Hello, my loves. I truly didn't intend to be away from posting for this long, but mid-August is quite a time in The Underworld. There's always a big, out-of-town work convention paired with my birthday, then a lot of catching up to do all around. This is a very minor offering, I'm afraid, but it's something to check in with until I can get back to my regular blathering. I recently watched, for the first time, a truly sorry Bob Hope comedy film called
Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1966) and could barely get through it. It reminded me of another movie that Leonard Maltin once called "the worst" of Hope's flimsy 1960s efforts. It certainly isn't what I would call "good," but I nonetheless found
The Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell (1968) a hell of a lot easier to sit through than
Wrong Number.
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The plot, such as it is, is rather thin. Set during WWII, the Japanese have bombed a U.S. tanker that was filled with Pabst Blue Ribbon beer, beer that was earmarked for the island on which Bob Hope is stationed. This buzz-killer (literally!) leads Hope to ask for some nurses to be assigned to the island in order to perk up the soldiers' morale...!
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Hope assembles a band and gathers all the men together to welcome the arriving plane, complete with a ditty called "Welcome Pretty Lady."
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All the servicemen are ready, willing and eager to meet the arriving nurse (only one could be spared at this time)...
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Here she is, boys...! It turns out to be zany Phyllis Diller.
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In other news, young Michael Burns has received a "Dear John" letter from his girl back home and is despondent over it. Hope tries to assuage his grief by flashing back to the time he fell in love in Hawaii, just before the war broke out.
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Walking along the beach, he came upon the dazzling Miss Gina Lollobrigida.
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I have always found bright, indirect sunlight to be most flattering and Lollobrigida looks smashing.
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Hope is in complete agreement! However, there isn't a single thing about her look that speaks to 1941....!
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But with a 41 year-old Lollo in this kind of condition, does anyone truly care?!
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She's really got it goin' on in this movie.
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It's a shame that this was the sort of movie she was landing
at this stage, though Hope was famous for enticing glamorous women to
costar with him in his loony opuses. |
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In a second flashback, she shows off another daring Pucci getup and, again, looks sensational in it.
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Another part of Private that helps this movie go down easier is the presence of glorious Jeffrey Hunter.
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As a fellow officer of Hope's, he's tan and lean and very soothing to the eye.
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Speaking of eyes, his sparkling blue eyes pop from the screen (sometimes to a great degree when he's mugging comedically!)
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Comedy isn't really one of Hunter's great strengths, but when you look like he did, a lot can be forgiven. As a sort of mama's boy in the movie, he is so desperate for love that he begins to have dreams about Diller...!
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One dream has him (hideously bewigged) as a fig-leaf-clad Adam in the Garden of Eden.
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And of course Diller is the tempting Eve.
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I'm no Oral Roberts, but I don't think they got their Bible right...! Adam and Eve were nude UNTIL they bit into that apple. Then it was that they resorted to fig leaves to obscure their private parts...
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It's a dorky sequence, but it gives us a look at most of his body, including some blurry tan lines.
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Still not free of dreams and hallucinations about Diller, he soon finds himself talking to her when...
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...she transforms into Cleopatra before his (searingly beautiful) eyes.
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When the scenario with the nurses doesn't pan out, Hope turns his attention to recovering all the beer that was sunk. Director Norman Taurog (whose last film this was) is no Joshua Logan when it comes to packing a movie with beefcake. But there are occasional glimpses of tan, male physiques. (Among several familiar faces in the movie are - seen here - Robert Donner, the aforementioned Burns and William Christopher, who later costarred on MASH.)
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For reasons known only to him, William Wellman Jr (son of the great director) almost never bothers to put a shirt on. But that's fine. The movie needs something other than the admittedly beautiful island scenery to hold our attention.
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I have always felt that Hunter was an underappreciated actor as well as an underappreciated example of male beauty. It's hard to believe that this was his last American film.
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While shooting Viva America (1969), a period gangster film made in Italy, he was injured in an explosion gone wrong. This, in conjunction with a reliance on alcohol, later led to a fall in his home and his death at only 42. In America, he wore a robe in his love scenes and only showed a hint of chest in one telephone sequence.
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A prior film, the little-known Austrian-Italian Sexy Susan Sins Again (1968) was a randy romp in which he showed his torso off several times (for the final time in a movie.)
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Speaking of randy... This foreign poster for O'Farrell tries to write a check that not only the movie doesn't cash, but which the audience never wanted to! LOL No one was screaming for Bob Hope to shimmy out of his pants like this. And note how it must have been a late-release, trying to piggyback onto the smash hit M*A*S*H (1970), whose Koren army medical setting has no relation to the WWII naval period of O'Farrell!
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And that brings us to The End. See you soon with more nonsense!
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9 comments:
I sympathize with you about the "busy time of year" part, so extra thanks for posting as much as you do! And Happy Birthday!
Jeffrey Hunter was indeed quite an eyeful, and those blue eyes were amazing!
SEXY SUSAN SINS AGAIN was the second in a long-running series of borderline-softcore comedies known as the "Frau Wirtin" ("Landlady") series in their home country, and were about Suzanne, a slutty landlady and madam in the Napoleonic era; they usually had suggestive German-language titles like "The Landlady also likes blowing Trumpets".
