![]() |
||||||||||||||
|
Come Blow Your Horn (1963) - full review!Directed by Bud Yorkin, who co-produced this slightly above average light comedy with Norman Lear, who wrote the screenplay adapting a play by Neil Simon, who earned his first motion picture screen credit, it stars 47 year old Frank Sinatra playing a 39 year old older brother to a 21 year old character, played by Tony Bill, and the son of Lee J. Cobb's (though Cobb himself was only 51 at the time) and Molly Picon’s (65 at the time) characters, who'd been married for 43 years. If you can get past all these improbable numbers (and aren't offended by its shallow female, and other stereotypical characterizations), it's actually (still) a pretty entertaining film today. Barbara Rush, Jill St. John, TV Bonanza's Dan Blocker, and Phyllis McGuire round out the primary cast; Dean Martin, Mary Grace Canfield who plays a woman hypnotized into thinking that Sinatra is JFK (an "inside" joke), and Grady Sutton (who can be glimpsed while Sinatra sings the film's title song) are among those who also appear uncredited. The film's Color Art Direction-Set Decoration was nominated for an Academy Award. Sinatra plays Alan Baker, a playboy whose refuses to "grow up" and get married, per his father Harry's (Cobb) wishes. Harry blames his wife Sophie (Picon) for being too soft on Alan as a child, hence their "boy's" situation. Both are pleased that Alan's (much) younger brother Buddy (Bill), who still lives at home with them, is more responsible. Of course Buddy's had enough of being treated like a child, and leaves their suburban home to live with Alan in his extravagant bachelor pad in New York (how he affords it is a loose end until the film's end), though only about an hour's drive away, on his 21st birthday. Both sons work in their father's decorative artificial fruit business, Alan as a salesman and Buddy in design (?). Once Buddy lives with Alan, and with his older brother's encouragement (at least initially), he undergoes a transformation into a younger version of Alan. Buddy learns by example, having seen Alan successfully juggle an attractive air-headed wannabe actress who lives in his building, Peggy John (St. John), a beautiful singer named Connie (Rush) who's conveniently on tour a lot of the time, and even a would-be, though married, client of their father's company Mrs. Eckman (McGuire), a buyer for Neiman Marcus, whose husband's discovery of Alan's swinging sales technique finally gets him in trouble with Mr. Eckman (Blocker), and fired by Harry. Naturally, Buddy's "corruption" is upsetting to their parents as well. Not only are the characterizations humorous, for example Cobb's Harry is evidently a self-made immigrant who loudly calls his son a ‘bum’ (though Martin, in a cameo, is the film's only real bum) and Picon plays a long-suffering "Jewish" mother, but the tried and true (silent film) technique of never knowing who's on the other side of Alan's apartment door when the doorbell (or the phone) rings is effectively utilized with comic results. Rush plays a woman whose biological clock is ticking such that she's hoping Alan will settle down with her after only six months of dating. John plays a bubble-headed neighbor who helps Buddy begin his "fling". The film's final third is not as good as the first two thirds, and it does end rather predictably - with Alan seeing the error of his ways through Buddy and deciding to marry Connie. However, that doesn't keep it from being a good ride while it lasts. |
Find your movie or DVD now @:
![]() Most Recent Additions: I Want You (1951) - full review! A Bill of Divorcement (1932) - full review! Patterns (1956) - full review! Last Train from Gun Hill (1959) - full review! Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957) - full review! Hour of the Gun (1967) - full review! To Sir, with Love (1967) - full review! You'll Never Get Rich (1941) - full review! The Actress (1953) - full review! Mannequin (1937) - full review! All My Sons (1948) - full review! Mourning Becomes Electra (1947) - full review! State Fair (1945) - full review! Billy Budd (1962) - full review! Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. (1951) - full review! The Bachelor Party (1957) - full review! The Glenn Miller Story (1954) - full review! The Southerner (1945) - full review! The Russians Are Coming the Russians Are Coming (1966) Never on Sunday (1960) - full review! The Arrangement (1969) - full review! A Summer Place (1959) - full review! Miracle in the Rain (1956) - full review! Love Letters (1945) - full review! The Story of Dr. Wassell (1944) - full review! The Absent Minded Professor (1961) 20000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954) Come and Get It (1936) - full review! The Prize (1963) - full review! This Is the Army (1943) - full review! Home from the Hill (1960) - full review! Hangmen Also Die (1943) - full review! The Shop on Main Street (1965) - full review! The Good Guys and the Bad Guys (1969) - full review! A Gathering of Eagles (1963) - full review! This Happy Breed (1944) - full review! Red-Headed Woman (1932) - full review! Waterloo Bridge (1931) - full review! Baby Face (1933) - full review! Titanic (1943) - full review! Cover Girl (1944) - full review! Saratoga Trunk (1945) - full review! Murder on the Orient Express (1974) The Young Philadelphians (1959) - full review! Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) Pocket Money (1972) - full review! Week-End at the Waldorf (1945) Judge Priest (1934) - full review! Broadway Melody of 1936 (1935) - full review! The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970) Angel Face (1952) - full review! The Wreck of the Mary Deare (1959) - full review! Dallas (1950) - full review! Springfield Rifle (1952) - full review! Gaslight (1940) - full review! The Gazebo (1959) - full review! Passage to Marseille (1944) - full review! The House on 56th Street (1933) - full review! Annie Get Your Gun (1950) - full review! Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964) Lonelyhearts (1958) - full review! Good News (1947) - full review! Wild Rovers (1971) - full review! Lovers and Other Strangers (1970) - full review! Topper Returns (1941) - full review! The Masque of the Red Death (1964) The Barkleys of Broadway (1949) Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948) The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (1933) Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962) The Winning Team (1952) - full review! The Hasty Heart (1949) - full review! Storm Warning (1951) - full review! |
||||||||||||
[Home] [Hitchcock] [Oscar's Best] [Essays] [Essential Films] [TCM Picks] [Obscure Films] [Links] [Other Reviews] [Academy Awards] [Silent Films] [Movie Index] |
||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |