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Mr. Blabbermouth! Poster

Mr. Blabbermouth!

1942 | 19m | English

(328 votes)

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Popularity: 0.1 (history)

Details

Following Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, America was rife with rumors about the size of Japan's armed forces and how well-equipped they were to wage war against the U.S. Using animation, the first part of this film dispels these rumors by showing that the U.S. had more raw materials and more fighting ships. The narrator also cautions moviegoers against spreading rumors (which are often initiated by enemy infiltrators to create fear and dissention) and believing everything they read in the newspapers. Just because "they say" something, that doesn't make it true.
Release Date: Aug 08, 1942
Director: Basil Wrangell
Writer: Walter Selden, Manchester Boddy
Genres: War
Keywords
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 18, 2026
Entered: Apr 28, 2024
Starring

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International Posters

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Full Credits

Name Character
John Nesbitt Narrator (voice)
Ralph Peters Mr. Blabbermouth
John Berkes
Stanley Andrews
May McAvoy
Name Job
Basil Wrangell Director
Jackson Rose Director of Photography
Walter Selden Screenplay
Adrienne Fazan Editor
Manchester Boddy Writer
Name Title
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

This features quite an effective use of archive to bolster US public awareness of the risk of idle talk. Using a variety of social scenarios, we put some “I’ve heard” or “I’ve read” sentences in the mouths of those in the shops, the hairdressers and the bars and then attempt to counter these specula ... tive gossips with some facts and then some out and out propaganda about the superiority of the American soldier, kit and technology against not just the Japanese, but the Nazis too. On that last front, it does recognise that the  USA is not the only nation fighting here, but as this is essentially designed to boost domestic morale and encourage people to keep their traps shut, it’s largely a celebration of the might of a military and the strength of a democracy that will prevail, no matter what. There is some original photography here, but if you’ve followed the approach newsreel cinema took to World War II in any depth, then you will have seen most of that before. The commentary is far too earnest, and the more I watched this I wanted someone sarcastic and caustic - like Pete Smith - to make the point a little more engagingly and less like it was a school lecture, but in 1942 it probably served it’s purpose.

Mar 17, 2025