. To play such a petty tyrant like this. I can't imagine how many big Hollywood names turned down playing such a character as Queeq.
Bogart was a real talent. My personal favourite Bogart film will always be the Treasure of the Sierra Madre.
Original choice to play Queeg was Richard Widmark. I just can't see Widmark playing Queeg as good as Bogie did.
@@TWS-pd5dc Yes especially the scene with him testifying and he starts to come unglued.
In my opinion, Bogart's 2 best screen performances were Captain Queeg and Fred C. Dobbs!
Favorite is his role in The Big Sleep.
@@paulfroelich1024 The Big Sleep? Bogart's performances in the Caine Mutiny and the Treasure of the Sierra Madre were better. In those 2 movies Bogart had dynamic shifts in his personality. In the Big Sleep, he was portraying the same type of character as he did in many other movies.
I had a supervisor in maintenance just like that. Once we had an extra amount of garbage that required extra garbage bags, and he reacted just like Queeg. Had an investigation and everything even though we told him we used extra bags due to all the garbage we had to get rid of
A petty king of a petty little hill
Put the supervisor in a bag too-!
Time to update that resume!
This is why I am self employed. I hate people looking over my shoulder.
what object did your soup use to demonstrate the missing bags?
@@danmason8427 Oh, I'm retired now! 👍
This scene always makes me think about the time in my basic at Ft Benning when myself and another private were on KP and riding in the back of a truck with chow, heading to a range. We enjoyed an extra helping of the chicken parm. With the PT, marching and everything, we stayed hungry. My dad was in navy transportation at Pearl Harbor when they filmed this movie. He got to take guys out to and from the ships they used for the movie.
Bogart was an amazing actor.
The movie portrays a pattern of petty behavior. However, should a blind eye be taken to someone eating up the leftover strawberries? In your refrigerator at home its a non-issue but at sea every resource is measured. The problem isn't that he's looking into it but that he 1) would have had five helpings himself; and 2) he made everyone stay up and investigate while he got shut eye. The obvious answer is that the guy scooping the strawberries split them with his mates thinking no one would care.
Is anyone else craving strawberries and ice cream right about now?
Going out for some today
I'm craving a bowl of sand actually
Missing frozen strawberries 🍓 are more important than the running of a warship.
Not uncommon in the military. Saw stupidity like it in Army.
In a middle of a war too
@sidney dent not every second of war is combat, you know that, right?
If memory serves, the mess boys ate the rest.
You are correct. The ensign played by Jerry Paris later confides in his fellow officers that yes indeed, it was the mess boys who ate the strawberries. He doesn't tell the capt. because he didn't want to get them into trouble & also because he didn't want the capt. to cancel the leave he'd bee granted to see his sick wife back in the states.
They each ate a ton of ice cream and strawberries lol damnn
Queeg had four portions and he's complaining about not getting a fifth. 😒
@@anthonyvasquezactor rank has benefits
Things the officers could have done: 1) Protested vigorously that sand, because of its small granules cannot compare to strawberries for proper portion comparison, and the only way to truly gauge it properly would be with actual strawberries. 2) If they were out at sea at the time, ask the Captain where he got the sand. 3) Tell the Captain that he now has a whole gallon of sand and can eat the whole thing if he wishes.
Right about now, Maryk is asking himself, "why didn't I just refuse to accept that damned can of strawberries?"
Queeg had four helpings.
Y'know, ya try to root for the captain because he's got your life in his hands.
But this one just tears it.
Philip Francis Queeg was a danger to the Navy, the Caine and all hands.
He might've been a good officer aboard the convoy escorts in the Atlantic.
But the Navy should have recognized he was in no shape to sail away by himself.
I don't like strawberries. But I tore that ice cream up!
The way Whittaker portions out the sand helpings is hypnotic ! 🙂
This a great scene indeed....and later when Queeg gives his "defence"....Another great scene from a Naval war movie is from Mister Roberts where the officers attempt to synthesize Scotch Whisky.
