Oliver is in trouble. He's been caught embezzling money from his father's company, and unless he can pay back the $250,000 he took (which he can't), he will be fired from his job, arrested, ... Read allOliver is in trouble. He's been caught embezzling money from his father's company, and unless he can pay back the $250,000 he took (which he can't), he will be fired from his job, arrested, and probably sent to jail.Oliver is in trouble. He's been caught embezzling money from his father's company, and unless he can pay back the $250,000 he took (which he can't), he will be fired from his job, arrested, and probably sent to jail.
- Harold Booker Esq.
- (as Stephen Franken)
Featured reviews
I watched it at the ages 12-13, and not even then could I like it.
Low budget, low quality acting job. Stay as far away as possible from this one!
This silly screwball comedy stars a man with an impressively silly name, the (surely) one and only Bob Dishy. This is possibly the actual funniest aspect connected to this film though, as despite being a relentless farce, it isn't especially amusing. Its plot ensures that it is quite episodic in nature and this means that it's fairly fast paced which certainly helps a bit. While it isn't exactly a successful comedy, it is strange enough to be worth a viewing. It's sort of like a poor man's Mel Brooks, even if some of Mel Brooks' actual films sometimes seem like poor man's Mel Brooks films themselves. But the sheer daftness on display here is sort of endearing to a certain extent and, on the whole, I sort of didn't mind it all that much.
It's all shtick all the time from insane characters, as I realized when they got down to Richard Libertini. Insane characters can be fun, but the audience needs someone to hold onto, some one to react to the insanity, which you don't get until Libertini and Vito Scotti are riffing off each other in. Italian. That wasn't anywhere near enough to keep my interest, and the writers seem to have agreed, since they didn't bother writing an ending.
Did you know
- TriviaBob Dishy was a last-minute replacement to star in the Mickey Rose screenplay when the producer was unable to insure Peter Sellers, due to Sellers' heart condition.
- GoofsRichard Libertini's character is referred to as "James Kirsten" several times and is listed that way on his office building's directory, but when Jordan Oliver and the other characters meet him he is thereafter referred to only as "Jack Kirsten."
- Quotes
Clarice Oliver: [Sharing with her attorney her concerns about Jordan] He keeps acting, pretending he's other people.
Harold Booker, Esq.: You mean how he sometimes thinks he's Humphrey Bogart?
Clarice Oliver: Oh, that's not so bad. The Bogart thing was a game with us. We were gay, we laughed.
[Smiling]
Clarice Oliver: He's be Bogart and I'd be Bacall and -
[suddenly disturbed]
Clarice Oliver: and then without warning he was Peter Lorre! Harold, he made me be Sydney Greenstreet. I gained 35 pounds in one month!
- ConnectionsReferences Dracula (1931)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Kill My Wife... Please!
- Filming locations
- Southern California, California, USA(Location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro