• Warning: Spoilers
    A very young John Wayne is an Army football hero who dumps his non-committed girlfriend (Laura La Plante, the heroine of "The Cat and the Canary" and the original "Show Boat") and takes off for adventures elsewhere. La Plante ends up marrying on the rebound Wayne's former commanding officer (a very good Forrest Stanley) who surprises her by inviting Wayne for a visit. La Plante's naive younger sister (June Clyde) falls for Wayne and a very jealous La Plante plays the devoted overprotective sister to the hilt to keep them from getting involved. Has Wayne changed his womanizing ways? That will be disproven if La Plante and a drunken Mexican senorita (Nina Quartero) get their female way.

    What starts off fairly slow moves into an entertaining pre-code drama, featuring a fascinating auction scene where La Plante and Stanley try to bid each other out over the football which won the big game, signed by all the players including Wayne. He is present at the start of the auction (with another blonde on his arm), and his look of disgust at La Plante's presence makes it clear that there was another reason for him dumping her rather than just not wanting to commit to her. It's obvious that her feelings for him have remained, and it takes being humiliated through the presence of her younger sister to wake her up. Quartero, playing a stereotypical Mexican spitfire, tries to bring some spark to her scene, but she is certainly no Lupe Velez or even an Armida. Some lavish sets make this appear to be higher budgeted than it probably was, while the direction of George B. Seitz (who later directed some of Judy Garland's early films) speeds up the film once the plot takes off.