James Garner & Peter Brown in
DARBY'S RANGERS
1958


   Directed by William A. Wellman
Written by Guy Trosper
"Suggested by" a book by
Major James Altieri
Cast
James Garner as Colonel William Darby
Etchika Coureau as Angelina De Lotta
Jack Warden as Master Sgt. Saul Rosen
Edward Byrnes as Lt. Arnold Dittman
Venetia Stevenson as Peggy McTavish
Torin Thatcher as Sgt McTavish
Peter Brown as Pvt. Rollo Burns
Joan Elan as Wendy Hollister
Corey Allen as Tony Sutherland
Stuart Whitman as Sgt. Hank Bishop
Murray Hamilton as Sims Delancey
Bill Wellman Jr. as Eli Clatworthy
Andrea King as Mrs. Sheilah Andrews
Adam Williams as Heavy Hall
Frieda Inescort as Lady Hollister
Reginald Owen as Sir Arthur Hollister
Philip Tonge as Prof. John Andrews
Edward Ashley as Lt. Dave Manson
Raymond Bailey as Brig. Gen. W.A. Wise
Willis Bouchey as Brig. Gen. Turscott
Uncredits bits
Thomas Browne Henry 
David Janssen
H.B. Warner

Peter Brown as Rollo Burns
Peter Brown in Darby's Rangers
This preLawman Warner Bros. WWII drama tells the more or less true story of Major William Darby who came up with the plan to create an American version of the elite British Commandos -- the American Rangers.  He also managed to convince the Brigadier General that he should leave the frustration of desk duty to command the Rangers.
James Garner as William Darby
Jack Warden as Master Sgt Rosen
Darby and the General
The story follows a group of "representative" soldiers through both love and war.  Young Peter Brown plays  brave young soldier Rollo Burns, a character somewhat similar to the young deputy he would later play in Lawman  -- eager, inexperienced and courageous, as well as sweet and innocent with girls.  [We wonder if Peter, who himself was anything but innocent and inexperienced, especially when it came to women, got a kick out of playing so many naive young men.]
Rollo shows up late
A little test of courage
Peter's first appearance with the Rangers is less than auspicious as he got lost somewhere around Victoria station and is 13 hours late in reporting.  Garner tests Rollo's instincts by pulling the pin an a grenade and tossing it to him.  Peter reacts by throwing it out the window and throwing himself on top of Darby, putting him out of harms way.  Of course the grenade wasn't actually live but the action convinced Darby that Rollo has the right stuff.
Rollo asks directions
Rollo is welcomed to his new residence
Rollo happy over the accommodations
The American soldiers are billeted with local families.  Rollo asks directions from the formidable Sgt. McTavish to the place he has been assigned.  The Sgt. seems to know the place well, including the fact that a 19-year-old girl will answer the door.  When she does answer, the flirtation begins.
Rollo realizing he's alone with a girl
Peggy tries to act worldly and experienced
Flirting
Rollo seems little rattled when she offers to show him his room and lets him know no one else is home. He trips on the stairs twice,  But this being 1958, all is innocent.  She makes the kind of teasing comment no nineteen year old boy can tolerate -- he's probably never been alone in a bedroom with a girl before.  And that it's cute to see a man so inexperienced.  He lets on he's had "some" experience.  They trade a few lines and end up bouncing childishly on the bed as she shows him how soft the down quilt is.  Of course, daddy, who turns out to be the sergeant, comes up the stairs to the sound of the bouncing bed.  When he comes in, Rollo hastely tells him that he found the house all right.
Bouncing on the bed
Sgt not happy
Rollo flustered
Although for reasons of time, the details of courtship are not included, our next scene with Rollo and Peggy telling the sergeant that they want to get married.  Daddy pours a toast which Rollo chokes on, whether from the unaccustomed strength of the liquor or the toast itself which includes a wish for lots of children, is not clear.
Asking permission to be married
A tender moment
A toast to the couple
But marriage is delayed to see if Rollo "makes it through the war" so he bids Peggy good-by leaving no future child behind.
Sad good-by
Live ammo drills Mud
Peter's best scenes in the movie occur when he kills his first enemy soldier, an Italian sniper who has taken a position on a bell tower.  The man fall into a pile of debris below where Rollo looks on stricken at the man's dying words.
Peter shoots a sniper
The sniper goes down
Rollo is devastated
When Rollo falls into a depressions, a smart-ass new West Point graduate, Lt. Dittman [Edd Byrnes], gives Rollo a haughty "you should be proud to kill an enemy" and "get back to work" speech.
Edd Byrnes as the arrogant young lt.
Lt. Dittman gives Rollo a pep talk
Rollo doesn't respond well
However, the compassionate Darby comes by and, in one of the best moments in this movie, gives Rollo a much more intelligent talk about his duty and the harshness of war.
Colonel Darby has more compassion
Darby gives his view of the evil of war
When Rollo thanks Darby for taking the time to talk to him, Darby says he was talking to himself as well.
The father figure
The perfect son figure
Darby admits he has his own problems with killing
When the Rangers get to Anzio, where a large percentage of them were killed, Rollo is shot, tumbles down a drop to a road and is carried to the medics by a buddy.
Rollo is shot
Rollo dives to the road
Rollo's buddies carry him to the medics
Rollo bravely tells Darby how proud Sgt McTavish will be of how many Germans he killed.
The medics rush to help
Rollo tells Darby he's fine
Rollo thinks the Sgt will be proud
Then in the scene which ruined this movie for a group of ten year old girls watching it after they had already been watching Peter as Johnny McKay on Lawman for half a season, Rollo dies.
Dying
Dead
Darby covers the body
NiteOwl Review:  Of course, we've only noted Peter's part here.  Overall the movie spent about half its time on the various adventures with women embarked on by all the characters.  This distracted from the tone of the movie and wasn't well enough done to be a welcome distraction.  We liked James Garner, of course, and enjoyed Peter's scenes, especially those with Garner.  Peter was in a much better Warners WWII movie, Merrill's Marauders, after his stint on Lawman.  When our video group took a survey of the members as to what was the first movie that made them cry, Darby's Rangers came in second after Gone With the Wind (and just ahead of Old Yeller).  [Of course, most of the men wouldn't admit they had ever cried in movies so this was mostly a female survey.]  Some of us didn't go to another war movie until someone's big brother told us that Peter's character didn't get killed in Merrill's Marauders.
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