An Officer and a Gentleman



""You know something, you ain't nothing special. You got no manners, you treat woman like whores and if you ask me you got no chance of being no officer.""

A 1982 romantic drama starring Richard Gere, Deborah Winger, and Louis Gossett Jr. Gere plays Zack Mayo, an orphaned loner who grew up to be an emotionally isolated opportunist after his mother commits suicide and his father ignores him. After graduating from college, he joins the Navy in hopes of becoming an Aviator, and enters officer's training under the tutelage of Drill Sergeant Nasty Emil Foley (Gossett). Despite being warned about the local girls who are looking for potential officers to marry, Zack and his friend Sid Worley begin to date two local girls, Paula Pokrifki (Deborah Winger) and Lynette Pomeroy (Lisa Blount). Along the way, Zack learns the importance of friends and colleagues.

Earned a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for Louis Gossett Jr.

Despite the name, the movie is not the Trope Namer for the Officer and A Gentleman trope.

""Sergeant Foley, can't you see,
 * The Ace: Deconstructed. Mayo leaps every hurdle--from the obstacle course to shining belt buckles--with ease. But he falls far short of Foley's standards for character, who makes it clear he'd rather pass the girl who can't make it over the climbing wall than the ethically elastic Mayo.
 * Artistic License Military: As a general rule, Gunnery Sergeant Foley should be referred to by that rank, or by the accepted informal shorthand "Gunny." In Navy OCS, however, the proper term of address for a drill instructor of any rank is "Sergeant Instructor." The movie gets it wrong in either case by referring to him as simply "Sergeant."
 * Auto Erotica
 * The Baby Trap: A central point of the film. The cadets are clearly warned about how the local women want to marry an officer to escape their blue-collar lives, and aren't afraid of using The Baby Trap to do so.

A Puget Deb is after me!

Please don't let 'em catch my tail,

I'd be better off in the country jail!

My mom was a deb, my grandma too;

That's all them gals know how to do!""

""Look over there... look at her. She decided to stay, instead of taking liberty on this weekend. She may not make it throught the program, but she's got more heart and character than you will ever have! And stop eyeballing me, boy!""
 * Subverted when
 * Bar Brawl: Subverted. Despite the obvious tensions, the brawl doesn't happen until everyone is outside, and it ends after one well-timed roundhouse kick.
 * Bowdlerise: Sgt. Foley's cadence during the cadets' training ("...Puget debs...") was dubbed over an earlier real-life Marine cadence about napalming children.
 * California Doubling: Averted. The Navy wouldn't allow shooting at Pensacola, so shooting was done at an abandoned airbase in Washington State. So nothing was done to make anyone believe they were anywhere other than Washington, including the renaming of the Real Life "Mobile Debs" to "Puget Debs" (after the Puget Sound). Then again, trying to make Washington look like Florida would just have been silly.
 * CPR Clean Pretty Reliable
 * The Determinator: Casey Seeger, who forgoes weekend leave just to do more exercises so she can pass the obstacle course.
 * Drill Sergeant Nasty: Played to perfection by Louis Gossett Jr.
 * Driven to Suicide:
 * Gold Digger: Lynette. If you had any doubt, you'll know it when Sid proposes and she starts acting like she won the lottery.
 * Good Ol' Boy: Sid.
 * Good Old Fisticuffs: Averted when Zack fights Sgt. Foley . While Zack is a skilled fighter who learned streetwise fisticuffs, Foley -- the self-defense instructor with kung fu expertise -- eventually defeats him.
 * Hero of Another Story: Casey Seeger.

""Wave good-bye to your buddies, Mayonnaise! Oh, I forgot. You don't have any buddies, do you? Only customers!""
 * Hoist By Her Own Petard: Lynette's baby hoax results in, thus defeating her scheme of marrying an aviator.
 * Honor Before Reason: Arguably, Sid Worley, who drops out of the program with only two weeks remaining
 * Karma Houdini: Sid's girlfriend, Lynette.
 * Subverted since
 * Like Parent, Like Spouse: Paula confesses to Zack that she loves him because he reminds her of her father, a Navy aviator.
 * Memetic Mutation:"I HAVE NO WHERE ELSE TO GO!!!"
 * "Only two things come from (Insert State Here)!"
 * A Man Is Not a Virgin
 * Military Academy
 * Military Brat: Zack Mayo and Sid Worley.
 * The Musical: Coming next November, in Japan, staged by the Takarazuka.
 * My Sibling Will Live Through Me: Sid is driven to succeed for the sake of his older brother, who was killed in combat.
 * No One Gets Left Behind: Played mildly when Casey, in her final run of the obstacle course, still can't make the rope-climb wall she needs to pass the test. Zack abandons his attempt at breaking the course record to return and yell encouragement at her until she climbs it.
 * Parental Abandonment: When Zack moves in with his father in the Philippines after his mother's death, his Dad explicitly tells him that he won't "do the daddy stuff" and leaves Zack to raise himself above a brothel.
 * Punctuated for Emphasis: Foley delivers literally all of his dialogue this way.
 * Scary Black Man: Sgt. Foley, part and parcel of his Drill Sergeant Nasty role.
 * A case of Truth in Television: While doing research, screenwriter Douglas Stewart found out that all of the top drill instructors at Pensacola were African-American, which inspired the casting of Louis Gossett Jr.
 * And Gossett had good training; the military adviser for the film was R. Lee Ermey.
 * Averted (for good reason, in this case) in the Takarazuka version, with Kaname Ouki as Foley.
 * The Scrounger: Zack, who does a brisk business selling polished boots and belt buckles for his comrades to pass inspection.

""You're one of those girls who couldn't get enough of daddy's attention because he really wanted a son!""
 * The Squadette: Casey Seeger, the only woman in Zack's class of candidates.
 * Training From Hell: Zack gets this personally from Sgt. Foley after he's busted for selling inspection-approved boots and buckles.
 * "Well Done, Son" Guy: Casey, who wants to be the first female naval aviator and win the approval of her father. She gets a Heroic BSOD when Sgt. Foley exposes her weakness and taunts her for it.