Knute Rockne, All American (1940)
- Starring:
- Pat O'Brien, Gale Page, (more)
- Director(s):
- Lloyd Bacon
- Theatrical MPAA Rating:
- NR
My RatingTheatrical Release Information | See Details About All Versions
Knute Rockne-All American was Pat O'Brien's finest hour: thanks to intensive rehearsals and numerous makeup applications, he so closely resembled the title character that, in the words of Rockne's widow, "I almost expected him to make love with me". The life of the legendary Notre Dame football coach is recounted from his childhood, when young Rockne (played by Johnny Sheffield) startles his Norwegian-immigrant parents by announcing at the dinner table that he's just been introduced to "the most wonderful game of the world." As an adult, Rockne works his way through Indiana's Notre Dame university, under the watchful and benevolent eye of Father Callahan (Donald Crisp) A brilliant student, Rockne is urged by Father Nieuwland (Albert Basserman) to become a chemist, or at the very least remain a chemistry teacher. Newly married to Bonnie Skilles (Gale Page), Rockne at first sticks to academics, but the call of the gridiron is too loud for him to ignore, and before long he has built his reputation as the winningest college football coach in America. One of his most significant contributions to the game is the invention of the tactical shift, inspired by the precision choreography of a team of nightclub dancers! Among the players nurtured by Rockne are the immortal Four Horsemen-Miller (William Marshall), Stuhlreder (Harry Lukats), Laydon (Kane Richmond) and Crowley (William Byrne), and of course the tragic George Gipp, superbly enacted by Ronald Reagan. His career continues unabated until his death in a plane crash in 1931. The screenplay of Knute Rockne-All American tends to be all highlights and little story, with several of the more dramatic passages telegraphed well in advance (just before her husband's death, Bonnie Rockne comments forebodingly "It's gotten cold all of a sudden"). Still, the film remains one of the best and most inspirational sports biographies ever made, with a heart-wrenching conclusion guaranteed to moisten the eyes of even the most jaundiced viewer. Ironically, the film's most famous scene, George Gipp's deathbed admonition to "Win one for the Gipper", was for many years excised from all TV prints due to a legal entanglement stemming from an earlier radio dramatization of Rockne's life; fortunately, this and several related scenes were restored to the film in the early 1990s. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Theatrical Feature Running Time:
- 98 mins
Complete Cast:
- Pat O'Brien - Knute Rockne
- Ronald Reagan - George Gipp
- Albert Basserman - Father Julius Nieuwland
- John Qualen - Lars Knutson Rockne
- Owen Davis, Jr. - Gus Dorais
- Johnny Sheffield - Knute: age 7
- Kane Richmond - Elmer Laydon
- Howard Jones - Himself
- Alonzo Stagg
- David Bruce - Player
- Billy Dawson - Knute, Jr. at Age 12
- Bill Gratton - Jackie Rockne at Age 4
- Harry Hayden - Professor
- Richard Clayton - O'Flaherty
- George Reeves - Player
- Charles Wilson - Gambler
- Pierre Watkin - Commissioner
- William Byrne - James Crowley
- Georgie Billings - Boy Quarterback
- John Ridgely - Reporter
- Gaylord "Steve" Pendleton - Player
- Frank Mayo - Reporter
- William Hopper - NY Alumnus
- Fredrik Vogeding - Elder
- Bill Spaulding - Himself
- William Haade - Worker
- Edgar Dearing
- Cliff Clark - Danny, Post Office Paymaster
- Gale Page - Bonnie Skiles Rockne
- Donald Crisp - Father John Callahan
- John Litel - Committee Chairman
- Henry O'Neill - Doctor
- Dorothy Tree - Martha Rockne
- Nick Lukats - Harry Stuhidreher
- William Marshall - Don Miller
- Glen S. "Pop" Warner - Himself
- Egon Brecher - Elder
- Eddy Chandler - Worker
- Pat Flaherty - Worker
- Creighton Hale - Secretary
- Dutch Hendrian - Hunk Anderson
- David Dickson - Bill Rockne at Age 10
- Dick Jones - Boy Captain
- Minor Watson - Committee Member
- Bill Sheffield - Knute Rockne at Age 4
- William Byrne - Horseman
- Peter Ashley - Player
- Lee Phelps - Army Coach
- Carlyle Moore, Jr. - Player
- George Irving
- George Haywood
- Charles Trowbridge - Notre Dame Professor
- Michael Martin Harvey - Player
- James Flavin - Coach
- Robert O. Davis - Elder
- Frank Coghlan, Jr. - Messenger
- Director(s):
- Lloyd Bacon
- Writer(s):
- Robert Buckner
- Producer(s):
- Robert M. Fellows, Hal B. Wallis, Jack Warner
- Theatrical MPAA Rating:
- NR(Excellent For Children)
- Closed Captioning:
- Check All Versions
- Subtitles:
- Check All Versions
- 1997 - Library of Congress - U.S. National Film Registry








