
Major Nick Reed is an intrepid analyst for Army Intelligence. It's his job to locate a secret enemy base whose fighters - the dreaded Ghost Squadron - attack our bombers. Complicating his efforts is a chance meeting with his former love, Lt. Monica Tasty, and her current beau, Major Mitch Dunning. Can Reed find the fighter base in time for the 4th Armoured to attack? Will the Nazi learn our next target and send the Ghost Squadron to attack our bombers? Why do some women fall ... (Full plot summary below)
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Major Nick Reed is an intrepid analyst for Army Intelligence. It's his job to locate a secret enemy base whose fighters - the dreaded Ghost Squadron - attack our bombers. Complicating his efforts is a chance meeting with his former love, Lt. Monica Tasty, and her current beau, Major Mitch Dunning. Can Reed find the fighter base in time for the 4th Armoured to attack? Will the Nazi learn our next target and send the Ghost Squadron to attack our bombers? Why do some women fall for the bad boys, completely ignoring the good responsible men right in front of them? Learn the answers in 'At War With Intelligence.
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| Let's Not ListenTricia OlszewskiThe target's a slow-moving one, and the digs get old fast. |
| San Diego MetropolitanJean LowerisonA hilarious takeoff on World War II training films. |
| Seattle Post-IntelligencerWilliam ArnoldThis movie is an imaginative idea that, in execution, just doesn't come off. |
| Combustible CelluloidJeffrey M. AndersonEven at a brief 78 minutes, the jokes are too few, too repetitive and too obvious to really make this worthwhile. |
| Los Angeles Daily NewsBob StraussThis gets old in about 10 minutes, but the movie strikes the same comic note for another hour. |
| L.A. WeeklyAdam NaymanIt would be a shame if this smarmy, kiddie-pool-shallow bit of gimmickry were to be confused with clear-eyed satire. |
| Boston GlobeTy BurrIt's a great idea for 20 minutes. Unfortunately, the movie's 78 minutes long. |
| Seattle TimesTom KeoghAn ingenious satire that could easily tip toward self-congratulation yet never does. |
| User ReviewDarian HAllegedly intended, and certainly billed, as a parody of the military training and recruitment videos of the 40s, it only occasionally seems to put forth the effort to make actual jokes at their expense, and at the expense of the military. Apart from these occasional ribbings at the differences between actual wartime situations and the watered down equivalents portrayed in those old propganda-reels (and a few sly references to America's current war on the abstract concept of "fear"), it more often than not comes across as more of a genuine tribute to them. Still, it kept me fairly amused. |
| User ReviewKrista WNot as promising as the trailer would suggest. Funny, but does get a bit old after a while. An extra star for originality of concept. |