Rendezvous with Annie is a 1946 American comedy film directed by Allan Dwan and written by and Mary Loos and Richard Sale.
The plot involves a World War II serviceman who surreptitiously flies back from England to the States to see his wife for several hours and impregnates her, accidentally leaving her to deal with the consequent scandal when the townsfolk do the math and erroneously conclude that her husband could not possibly be the resultant baby's father.
He gets a visit from a night club singer, Dolores Starr, and recapitulates the events leading him to his current miserable situation.
His Air Force friends persuade him to go AWOL with them as they fly overnight to the U.S., so that he can visit his wife on their wedding anniversary.
A lawyer tells him he has to prove his paternity, or the baby will lose its inheritance of half a million dollars.
Jeffrey reaches out to everyone he saw that particular night, but Thorndyke denies meeting him at the Bongo Club, and the same goes for Avery and Spence, who are afraid of being court-martialed.
Dolores, relieved, kisses Jeff on the cheek, and when Louise snaps a photo, unscrupulous newspaperman Al Morgan prints it in the paper.