What does whiskey taste like? Do you know it tastes like to me? Iodine
Have you tried the recipe? Give it a try.@@Willsey
I would be embarrassed and ashamed if I had to subject people to something as inconsequential as this.
Bogie was an excellent actor ...underrated
my favorite actor ever
Bogie wasn’t underrated, he reached the top as a movie star.
He was no Huntz Hall, but Bogie was indeed one gifted actor.....
Bogart was in no way underrated.
Dumbass comment
Would have been funnier if they used real strawberries and ice cream with Bogart polishing off each bowl as it was prepared.
I liked when Jack Lemmon threw the captain's potted coconut palm overboard in Mr. Roberts. Cagney as another overbearing Captain.
Having watched the 2023 version of this, it's wild how much Kiefer Sutherland is aping Bogart's mannerisms and voice as Queeg.
Make the crew eat sand until the guilty person is caught.
What a scene, and the little details too:
* Queeg (what a great name) - 4 servings
* Keefer (the snake) - 3 servings
* Every other officer - 2 servings
* The mess boys - 1 each (and only because Ensign Keith said it was OK)
Captain Bligh had a similar fit about coconuts.
It's not about the food, it's about keeping a tight grip on the ship. If you lose discipline, you lose your ship.
Take from an old squid.
Except that what author Herman Wouk brought to light initially in his novel was that OCD in a commanding officer is counterproductive to morale, proper seamanship and efficient teamwork. Wouk served in the Navy during WW2 and knew a “Queeg” type.
The crew basically disliked Queeg and Keefer sowed the seeds of mutiny. A great film, ignoring the needless love story.
If the dessert had been Jello, this whole unfortunate affair may have been avoided.....
Well then the mess cooks would have dipped into the jello instead of strawberries.
"What if the enemy stole our jello?"
"We'd win the war!" - MASH
Fted Macmurry conveys perfect range of emotions...
A classic !! Loved this movie. !
I don't think of Queeg as a tyrant. If he were around today, he would be diagnosed with PTSD Too much pressure and too little support. Everyone has a breaking point.
My teenage son recently misplaced a mason jar mug he likes to drink out of. He was just as obsessively analytical as Queeg trying to find the thing.
This movie cemented Fred McMurray as an A list protagonist and also Bogart as a versatile , dark character only before seen in Treasure of the Sierra Madre .
Thus was an outstanding film and Tarantino said he based the court scene in 'A few good men" on Bogarts character coming unraveled at the end like Col .Jessup did.
Tarantino?
You mean Rob Reiner. He directed A Few Good Men. And yes, he admitted he filmed the close up on Nicholson's monologue the same way Bogart's close up was done in Caine Mutiny.
@@TWS-pd5dc Thanks for the correction...
McMurray wasn't really a protagonist in the film.
@@Crunkboy415 He pushed Caine and nearly paid for it with military prison.. Just simply accusing. A ranking officer of this could lead to another man's dismissal. Without evidence...stuck a stick in the eye of Naval law by challenging mutiny clause....pretty protagonist in nature
Eh, Captain, strawberries and sand do not have equal volume. Your argument is flawed.
Zoltan Korda seriously why is this even a plot line 😂
Of course it’s faulty logic, Queeg is nuts.
MARVELous Meyer Because it’s one more reason for the senior officers to suspect the ship’s captain is overly concerned with minutia and is showing signs of paranoia. It’s in the original novel.
🤫 dont tell anybody!
@@historybuff66 Yes, I read the novel, twice. The movie only shows the "scoop of sand" part, once. Queeg really did this at least 3 times. And I believe, if Bogart just screamed in a high voice like a woman, like Queeg did, he would've won another Oscar.
The Queeg 5000 program from Red Dwarf defiantly modelled from the the Cain Mutiny.
Great scene
If Don Knotts had played one of the officers, we may have heard some one in the room yell out, "Attaboy, Luther !"
THIS IS WHERE GEOMETRIC PRECISION WORKED IN THE DEFENSE OF CAPT QUEEGE,S SANITY.BUT IN REALITY THE MESS MATES ATE ALL THE STRAWBERRIES.
ZACTLY
Why y’all screaming aka using caps
Reminds me of a jerkass co-worker of mine, always paranoid that people against him, always thinking of silly conspiracy theories.
According to the novel, Queeg had all of that sand put back into the lard can, twice, and was doled out into the the tureen again, twice over.
"There aint no more straw-brerries"
I ate the strawberries.
These guys must really love ice cream, geez.
Officers were able to have more than one portion of food, since they had many more responsibilities. There were 8 officers, 2 portions each (except for Keefer, he had 3 naturally) not a lot IMO. Oh, and Queeg had 4. But he was a sick man anyway.
They also loved their “Hopalong Cassidy” films. And when the Captain took that away from the crew it was getting their guts ripped out. When your out in the middle of the Pacific for a year amid tedium and boredom, peppered with air attacks and typhoons, little things like Cowboy pictures and ice cream become your shrine.
During WWII, small warships in the middle of the Pacific did not have delicacies such as strawberries on ice cream every night. Can you blame them for indulging when they were available?
@@historybuff66 Are you referring to the movie, and the novel "Mister Roberts"? Ensign Pulver in the movie is reading Roberts letter, saying the "boredom becomes a faith, and a terrible form of suicide." That's at the end of the movie, but its taken from the beginning of the novel itself, describing the crew on the "Reluctant" ( or Bucket) ship.
@@bobbyfrancis8957 No, I referring to Herman Wouk’s original novel of “The Caine Mutiny”.
Mmmmm . . . frozen strawberries my favorite !!!!!!!
Why was sand on a boat?
I know in the day of sail sand was dump on the floor of the surgeons table to keep from slipping on the blood. It’s also used as a scouring agent on copper pots
Another possible use was ash trays (well buckets) for cigarettes..... people now a days forget that back in the day public ash trays were filled with fine grain sand
@@MrSheckstr Those are strong reasons. Congrats!
For firefighting. Or maybe traction on slippery decks.
@@juanmonge8 yup that pretty much what nonskid is, paint mixed with large grain sand. It would be stored separately them combined when applied.....
In the book during the changing of command there is even a conversation between the two Captain about the most common make work job in the navy, chipping old paint and putting new on.
He's so focused on those scoops, lol.
There is *one* degree of separation between Humphrey Bogart and Chuck Norris. Any guesses?
It's Lee Marvin. He's in this and in Delta Force with Chuck Norris
@@Rhubba good job 👍
How can you measure strawberries using sand? The strawberries take up more space. Duh.
Well the whole point was to showcase Queeg’s paranoia and illogic.
because the ladle is the same size regardless of what is in it
Nice conversation!
I ate the strawberries!
I ate the duplicate key too!
I ate the yellow dye marker!
I ate the cable!
I ate the target!
I ate the cheese!
🎵Now I've got the yellow stain blues. 🎶
Mr. Keefer?
Fifteen, Captain.
Problem solved.
those damn strawberries betrayed him too, lol.
Where did the sand come from?
Kept on board for fire supression or oil spills.
From the litter boxes for the "mouser" cats each ship had back then to control the rat population......
Apparently Fred C. Dobbs joined the Navy.
Ha ! That's rich ! 🤣
Sand is a Different Component than…Strawberries! Logic
But he wass absolutely right! Harding finds out later that, the mess boys ate them but he doesn't snitch on them!
Sand does NOT equal strawberries by volume and mass. 🍦🍓⚓
People would think this is weird behavior if done in real life, but if it was done as part of a religious ceremony people would believe it was a good thing that people had faith and rituals in their lives.
