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McHale's Navy
The story tells about the life of retired Quenton McHale, who spends his life away from the noise of work, spending his life everywhere in the Caribbean in his old home, which seems to be a very good house. Along with that interesting life, things may change just as Quinton quit when his old enemy took on a mission that could destroy the whole world as he attempted to take over the island of San Moreno and begin building a nuclear launch pad on it. Things may seem very dangerous as the commando tries to stop the terrorist with the help of his old crew and his obstacles from Captain Wallace Binghamton.
7 September 1984, Los Angeles, California, USA
1937 in New York City, New York, USA
24 January 1917, Hamden, Connecticut, USA
30 June 1956, Detroit, Michigan, USA
30 December 1962, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
1969, New York City, New York, USA
8 March 1954, Pipestone, Minnesota, USA
December 23, 2002
[Trots] out the same tired cliches -- unorthodox heroes, inept commanding officers, officious little weasels getting trampled by the zany crew -- which haven't been funny since...well, ever.
January 01, 2000
I didn't laugh once, not even giggle.
January 01, 2000
Leaky PT-boat of a comedy.
September 23, 2003
Dear God, why?
April 09, 2005
The most idiotic, unfunny script imaginable.
May 15, 2008
This shotgun marriage of coarse laughs and low-rent action cliches is, of course, utterly predictable: Cutting-edge comedy isn't lurking under the corpses of old TV shows.
June 18, 2002
By the end, this soporific comedy makes 105 minutes feel more like a two-year hitch.
November 01, 2004
Tom Arnold is no Ernest Borgnine. A profound statement.
April 12, 2002
A useless movie. Not funny, suspenseful, moving or even offensive enough to want to torpedo. Just devoid of any conceivable value.
January 01, 2000
Suitable only for movie-goers who have undergone frontal lobotomies.
May 15, 2008
A ham-fisted, fitfully amusing lark that quickly runs aground.
September 05, 2009
All apologies to the handful of Americans who've waited decades for this big-screen update of the '60s sitcom--the result is both awful and awfully irrelevant.

