Girl Crazy Page #3

Synopsis: Rich kid Danny Churchill (Rooney) has a taste for wine, women and song, but not for higher education. So his father ships him to an all-male college out West where there's not supposed to be a female for miles. But before Danny arrives, he spies a pair of legs extending out from under a stalled roadster. They belong to the Dean's granddaughter, Ginger Gray (Garland), who is more interested in keeping the financially strapped college open than falling for Danny's romantic line. At least at first...
Production: WARNER BROTHERS PICTURES
 
IMDB:
7.0
PASSED
Year:
1943
99 min
548 Views


- Well, do you ever get...?

Then you go to classes until 10 minutes

of 1, dinner until 1:30.

Then you have another 15 minutes

to do anything.

Like playing 18 holes of golf.

Then in the afternoon,

you work in the laboratory...

...or in the mine shaft or with the

livestock, depending on your courses.

- Don't you get...?

- Until 5:
45.

Then come back to your room

for supper.

After supper, you study till 9:30

and then you go to bed.

In a wheelchair, no doubt.

- So you see, it's a pretty full day.

- I'd say so.

Except Saturday, we have

the afternoon off from 3 till 6.

Oh, goody, goody.

And at night we see movies,

sometimes talkies.

Talkies?

Well, that sort of rounds out

the whole week, doesn't it?

Yeah. I'll go take a shower now

before I do anything else...

I forgot to tell you...

...the showers are out back,

there aren't too many of them.

You have to write your name

on a slip of paper...

...and put it in the box in the hall.

The monitor checks it

when you can use them.

The best day is Saturday.

Good morning.

Hey, come on.

Hey, you gotta get up.

- Up and at them.

- No, no, no.

- Come on.

- Look. I'll tell them. I'll tell them.

- Fine. When he gets here, I'll tell them.

- Come on. Come on. Up you get.

Yeah, 48 states in America and

I have to wake up in a bureau drawer.

- What was that?

- The gong. You get used to it.

- Yeah. Like hanging.

- Come on, will you get up there?

- Fine. I'm up.

- Come on.

I jump right out of bed, see?

Okay. Fine.

What, no Indians?

- Hi, you lads.

- Hello, Bud.

- How are you?

- How did you sleep?

Sleep? I hardly yawned.

Well, wait till you get your lungs full

of some of that good fresh air.

- Here you are. Climb into these.

- What are these?

We're going on an all-day ride.

Do it every two weeks.

- Well, where to?

- Nowhere in particular.

We ride up into the hills

and spend the night...

...and we come home in the morning.

Well, if it's all the same to you fellows,

I think I'll just sit this one out.

- No, you don't.

- Come on.

Come on, Dan. Come on, Dan.

Come on, fellows, let's go.

Hey, wait a minute.

Wait a minute, will you?

How do I look?

You look great, old man.

Yeah, well, if you bump into

Buffalo Bill, tell him not to worry.

That's a good one.

Hey, where'd everybody go?

Hey, who's riding that buck?

- Good morning.

- Hello, Rags.

- Ain't you coming along?

- As soon as I finish the mail.

Hurry. There's no point to these rides

unless you barbecue them steaks.

I'll be there.

What's holding everything up?

We're waiting for Park Avenue

to mount Whitey.

Oh, fine. I gotta see that.

I hope you fellows have a spirited

animal for me...

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Fred F. Finklehoffe

Fred Franklin Finklehoffe (February 16, 1910, Springfield, Massachusetts – October 5, 1977) was an American film writer and producer. He was educated at Virginia Military Institute (V.M.I.) where he met his writing partner John Cherry Monks, Jr. (both class of 1932).Monks and Finklefhoffe wrote a play set at VMI in 1936, "Brother Rat", which was adapted into a 1938 film of the same name. A 1940 film sequel entitled Brother Rat and a Baby was also produced. Monks and Finklehoffe also wrote the MGM musical, Strike Up the Band (1940). Finklehoffe was nominated for the 1944 Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay with Irving Brecher for his work on Meet Me in St. Louis. He also wrote the scripts for a pair of Martin and Lewis comedy films, At War with the Army (1950) and The Stooge (1952). more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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    "Girl Crazy" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 25 Apr. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/girl_crazy_8986>.

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