This one was made under the title "FRAU WIRTIN HAT AUCH EINEN GRAFEN" ("The Landlady also has a Count"), with Hunter playing the Count. However, even though he's shown on the U.S. poster for SEXY SUSAN, Hunter's name is not featured-- billing goes to "Mike Marshall" instead!:
https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51BD%2B-VXu4L._SR600%2C315_PIWhiteStrip%2CBottomLeft%2C0%2C35_SCLZZZZZZZ_FMpng_BG255%2C255%2C255.jpg
"Frau Wirtin" herself (Terri Torday) also fails to make the U.S. poster; at least this didn't apply overseas, where both were credited. I'm not sure how many of the "Frau Wirtin" movies were released in the U.S., but this sort of German-language movie filled adult theaters in the late '60s and well into the mid-'70s.
I'm glad you covered this and included the shots of the dream sequence with Hunter as "Adam"-- not only for the eye candy, but also because I'd run across a shot of him minus Phyllis Diller, and couldn't figure out how his being dressed like that would've fit into the film!
William Wellman, Jr. (son of the director) was also a nice eyeful, and had previously appeared in the voodoo-themed low-budget film MACUMBA LOVE (1960), as a honeymooner who gives his bride-- buxotic ("44-20-36") June Wilkinson-- some serious competition as they frolic in the surf. (At least he did for me, when I caught this on late-night TV at about age 14!) There's a legendary alternate take for overseas markets, in which famous nude model June ditches her top-- but alas, Wellman keeps his trunks on.
Thanks for covering this one, Poseidon-- and as usual, I'm sure your breakdown is much more fun than the film itself!
(Your posts are often like the much-missed mid-'90s USA cable show REEL WILD CINEMA, where Sandra Bernhard presented the best parts of trashy movies with running commentary-- as she put it, "We watched the whole thing, so *you* don't have to.")
Thanks for all you do, Poseidon! Love to all, and be safe and well, everyone!
Hi Poseidon,
Nice that you were able to find some highlights in one of the string of regrettable cinematic misfires that Hope undertook in the later 60's that finished off his feature career. Of course that was true of many great stars of earlier eras as Hollywood went through a time of enormous change and the old guard and the rising mavericks duked it out for dominance.
I have only vague memories of this, so much so that if I were to watch it now it would practically be a new experience. But I'm thinking these pix of Gina, Jeffrey and Bill Wellman Jr. are the best parts of the film so I'm good.
I also think Jeffrey Hunter wasn't given the credit due for his acting. He wasn't one of the greats or capable of the enormous variety of an Olivier or Claude Rains but he was always watchable and competent and when given the chance, such as in The Searchers, he could draw the audience in. His early death, the mediocre string of films he finished his career with and the lack of a signature role have hurt his legacy but there were few better looking men than he in his prime.
Yeah, Hope was really starting to wear out his welcome by this time. It’s as if he was trying to show contempt for his audience. Granted, this did seem to be a fertile period for military comedies. (In this case, fertile as in manure). Especially galling given the dreadful mistreatment of Hunter. I thought he looked his best in uniform and with that subtle hint of gray on his temples.
Oh well, thank goodness for fast forward and freeze frame.
Once as a wee child my father mother and I were walking in Charleston SC and almost literally ran into Hope and General Westmoreland. My father was gob smacked to say the least, but I was unimpressed. It's not like Sister Bertrille or Endora was walking down the street...I also find it fascinating that in the age before cell phones I don't think it even crossed my father's mind to take a photo. A handshake was more than enough. They were of an age to enjoy Hope and Crosby, I could not have cared less and found Hope to be affected and not that funny.
Diller on the other hand was quite the pioneer. It's said the "The Marvelous Mrs Maisel" is in part based on her. If you haven't seen that show I would HIGHLY recommend it, if nothing else for the period fashions. Also artificial she was a creature of her own making, and man oh man how it worked for her.
As I've said many times I'm loud and proud to be a nerd and I of course know Hunter from the pilot for "Star Trek", his most lasting and iconic role among fans of that genre. He was originally to star but alas, it was not in the stars for him (see what I did there? hahhaha). Of course, there's the "I was a teenage Jesus" in "King of Kings' but THE character and beard hide him in a way, except for those eyes. I have a theory that playing Jesus in anything puts some kind of kibosh on an actor. I am offended and outraged by the size of that fig leaf, that's for sure. How dare they. How VERY dare they!
We're discussed Gina's penchant for photography. Intriguing to say the least. What a gal. For decades she put the Va in Vavavoom.
Happy birthday Poseidon, so very grateful for your blog. I wish you many more years and many more posts. Thank you so much.
Wow Gina is dynamite in that bikini. Bob really did some junk, but I love anything with Phyllis Diller and will watch. Jeffrey is gorgeous. I saw a good Bob Hope flick, a Raymond Chandler parody called "My Favorite Brunette". Really funny and a great cast.