I just noticed something... he says he had 4 portions, then mumbles about 2, and... He potentially ate the rest himself and became incensed about the ship being all out of strawberries. What a mad man!
or, after all the officers had their double shares and more, the mess stewards knowing that there was not enough for another meal, ate them.
my question is where do you find a gallon of sand on a boat in the middle of the ocean
Wouldn't it have been better if, they just used water?! Wouldn't that be more comparable to the liquid strawberries,than the sand would've!?
The real question is where do you get sand on a ship
World War II ships carried sandbags for a variety of reasons - makeshift deck anchors, improvised gun positions during battles (such as a tripod machine gun), and repair of battle damage.
@@nuancolar7304 ah that makes sense thanks
For the litter boxes for the "mouser" cats each ship had back then to control the rat population......
Why do they have a bucket of sand on a navy ship in the first place?
For fighting fires.
It was a gallon lard can filled with sand
@@josephthemann1174 Where did the sand come from? Why would they have sand on a navy ship?
For the litter boxes for the "mouser" cats each ship had back then to control the rat population......
@@TheStapleGunKid it’s for fighting grease fires
So that's Navy life. Wonder how many grunts in foxholes got ice cream and frozen strawberries.
Humphry bogart could play good guys very powerfully . He played a defense attorney defending a young innrr city gang hoodlum...he also played a crusading newspaper editor fighting organized crime...
I have experienced factory bosses like this that have made a big issue over something trivial eg. People sneaking off to break time a few minutes early, talking in work’s time, taking a long time over a comfort break. Some of these tyrant bosses are so bureaucratic; once they get on the case they don’t know when to stop.
Y I had my own business. Fed up with idiots.
@@charleswest6372 A good boss turns a blind eye; he or she didn’t see me and I never admit to it if a jobsworth wants to interrogate me.
When ur roommates eat ur food
1:21 Dennis the Menace dad
Typical mess boy shenanigans causing trouble for the whole crew.
a thief on a ship cannot be abided. It's ....
Aliens did it
24 ladles worth? Maybe each ladle was over filled?
officers faulk they senior officer should talk to the cap in private explainig how absurd situation is...
Where did they get sand, on a ship at sea??
don't think strawberries are like sand
Where did they get the sand?
Frozen strawberries taste plain and bland to me. May require doctoring up.
What about the ice-cream? . OR, did the 'strawberries thief' eat them 'straight'?
They were strawberry addicts. They mainlined them .
This is how Ellen runs her house!
Rob Curran I doubt that she would ever share any strawberries or ice cream.
Who said the strawberries were frozen ?
Queeg weird name
Weird actions
OandA
How come that one guy is armed? Isn't this supposed to be during peacetime?
this is during the war
He’s armed because he is the Master at Arms on duty....
Its during WWII
@@jimjackson8718 No, he's the Officer of the Deck (OOD). They always had sidearms while on watch.
Did you watch the movie? Guess you missed the part where Queeg told Keefer that there was a war on and that all novel-writing on board ship would stop. Did you also miss the landing craft scene - you know, the one where the ship was being shot at?
So did you watch the movie or just the RUclips outtakes?
Blue Bloods brought me here. 😂
Bogart doing his Joe Biden impression
Joy Behar brought me here.
She brought me here also.😄
I hope she gave you cab fare to get home, at least.
Blue Bloods brought me here
Joe Biden in the White House kitchen.
Bad casting. Everyone is too old.
Not necessarily. Lots of Naval Reserve junior officers were called up in WW2, many in their 30's to early 40's. Career officers (like Queeg) who had served in WW1 were often in their 40's to early 50's.
@@leestamm3187 interesting; I did not know that. In the book, DeVries is described as being in his 30s; he looks much older to me in the movie. I would just expect there would be at least one other officer who looked to be in his 20s, even late 20s- even the enlisted men looked old to me in the movie.
@@tommym321 Robert Francis, who played Ensign Kieth, was 24.
No me
You aren't first
Humphrey Bogart would’ve been a better actor if he had opened fully his mouth and enunciated his words instead of annoying mumbling.
He had a problem with his palate it wasn’t laziness.
Hmmm…interesting.