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IMDbPro

How to Commit Marriage

  • 1969
  • M
  • 1h 35min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,3/10
597
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
How to Commit Marriage (1969)
CommediaMusicaRomanticismo

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaYoung 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... Leggi tuttoYoung 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.

  • Regia
    • Norman Panama
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Ben Starr
    • Michael Kanin
  • Star
    • Bob Hope
    • Jackie Gleason
    • Jane Wyman
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,3/10
    597
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Norman Panama
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ben Starr
      • Michael Kanin
    • Star
      • Bob Hope
      • Jackie Gleason
      • Jane Wyman
    • 19Recensioni degli utenti
    • 10Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto5

    Visualizza poster
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    Interpreti principali25

    Modifica
    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Frank Benson
    Jackie Gleason
    Jackie Gleason
    • Oliver Poe
    Jane Wyman
    Jane Wyman
    • Elaine Benson
    Leslie Nielsen
    Leslie Nielsen
    • Phil Fletcher
    Maureen Arthur
    Maureen Arthur
    • Lois Gray
    Paul Stewart
    Paul Stewart
    • Willoughby
    Irwin Corey
    Irwin Corey
    • Baba Ziba
    • (as Professor Irwin Corey)
    Tina Louise
    Tina Louise
    • Laverne Baker
    Tim Matheson
    Tim Matheson
    • David Poe
    • (as Tim Matthieson)
    JoAnna Cameron
    JoAnna Cameron
    • Nancy Benson
    The Comfortable Chair
    • The Comfortable Chair
    A Marquis Chimp
    • Mildred
    Danny Borzage
    • Musician in Waiting Room
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Don Brodie
    Don Brodie
    • Pevney
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    David Burns
    David Burns
      Rudy Germane
      • Stage Manager
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Alex Gerry
      Alex Gerry
      • Rev. Dempster
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Lauren Gilbert
      Lauren Gilbert
      • Ralph
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      • Regia
        • Norman Panama
      • Sceneggiatura
        • Ben Starr
        • Michael Kanin
      • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
      • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

      Recensioni degli utenti19

      5,3597
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      Recensioni in evidenza

      6moonspinner55

      Bob Hope in a toupee and Nehru jacket: "Nice try."

      Amusingly salty farce brings Bob Hope and Jackie Gleason into the swinging 1960s--and just in time! Hope and Jane Wyman agree to end their stale marriage after 19 years, just as their daughter decides to drop out of college and join a rock group with her boyfriend. Turns out she's also pregnant, and has been persuaded to put her baby up for adoption by a (bribed) Indian guru, so Hope and Wyman conspire to adopt the child under the guise of an Irish couple (don't ask). Gleason is Hope's would-be in-law, a rock music promoter who holds a grudge against Bob for a years-old real estate transaction that ended up in the mud. Tatty-looking comedy (with unflattering hairstyles) stays afloat on some funny one-liners, but loses momentum during two pointless sequences: a golf match involving a chimpanzee and the slapstick finale, an endless dig at the Maharishi. Despite this, Hope, Gleason and Wyman (and Tina Louise as Gleason's main squeeze) manage bright performances, and director Norman Panama excels with a romantic fantasy scene and also the opening montage, a cynical jab at married life. **1/2 from ****
      7brucecorneil-593-677822

      Hope's Hippie A - Go - Go

      America's favorite comedian gets all caught up in the Age of Aquarius when his free-thinking daughter drops out of college to join a rock group and search for spiritual enlightenment under the guidance of a bumbling Persian mystic. But there's a twist to the usual generation gap scenario. Bob's wayward kid wants to do the "establishment thing" by tying the knot with her composer boyfriend while her parents have (secretly) decided to call it a day on the marital front.

      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
      2ajm-8

      Starring Bob "How D'Ya Like My Nehru Jacket?" Hope & Jackie "To the moon in the 7th house, Alice!" Gleason

      In the intended generation gap comedy, Bob Hope and Jackie Gleason play bickering not-quite-in-laws. I say "not-quite" because Gleason's son and Hope's daughter are cohabiting without benefit of matrimony.

      Living in sin.

      Shacking up, don't you know.

      The kids have a baby out of wedlock and put it up for adoption so they can concentrate on performing in their Top Ten psychedelic rock group, The Comfortable Chair (Cue Cardinal Fang: "The COMFY CHAIR!?!") Hope and estranged wife Jane Wyman (whose real-life ex-husband was governor of California when this film was made) adopt the tot using fake identities and, after a round of 3 a.m. feedings, grudgingly reconcile.

      Jackie discovers that Hope & Wyman have the grandchild, revealing the info during a golf match between Hope and a chimp. (You're ahead of me. Bob loses.) But Ol' Ski Nose solves everything by impersonating the youngsters' guru, a Maharishi-like religious leader, at a huge concert. In disguise, Bob tells the kids to forget nirvana and perfect happiness and get married instead. By the time everyone figures out who's who, the rock stars have their baby AND wedding rings, Bob and Jane are back together and the new house Bob just sold Jackie gets destroyed in a mudslide.

      Even for a wacky 1960s comedy, the events in this movie defy logic: What adoption agency would instantly hand over a newborn to a decidedly over-the-hill couple? Wouldn't Hope and Wyman face prison sentences for using phony names to get the baby? And how could Jackie Gleason attract Tina "I Trained at the Actors Studio, But They're Going to Put 'She was Ginger on Gilligan's Island' On My Tombstone" Louise?

      Hope's probably the LAST guy in Hollywood to have been defending monogamy, given his notorious unfaithfulness to wife Dolores over a seven-decade marriage, and it's doubly offensive that he spoofed an Eastern religious figure to do so. Imagine the justifiable outcry had he impersonated a priest or a rabbi.

      Gleason's in decent form but is given little to do. HOW TO COMMIT MARRIAGE isn't as utterly bizarre as another Gleason '60s vehicle, SKIDOO (1968), but simply one of Hope's worst starring films -- a pity, because for around 25 years Hope WAS a legitimately great movie comedian. At least it's interesting to see Leslie Nielsen play the straight man in this film, and the young lovers are JoAnna Cameron (who set the hearts of seven-year-old boys aflutter as ISIS in the 1970s) and Tim Matheson (who, FIFTEEN years after this movie, would still be playing a collegian in UP THE CREEK).
      4bkoganbing

      The Chimp Makes Them Look Like Chumps

      The daughter of Bob Hope and Jane Wyman and the son of Jackie Gleason are in love and ready to wed. What they don't know is Hope and Wyman are considering divorce. Gleason has some rather negative view on marriage in the first place. They find out and it shatters some illusions.

      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.
      Sargebri

      What a Waste

      When you see the names Bob Hope and Jackie Gleason, you pretty much expect and instant classic. Well this film was just the opposite, an instant dud. This film was obviously somebody's idea of trying to poke fun at the hippie culture of the 1960's and the whole idea of free love. Unfortunately, by the time this film was made, everything was out of date, even the music and the fashions. You could pretty much tell by this film that Bob Hope's film career was pretty much at an end and that he was ready to concentrate on television. Also, Jane Wyman is pretty much a waste in this film as well as Tim Matheson (its hard to believe he would survive this film and make one of the great comedies of the 70's, Animal House). Also, you pretty much can tell that everyone was just in it for a paycheck. This is one film that definitely hasn't aged well.

      Also, WHO THE HELL WERE THE COMFORTABLE CHAIR?

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      Trama

      Modifica

      Lo sapevi?

      Modifica
      • Quiz
        Final feature film of Jane Wyman.
      • Blooper
        During 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.
      • Citazioni

        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.

      • Connessioni
        Featured in Bob Hope's World of Comedy (1976)
      • Colonne sonore
        Dream
        (uncredited)

        Written by Johnny Mercer

        Performed by Bob Hope and Jane Wyman

        [Frank and Elaine sing the song in their fantasy dance]

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      Domande frequenti15

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      Dettagli

      Modifica
      • Data di uscita
        • 14 dicembre 1969 (Regno Unito)
      • Paese di origine
        • Stati Uniti
      • Lingua
        • Inglese
      • Celebre anche come
        • Evlenmek Yasak
      • Azienda produttrice
        • Naho Productions
      • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

      Specifiche tecniche

      Modifica
      • Tempo di esecuzione
        • 1h 35min(95 min)
      • Mix di suoni
        • Mono
      • Proporzioni
        • 1.85 : 1

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