Egads! By the time my siblings and I were '70s teens, we were calling him Bob Hopeless! His TV specials went on for another couple of decades and these latter day "comedies" were staples of TV's afternoon movies. We were unimpressed, to say the least!
Female stars often get ridiculed for "playing young" well past their prime, but male stars did it, too--and Bob Hope was a prime example. Having sex bombs of the '60s fall all over Bob Hope was even more unconvincing than when they melted over aging Rat Packers like Dino and Frankie!
Gina really got the glam down in the '60s, didn't she? And Jeffrey Hunter was one handsome fellow. Interesting that she far outlived him.
And Phyllis Diller at least livens things up. Her "Cleo" is even more startling than when Lucy spoofed the Queen on her TV show in the early '60s. Glad to know Liz inspired their takes on the Egyptian temptress by way of Hollywood.
The last '60s Hope flick I endured was "I'll Take Sweden" and it was like watching a smutty sitcom!
Cheers and appreciate you're keeping your blog going, always a treat!
Rick
One must not forget the beautiful French actress Mylene Demongeot. I think this may have been her only U.S. film. Sadly recently deceased, she came to prominence in the late 1950s and just last year received rave reviews for her performance in Maison de Retraite.
She was promoted as a Brigitte Bardot type. I think she was much better than Bardot, was highly likable and did not always seem sulky and bad humoured.
Ms Demongeot was long married to Marc Simenon the son of the French novelist Georges Simenon the author of the Maigret detective series.
Mylene starred opposite many Poseidon favourites as Alain Delon, Dirk Bogarde, John Ericson, Geoffrey Horne and Jeffrey Hunter.
An appraisal of her career is perhaps due.
Liam, Mylene Demongeot had previously been been in Otto Preminger's U.S.-U.K. co-production BONJOUR TRISTESSE (1958), which was shot in France with a mostly American and British cast. But THE PRIVATE NAVY OF SGT. O'FARRELL was really her only full-on "American" film, AFAIK.
And you're absolutely right, she really deserves more attention than she's gotten in this country, where relatively few of her films got released. I've always wanted to see the 1957 adaptation of Arthur Miller's THE CRUCIBLE she starred in opposite Simone Signoret and Yves Montand, with a script by Sartre.
hsc, you always stun me with your knowledge of the obscure! You really dig deep for your viewing entertainment. I try, but I basically wade. LOL The Adam segment is way too short. He needed to do a Jorge Rivero and go swimming, too. Ha ha! William Wellman Jr was VERY cute in "Macumba Love" (though it seemed like the older star, Walter Reed, got more trunks time in than he did!) That's a movie that could use a cleaner version for viewing. It's in rotten shape. But who would go to the trouble?!? :-[ Thank you!!
joel65913, I've mentioned it before but it seems like RJ Wagner was given a much bigger push by 20th Century Fox than Jeff. Also, RJ seems to have been given more roles that were basically just him doing this western or him doing this drama while Jeff was placed in movies that augmented his looks a lot, denying him as much of a chance to have a matinee persona. He's nearly always great in whatever he's doing! Thanks!!
Dan, Hope had become such and institution. He hosted the Oscars many times (and did give some truly pithy comments here and there), hosted the aforementioned "Chrysler Theater" for a whopping fee and had popular specials. But, man, these later movies just tended to be wretched! I will say he and Phyllis Diller worked rather well together, but the writing just wasn't there. Thank you.
Ptolemy1, hilarious about Sister Bertrille and Endora!! I watched a little bit of "Mrs Maisel" when it began and I didn't dislike it, but I wasn't a subscriber to whichever channel it was on and so I didn't continue. I've been told it got really good as it went along. I'm rarely drawn to any contemporary TV series, though. Again, hilarious about the fig leaf! Ha ha! It's like they didn't want him to come off in any way sexy, so they saddled him with that wretched backwards wig and the stupid huge fig leaf. Lord, even Carol Burnett was suggesting nudity on her TV show back in the day. Let him show a tad more flesh...
Gingerguy, considering the shape Lollo was in in 1968, it's no wonder they anachronistically put her in that skimpy bikini. She looked marvelous. If you check this out, I suspect that Jeff and Phyllis will get you through it. ;-)
Rick, I didn't post pics, but Bob has a brief moment (when Gina removes her coverup) when he pulls his shirt open! It's actually amusing in context, but certainly nothing to savor... The only thing, and I do mean the ONLY THING I can recollect about "I'll Take Sweden" is Bob in an old-fashioned hat and then cute li'l Frankie Avalon in an abbreviated set of trunks crazily dancing the shit out of the title song!! Ha ha ha!!! "I'll Take Sweden... yeah yeah!" Not exactly a Sammy Cahn song. Thank you!
Liam, I don't dispute you about Mylene, but her presence in this particular film is so negligible as to be insulting. She hardly has any lines, isn't styled well and is just plain misused. (Reportedly, she and Gina didn't see eye to eye at all.) Considering all the people you've met and known, you really ought to consider generating your own blog! I'm sure people who like these vintage stars would eat it up.
hsc, that's where I first encountered Mylene - "Bonjour Tristesse." :-)
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