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  1. Buck Privates Come Home

    Buck Privates Come Home

    1947 · Comedy · 1h 17m

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  1. Buck Privates Come Home: Directed by Charles Barton. With Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Tom Brown, Joan Shawlee. Two ex-soldiers return from overseas--one of them having smuggled into the country a French orphan girl he has become attached to.

    • (2.2K)
    • Action, Comedy, Family
    • Charles Barton
    • 1947-04-04
  2. Budget. $1,167,500 [1] Box office. $2,365,000 [2] or $2 million (US rentals) [3] Buck Privates Come Home is a 1947 American comedy film directed by Charles Barton and starring the team of Abbott and Costello. It was released by Universal-International and is a sequel to their earlier film Buck Privates (1941).

  3. Jan 26, 2022 · A sequel to this movie, Buck Privates Come Home, was released in 1947. Buck Privates is one of three Abbott and Costello films featuring The Andrews Sisters, who were also under contract to Universal Pictures at the time.

    • 84 min
    • 2.5K
    • Sai Surya Pavuluri
  4. This article is about the 1941 film. For the 1928 film, see Buck Privates (1928 film). For the sequel to the film, see Buck Privates Come Home. Buck Privates is a 1941 American musical military comedy film directed by Arthur Lubin that turned Bud Abbott and Lou Costello into bona fide movie stars.

  5. Recently viewed. Buck Privates: Directed by Arthur Lubin. With Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Lee Bowman, Jane Frazee. Two sidewalk salesman enlist in the army in order to avoid jail, only to find that their drill instructor is the police officer who tried having them imprisoned.

    • (4.7K)
    • Comedy, Musical, War
    • Arthur Lubin
    • 1941-01-31
  6. Apr 24, 2022 · This Abbott and Costello gem gets a modern trailer.

    • 4 min
    • 1489
    • R_u_s_s_e_l_l
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  8. Buck Privates Come Home is directed by Charles Barton and written by John Grant, Frederic I. Rinaldo and Robert Lees. It stars Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Tom Brown, Nat Pendleton, Joan Fulton and Beverly Simmons. Cinematography is by Charles Van Enger and music by Walter Schuman.

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