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The Man Who Walked Alone (1945)

5.6 | Mar 15, 1945 (US) | Comedy, Drama | 01:10

He Was A One-Man Army - She A One-Girl Blitz!

A war hero returns home following a medical discharge and ends up entangled with a young woman speeding away from her wedding day in her fiance's car. Seeing the soldier, she gives him a ride and explains her predicament. Things get sticky when the cops capture them and accuse the soldier of desertion.

Featured Crew

Director, Screenplay, Associate Producer
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Screenplay
Music
Editor
Wardrobe Supervisor
Art Direction

Cast

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Dave O'Brien
Marion Scott
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Kay Aldridge
Wilhelmina Hammond
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Isabel Randolph
Mrs. Hammond
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Smith Ballew
Alvin Bailey
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Nancy June Robinson
Patricia Hammond
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Ruth Lee
Aunt Harriett
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Chester Clute
Herman Monroe
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Vivien Oakland
Mrs. Monroe

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Reviews

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CinemaSerf
6 | Jul 09, 2025
“Willie” (Kay Aldridge) is in the process of jilting her stuffy fiancé “Alvin” (Smith Ballew) - using his own car, when she encounters a hitchhiker to whom she offers a lift. They barely get half a mile down the road when they are apprehended by the cops for pinching the car and are promptly shoved in jail. It’s an easy mix-up for her to clear up, but her passenger “Marion” (Dave “Dex” O’Brien) seems to be having more difficulty on that front and so she assumes he has something to hide. To find out more, she takes him to her home where she pretends to be the secretary to it’s owner - really her mother, and sets about getting to the bottom of things where, of course, romance is only ever going to be just round the corner. With the fiancé on one side, the suspicious “Willie” and her disapproving mum all getting involved in her investigation, this amiably silly drama sets off down a path we’ve seen loads of time before. It’s a bit as if auteur Christy Cabanne took the first part of one old script he found in the attic and put it together with another he found at the bottom of the gerbil’s cage and so at times the plot overlaps and jars here. After the initial shenanigans settle down, it becomes a rather messy affair and the fairly lacklustre writing creates a story the cast can’t really make too much headway with. That said, though, there is a decent rapport between O’Brien and Aldridge and the scene stealing Nancy June Robinson raises the whole spirit of the thing as the younger sibling “Patricia” who certainly has the best of the quips. It’s a perfectly watchable afternoon comedy, but you’ll never recall it.