Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuYoung couple decide to live together and they wind up having a baby. They decide they should give the baby up for adoption. The baby's Mother's parents wind up adopting the baby using a fake... Alles lesenYoung couple decide to live together and they wind up having a baby. They decide they should give the baby up for adoption. The baby's Mother's parents wind up adopting the baby using a fake name.Young couple decide to live together and they wind up having a baby. They decide they should give the baby up for adoption. The baby's Mother's parents wind up adopting the baby using a fake name.
- Baba Ziba
- (as Professor Irwin Corey)
- David Poe
- (as Tim Matthieson)
- Musician in Waiting Room
- (Nicht genannt)
- Pevney
- (Nicht genannt)
- Stage Manager
- (Nicht genannt)
- Rev. Dempster
- (Nicht genannt)
- Ralph
- (Nicht genannt)
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Since it's the Sixties, what to do but go live together. Of course with a blessed event arriving that does complicate things.
Now the young folks, Tim Matheson and JoAnna Cameron are presented as fairly intelligent people. So why anyone would listen to religious faker Irwin Corey and give the kid up for adoption is beyond me. But that's what the film asks you to believe.
Two of the funniest men of the last century were Bob Hope and Jackie Gleason. So why they got stuck with a mediocre story idea like this is beyond me. I can't believe that the two of them had they looked could have found a better story idea.
When a golf playing Marquis Chimp steals the film you know you've got trouble.
Hope's shot at impersonating the aforementioned guru, complete with flowing robes, turban, fake beard and a drooping orchid which he uses to "bless" his "disciples" provides plenty of chuckles. Another change of costume sees him decked out in a Nehru jacket and sporting a groovy hairstyle as he takes a "space trip" to some pot-filled Go- Go joint down on Sunset.
Although a few of the gags fall flat others work just fine as Bob and Jackie Gleason team up to add some real sparkle to the film's better moments.
Hope to the perpetually loaded Gleason: "And about your breath... you could start the windmill on an old Dutch painting".
Bob had just about lost interest in the big screen by this late stage, having decided to concentrate on his top rating TV shows instead. This was, in fact, his second last theatrical release. And , although it won't be remembered as being one of his best, it's actually a pretty sharp satire of some of the more nonsensical, new age clap trap what was permeating western culture at the time. Even the Beatles quickly realized that they were being taken on a one way elephant ride to fantasy land by their own giggling guru.
As for this one, it's a low key walk - thru which doesn't demand much of its stars but it still generates enough laughs along the way to keep it going.
Not outstanding but fun
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFinal feature film of Jane Wyman.
- PatzerDuring the golf match sequence the bag of potato chips Mildred the Chimp is enjoying changes between shots from a full bag to one torn in half then full again.
- Zitate
Oliver Poe: [spotting the recently divorced Bensons with their respective dates, at his standing room only nightclub, dressed like hippies] Well, look who just came in... split-city. I think I'll go over and deflate some egos.
Laverne Baker: Now, Oliver, don't cause any trouble.
Oliver Poe: [gleefully] Me? Trouble? Preposterous!
Oliver Poe: [walking over to Benson's table] Who are you supposed to be, Sabu's mother?
Frank Benson: Look Flabberino, why don't you leave and make room for like six more tables?
Oliver Poe: Sold any mud, lately? Well, well, well. One big happy family. I don't get it.
Oliver Poe: [pointing to the ex-Mrs. Benson] You're with him...
Oliver Poe: [pointing to Lois' breasts] ... and he's with those... I mean, her.
Frank Benson: Back up Moby Dick, how would you like your flab parted in the front, too.
Oliver Poe: I'm getting out of here before I punch a senior citizen in the snoot.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Bob Hope's World of Comedy (1976)
- SoundtracksDream
(uncredited)
Written by Johnny Mercer
Performed by Bob Hope and Jane Wyman
[Frank and Elaine sing the song in their fantasy dance]
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 35 Min.(95 min)
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1