Bob Hope MGM Movie Legends Collection (1966)
Facts
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Bob Hope MGM Movie Legends Collection (Alias Jesse James/Boy, Did I Get the Wrong Number/The Facts of Life/I'll Take Sweden/The Princess and the Pirate/The Road to Hong Kong/They've Got Me Covered)
DVD Price: You save 25%! As of Jul 4 3:47 EDT (details)
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| Directed by | George Marshall, Frederick De Cordova and Sidney Lanfield |
| Cast | Bob Hope, Elke Sommer, Phyllis Diller, Cesare Danova, Marjorie Lord, Lucille Ball and Joyce Jameson |
| Theatrical Release | June 8, 1966 |
| DVD Release | December 4, 2007 |
| Running Time | 672 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 027616096838 |
| Buy this item | $29.99 at Amazon.com As of Jul 4 3:47 EDT (details) 7 DVD, TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 39 new from $24.50, 11 used from $25.00, 1 collectible from $39.98 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| bob makes it look easy. |
as can be in the facts of life while alias jesse james reunites bob with
jane russell. take a chance on this one. you won't be dissapointed.
now if someone will relase beau james on dvd... June 26, 2008
| worth everything |
| Hope Springs Eternal |
The Road to Hong Kong was the last "Road" picture. A DVD guide I read said they made one too many, and ought to have left this one off. However, this has always been one of my favorites. Leonard Maltin gives it 2.5 stars and says, "while fun, it lacks the carefree spirit of its predecessors". One sided disc, widescreen, 92 minutes, black and white, 1962.
Boy Did I Get a Wrong Number. Leonard Maltin calls this a BOMB, his lowest rating. I agree, although one may want to watch it once anyway. Double sided disc: full screen on one side, widescreen on the other. 99 minutes, color, 1996.
Alias Jesse James. Leonard Maltin gives it three stars and calls it "one of Hope's funniest". The Western theme didn't hold me and I found it a big snooze. Double sided disc: full screen and widescreen. 92 minutes, color, 1959.
The Facts of Life. Leonard Maltin gives it three stars and calls it a "sophisticated comedy". Bob Hope co-stars with Lucille Ball in one of her semi-dramatic roles. Maltin says "The two stars make a good team worth watching". I agree. I'll watch Lucy in anything, and that rather goes for Hope as well. Here's one of those "almost an affair" movies, full of subtle innuendo, before the late 'sixties brought out such bilge as Myra Brekinridge and the so-called sexual revolution which, after failing in society, was later shoehorned into popular culture to shore up the declining quality in TV and movies. Double sided disc: full screen and widescreen. 104 minutes, black and white, 1960.
They Got Me Covered. Leonard Maltin gives it two stars and says it "was topical at the time, awkward now; not up to Hope standards." Here we diverge. I found this spy yarn the most enjoyable film in the set. The writing is almost as scintillating as in My Favorite Brunette. Bob Hope plays a broadly comic, but vulnerable and flawed character, somewhat out of his usual ouvre. One sided, full frame disc. 94 minutes, black and white, 1942.
I'll Take Sweden. Leonard Maltin gives it two stars, calling it a "pseudo-sexy Hope vehicle" with "witless proceedings". Since it's from 1965, it had to be conflicted about relationships, but as with Doris Day's films, it's a comedy by Shakespeare's definition, which means it ends in marriage. A chance to see Tuesday Weld, Frankie Avalon, up and coming stars of the '60s, along with Hope and Dina Merrill, stars of the '50s. Lavish animated titles. One sided disc. 97 minutes, color, 1965.
The Princess and the Pirate. Leonard Maltin gives it three stars and calls it "one of Bob's wackiest". This is the sort of '40s "something for everyone" box office smash that I can't get into. Virginia Mayo is, nonetheless, outstanding. Maltin likes the younger Walter Brennan in this film, in which he plays a pirate; I like the older Brennan much better in The Gnome Mobile and The Real McCoys. One sided disc, full frame. 94 minutes, color, 1944. February 14, 2008
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