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IMDbPro

Cancel My Reservation

  • 1972
  • G
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
627
YOUR RATING
Cancel My Reservation (1972)
ComedyMystery

Bob Hope is a stressed out talk show host who is sent on a vacation to Arizona on doctor's orders and has to play Sherlock Holmes with his wife, the lovely Eva Marie Saint, to solve a series... Read allBob Hope is a stressed out talk show host who is sent on a vacation to Arizona on doctor's orders and has to play Sherlock Holmes with his wife, the lovely Eva Marie Saint, to solve a series of murders that has Bob as the prime suspect.Bob Hope is a stressed out talk show host who is sent on a vacation to Arizona on doctor's orders and has to play Sherlock Holmes with his wife, the lovely Eva Marie Saint, to solve a series of murders that has Bob as the prime suspect.

  • Director
    • Paul Bogart
  • Writers
    • Bob Fisher
    • Louis L'Amour
    • Arthur Marx
  • Stars
    • Bob Hope
    • Eva Marie Saint
    • Ralph Bellamy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    627
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paul Bogart
    • Writers
      • Bob Fisher
      • Louis L'Amour
      • Arthur Marx
    • Stars
      • Bob Hope
      • Eva Marie Saint
      • Ralph Bellamy
    • 22User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos19

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    Top cast25

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    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Dan Bartlett
    Eva Marie Saint
    Eva Marie Saint
    • Sheila Bartlett
    Ralph Bellamy
    Ralph Bellamy
    • John Ed
    Forrest Tucker
    Forrest Tucker
    • Reese
    Anne Archer
    Anne Archer
    • Crazy Hollister
    Keenan Wynn
    Keenan Wynn
    • Sheriff 'Houndtooth' Riley
    Henry Darrow
    Henry Darrow
    • Joe Little Cloud
    Chief Dan George
    Chief Dan George
    • Old Bear
    Doodles Weaver
    Doodles Weaver
    • Cactus, Deputy Sheriff
    Betty Ann Carr
    Betty Ann Carr
    • Mary Little Cloud
    Herb Vigran
    Herb Vigran
    • Roscoe Snagby
    Pat Morita
    Pat Morita
    • Yamamoto
    Gordon Oliver
    Gordon Oliver
    • Mr. Willie Sparker
    Isabella Hoopes
    • Elderly Lady
    Buster Shaver
    • Doc Morton
    • (as Buster Shavers)
    Tracy Bogart
    • Teenage Girl
    Trudy Bordoff
    • Teenage Girl
    Richard Yniguez
    Richard Yniguez
    • Motorcyclist
    • Director
      • Paul Bogart
    • Writers
      • Bob Fisher
      • Louis L'Amour
      • Arthur Marx
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    4.9627
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    Featured reviews

    3micksteel86

    Bob's last film. 1972

    CANCEL MY RESERVATION. You've read the other reviews and they're all on the mark. Those who like it are allowed to like it and those who hate it are all correct. Directed by Paul Bogart from television the film looks like a made for TV movie as many features did in this era. In the first five minutes there's a scene in which Bob says he is 42, he was 69 when made this film. He looked great for 69 but he looked early 50's, not 42.

    Here's my problem with the film, it's like Bob had to have a one liner every minute so you have 90 bad one liners which are unrelated to the story line or script. One good funny line every five minutes would have done. Strangely, unlike most ordinary films, I think the last ten minutes have made it better. There is a great support cast with nothing to do, but it begs the question as to why Anne Archer had to wait about ten years after this for lead roles. She's gorgeous. Here's the interesting thing, the last last ten minutes which are a bit more serious are good.

    Comedy was going through a monumental change at this time and with a bit of thought, some serious jokes about Native Americans could have made this work. And Bob delivers a good line in the final scenes about going to jail for a parking ticket, and it's this line that made me think that this could have been OK.
    5biduncan67

    Dated, uneven

    The narrator of Louis L'Amour's novel, "The Broken Gun" is a rugged novelist adventurer, a great deal like the author himself. The only character who comes from the book accurately is the evil ranch foreman, Reese, played by Forrest Tucker. Apparently, from the novel's dedication, Louis L'Amour visualized Alan Ladd as Dan, the hero. The William Bendix character would have been the lawman, Riley.

    Bob Hope sought to recapture the magic of his vastly superior mystery-comedies, "The Cat and the Canary" and "Ghost Breakers" with Paulette Goddard; "My Favorite Blonde" with Madeleine Carroll; "My Favorite Brunette" with Dorothy L'Amour; and "My Favorite Spy" with Hedy Lamarr. "Cancel My Reservation" suffers from dated gags just meant to get a quick laugh, rather than to move the story ahead.

    Paul Bogart directed this picture, in a nominal sense; but Bob was the executive producer. Any credit or blame goes to our star, who was otherwise a great entertainer.

