In the Pacific arena in 1944, fighter
pilot Andy Crewson circumvents regulations to finagle a four-day
leave to San Francisco for himself and fellow Navy flying aces
Mississip Hardy and Howard "Mac" McCann. Together with Naval
public relations officer Commander Walter Wallace, who has been
assigned to shepherd the three war heroes through the press, they
hop onto a San Francisco-bound plane piloted by their friend, Chuck
Roundtree.
On the flight, Mac, who is running for
Congress, confides that he joined the Navy as a ticket to a
political career, while Wallace discloses that he plans to use his
position to win a public relations job with shipping tycoon Eddie
Turnbill. At the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco, Wallace
wrangles a suite for the flyers while Crewson prowls the lobby for
attractive women. Once in their suite, the three discard their
uniforms for black kimonos, and soon after, the flashy, flirtatious
Alice Cratchner appears in response to a card that Crewson has
distributed promising nylons. After Crewson invites a group of
partygoers to the suite, Mac calls to confer with his wife about his
campaign. Hoping to win an extended leave for the threesome,
Wallace brings Turnbill to meet the pilots. When Turnbill's
stylish fiancée, Gwenneth Livingston, arrives, Crewson becomes
intrigued.
Soon after, Ensign Lewis appears to
collect a copy of the pilots' orders, and Crewson, who has no
orders, entices him with Alice and alcohol. Turnbill, a
self-important war profiteer, proposes that the pilots deliver a
series of anecdotal speeches to his shipyard workers, but Crewson,
angered at being asked to trivialize his war experiences, insults
Turnbill and abruptly adjourns the party.
When, in revenge, Turnbill arranges for
the three to be ordered to the hospital for an exam, Gwenneth
intervenes on their behalf and promises her fiancé that the pilots
have agreed to speak at his shipyard. Unable to hail a taxi to
take them to the shipyard, Crewson hops on a streetcar with Gwenneth,
who finds herself attracted to the darkly handsome pilot.
Instead of proceeding to the shipyard, they stop at a nightclub, and
there Gwenneth confesses that she agreed to marry Turnbill because
she knows that he will never be killed in combat.
After exchanging a meaningful kiss, they
return to the hotel bar, where Crewson meets an old pilot friend who
is now confined to a wheelchair, awaiting certain death from his war
injuries. When the dying pilot voices his last wish of flying
into combat, Crewson is shaken. Consequently, when Turnbill
finds Crewson at the bar and reproaches him for failing to keep his
speaking engagement, Crewson slugs Turnbill, and Gwenneth throws her
engagement ring in Turnbill's face. After a passionate
embrace, Crewson and Gwenneth spend the night together at her
apartment.
The next morning at the hotel, Alice is
disappointed because Mac spent the night telling her how much he
loves his wife. When Crewson appears, Wallace blames him for
ruining his chance for a job with Turnbill. The shore police,
sent by Turnbill, then arrive to take the pilots to the Alameda
hospital. There, Mac learns that he has won the election and
is thus eligible for a discharge.
Soon after, Alice phones Gwenneth with
the news that Wallace has found another tycoon to keep the pilots
out of combat and that a party has been planned that night at the
hotel to celebrate. Later, at their hotel suite, Gwenneth
starts to plan her future with Crewson, but when he balks at the
idea of marriage, she angrily storms out of the room. Wallace
then introduces Crewson to their new benefactor, paper tycoon Bill
Hotchkiss. As Hotchkiss drones on about the importance of
paper to the war effort, Chuck stumbles into the room, drunk, and
declares that he is flying back to the Pacific.
The celebratory air quickly evaporates
when Chuck announces that their carrier has been sunk and the
captain and most of the crew have gone down with their ship.
The news triggers an attack of Crewson's malaria, and when Gwenneth
embraces him to quell his shivering, he admits that he loves her.
The grim news forces Mississip and Crewson to realize that their
place is in combat, and they hurry to the airport to catch Chuck's
plane. There, Crewson informs Mac that they are returning to
war, and after Crewson kisses the tearful Gwenneth goodbye and
promises to return one day, he and Mississip jump onto Chuck's
plane, followed by Mac.
Notes
HR news items yield the following information about this
film: In October 1955, Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. bought the rights
to Frederic Wakeman's novel and Luther Davis' play. By
September 1956, Jerry Wald had acquired the rights to both the novel
and play. In April 1957, a news item announced that
Dan Dailey was to star with
Cary Grant and
Jayne Mansfield. LAT news items add that in October
1956, Wald was considering George Montgomery for one of the leads.
By December 1956, it was announced that Wald wanted
Richard Widmark, who also starred in the Broadway version of
Davis' play, to appear.
Although a May 1957 HR news item
states that King Donovan was added to the cast, but he was not in
the released film. A May 1957 HR news item notes that
location filming took place in San Francisco. Although
onscreen credits read "introducing Suzy Parker," Kiss Them for Me
did not mark noted fashion model Parker's screen debut, but
rather her first major role. Parker's first film was the 1957
release
Funny
Face.