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Chafed Elbows

  • 1966
  • 1h 3m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
551
YOUR RATING
Babo 73 (1964)
Comedy

A welfare recipient marries his mother.A welfare recipient marries his mother.A welfare recipient marries his mother.

  • Director
    • Robert Downey Sr.
  • Writer
    • Robert Downey Sr.
  • Stars
    • George Morgan
    • Elsie Downey
    • Lawrence Wolf
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    551
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Downey Sr.
    • Writer
      • Robert Downey Sr.
    • Stars
      • George Morgan
      • Elsie Downey
      • Lawrence Wolf
    • 12User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos24

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    Top cast19

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    George Morgan
    George Morgan
    • Walter Dinsmore
    Elsie Downey
    Elsie Downey
    • All Women's Roles
    Lawrence Wolf
    • Dr. Oliver Sinfield
    Tom O'Horgan
    Elmer Kline
    Ben Bagley
    Ralph Blasi
    Michael Brown
    Ronald Nealy
    Stanley Warnow
    Lafayette Malatsun
    Jack Jobson
    Jack Harvey
    Dan List
    Richard Berg
    • Saxophonist…
    Glen Berwin
    • Drummer…
    Steve Harris
    Cerves McNeill
    • Bassist…
    • Director
      • Robert Downey Sr.
    • Writer
      • Robert Downey Sr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.2551
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    Featured reviews

    8ElijahCSkuggs

    Ridiculous.

    Okay. Chafed Elbows is without a doubt one of the most unique flicks I've ever seen.

    Made in 1966 by Robert Downey Sr. (no clue Pops was a film-maker), Chafed Elbows is a satire that completely dissects and makes fun of almost every single aspect of society. From racism and the police, to incest and music.

    Filmed in a very peculiar but successful way, you're shown stills from a scene with very well-done dubbing. It's remarkably effective, especially in the laughs department.

    The flick follows around Walter Dinsmore, who basically goes around town interacting with whomever he crosses paths with. From a dude who wants to sell him as a painting because the weirdo painted his initial on his jacket, to his brother who wants to build a racist amusement park so he can help black people.

    God this flick was weird. But, it was also good, and intelligent, and funny. Check this out if you're in the mood for good old-time satire.
    stephanmorrow

    Never left me

    Along with a few adventurous souls from Stuyvesant H.S. I went to see this at the Bleecker Street Cinema so I was very young. It was the first underground film I had ever seen and it was playing with Anger's 'Scorpio Rising'. In the late 60's these films were so ahead of their time that it was like being transported out of the world of the go go 60's into the Bizarro alternate universe. I don't even have more than a hazy memory of 'Chafed Elbows' except I think the mother character was crawling under the table at some kind of wedding to get at someone and that it was all in stop action - something else that was unheard of at the time. But again, to see it back then was like being initiated into some kind of cult of either hidden truth or bizarro Satanism. But both of those films have never left me. In fact, I was surprised when I came across this site and that it could actually be seen again. Way back then, going to the Bleecker Street Cinema, the mecca for European film like Fellini's work (the first time I saw '8 1/2' I couldn't quite figure out what I had just seen - it was like a phantasmagoria of a dream - but I knew I wanted to see it again) was like attending a congregation of some arcane underground religion - and there weren't that many true believers. Stephan Morrow, Artistic Director, The Great American Play Series
    5boblipton

    All Experiments Are Successful, Aren't They?

    George Morgan has affairs with several women, including his mother, all played by Elsie Downey, while he goes through his annual mental breakdown.

    I have a big problem writing about Robert Downey Sr.'s mixture of silent and sound film with voice-overs and still-shot sequences on a site devoted to movies. It is absurd. This is not a movie in any sense that we understand it. Oh, you might call it 'experimental cinema', but what then? The general rule seems to be that such experiments are always successful, whether you're looking at the Empire State Building for 24 hours or reinventing basic Georges Melies camera tricks fifty years later. I reject such a standard as being no standard whatsoever. So where are we?

    This.... well, this thing looks amateurish, although I do do enjoy the bursts of Groucho-style voice-overs. Over to other opinions.
    10bighebeal

    Brilliant.

    First off, where did those preposterous ratings come from? Have any of those nincompoops actually seen the movie?

    It's certainly understandable if they hadn't, as it is EXTREMELY rare. More's the pity. This movie is a whoopee, stops-out, take-no-prisoners satire of absolutely everything: independent film-making, pop music, American mores, psychology, politics, family, education -- whatever popped into Downey's head. It's completely plot less and totally absurd, and it feels very much like a "Monty Python" episode made by New Yorkers in the '60's.

    It's absolutely hilarious and I could go on for days about the performances too (why didn't Elsie Downey and Lawrence Wolf have huge careers beyond their films with Downey?), but let's just leave it at this: if you ever get the chance, SEE IT.
    8framptonhollis

    feels like the cinematic equivalent of a Kurt Vonnegut novel

    This is among the strangest and most plot less comedies I have ever seen. After thinking about the film, I've realized that it the protagonist manages to be insane and incestuous murderer. The film sort of follows him around over the course of two "mental breakdowns" in which he encounters a "sock sniffer", marries his own mother, visits Heaven, and much more. The film is wonderfully satirical, and it makes fun of almost everything, much like the very best of Kurt Vonnegut's novels.

    It's a highly creative work from a highly creative director, the underground filmmaker Robert Downey, Sr. At this point, I'm beginning to really adore Downey Sr.'s sense of humor. It's always very satirical, dark, and offensive, and his filmmaking style is highly experimental, surrealistic, and absurd. All of these elements of humor and filmmaking are right up my alley and it seems that I'm really going to enjoy the rest of the films on the "Up All Night with Robert Downey Sr." eclipse set from the Criterion Collection. I'm seriously looking forward to "Putney Swope"!

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Robert Downey Sr. took the still photographs himself with a 35mm camera and had the film developed at a local Walgreens drug store.
    • Quotes

      All Women's Roles: My mother says that kissing a boy only leads to trouble and danger and skepticism.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits state: "Special Hindrance: N.Y.C. Police Dept."
    • Connections
      Featured in Putney Swope (1969)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1966 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Goosedown Production
      • Vulcan
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $25,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 3m(63 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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