    The best scene is a skit within the movie, when Bob visualizes his lynching, attended gleefully by Bing Crosby (of course), Johnny Carson, John Wayne, and the latest hot TV star, Flip Wilson. Johnny observes, "He'll do anything to win an Oscar."

    The screenwriter of this movie was Arthur Marx, son of Groucho. Arthur and Bob must have had a major falling out, since the writer penned a vicious unauthorized biography of his former boss. Other writers remained loyal to their former benefactor, such as Larry Gelbart, Sherwood Schwartz, and Melville Shavelson.
    3bkoganbing

    Cancel My Studio Contract

    After Cancel My Reservation Bob Hope made no more films for the big screen. It's as if his career ran out of gas in the seventies. Of course with the reception this film got, it was no surprise he stuck to television and military base tours.

    When I looked at Cancel My Reservation again for the purposes of writing this review I was dumbfounded to learn that it had been based on a Louis L'Amour western novel, The Broken Gun. Now nobody had ever accused Louis L'Amour of writing comedy, so I'd love to know how one of his gritty western tales became the basis for a Bob Hope film?

    Hope plays a TV talk show host who's advised by his doctor to take a needed vacation away from his wife Eva Marie Saint. Seems as though she came on the show as a co-host, kind of like the way Joy Philbin occasionally fills in for Kelly Ripa with Regis and it's grating on his hammy nerves.

    Wouldn't you know it but Rapid Robert gets himself involved with not one, not two, but three murders while in Arizona. Bodies just keep popping up around him. Eva Marie comes west to help him solve this, but Nick and Nora Charles, they're not. The only one who believes him is Anne Archer, the stepdaughter of wealthy rancher Ralph Bellamy.

    Cancel My Reservation marks the final appearance of Bing Crosby in an unbilled cameo in a Bob Hope film. That was a regular occurrence in the forties and fifties. The sequence is an imaginary one after sheriff Keenan Wynn tells him he could be the subject of mob violence. Hope imagines he's being lynched and he looks over at the crowd and appeals to such folks as Bing, Johnny Carson, John Wayne, and Flip Wilson for help in saving an innocent man. Bing says he furnished the rope for the lynching. Wilson says the devil made him do it. Carson says he hopes to inherit Hope's show and John Wayne says he'd like to help, but it isn't his picture.

    By the way with that unbilled cameo, the Duke appears in his career in two films based on Louis L'Amour novels, his classic Hondo and this one.

    Most of Hope's films in the sixties and now the seventies are just pale in comparison to the comedy classics of his earlier period. This one may be one of the worst. The gags just fall flat, the biggest laugh is when he tells the sheriff his age is 42 when he's a quite believable 69. John Wayne was finally playing characters his own age, why couldn't Hope?

    So if you want to see a good film based on a Louis L'Amour novel, I recommend Hondo.
    7bobjane81

    a fun flick, no more, no less.

    Unlike many of the these reviewers, Cancel My Reservation does not take itself too seriously. It is no more than a fun flick, without pretensions of high drama. Much of the seemingly stilted dialogue may indeed be deliberate self-parody. The film reminds me of the old Saturday double feature presentations, for those of you who can remember those afternoons at the movies. Relax, and enjoy it as a pleasant diversion, as well as for nostalgic reminders of actors and comics of years past. Bob Hope is a true classic, who provided us with years of pleasure, and who had the courage to tackle many forms of entertainment. He was able to laugh at himself about his film flops, much as Jack Benny did with his The Horn Blows at Midnight. (And the critics are on the mark about the nubile Ms. Archer.)
    Bede

    Hardly worth writing about ...

    What a horrible little film--so many talented players wasted in a piece of ephemeral tripe! Bob Hope's gags consist mainly of long outdated topical references. He says, 'Johnny Carson' or 'Dick Cavett', and we are supposed to fall about laughing. Hope, by 1972, was far too old for this sort of role. It is a flop as a comedy, is in no sense a mystery, and mostly it is tedious in the extreme. If you see this film on your TV program, avoid it--it will disappoint you.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Bing Crosby's cameo marked his final acting appearance in a film (his remaining appearances would be in documentaries).
    • Goofs
      At 54.20 Eva Marie Saint is talking on the phone and carries it out of the bedroom. But when she enters and crosses the living room there's no cord.
    • Quotes

      [Riding on the back of a motorcycle.]

      Dan Bartlett: We can pick up my stomach on the way back!

    • Soundtracks
      Cancel My Reservation
      Music by Dominic Frontiere

      Lyrics by Bobby Hart

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 21, 1972 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Broken Gun
    • Filming locations
      • Arizona, USA(the desert mansion of businessman Carl Hovgard, standing-in for the Strawberry Hill ranch)
    • Production company
      • Naho Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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