A man buys a house and comes to believe that not only is the house haunted by werewolves, but a family of vampires lives next door.A man buys a house and comes to believe that not only is the house haunted by werewolves, but a family of vampires lives next door.A man buys a house and comes to believe that not only is the house haunted by werewolves, but a family of vampires lives next door.
Storyline
Did you know
- Quotes
Dick Martin: [during opening credits] You told me we're equal partners. Sixty/forty, we split everything down the middle... Except Florence.
Dan Rowan: I am not interested in half of Florence.
Dick Martin: You don't know what you're missing.
- ConnectionsFeatures The Time Machine (1960)
Featured review
Rowan and Martin's "Laugh-In" was one of the cultural icons of the late 1960s, the "don't-miss" show if you wanted to be considered cool at the water cooler (or the playground, in my case). I never saw this movie when it was released. My parents would have found it scandalous. These days, it's much tamer than the majority of prime-time comedy shows, even those for "family viewing." It opens with a funny stand-up routine by Dan and Dick, commenting on the credit roll. This is the closest the movie gets to capturing the spirit of the TV show, and R&M are the ONLY cast members from the series to appear. So it's not really a "Laugh-In" movie; as others have pointed out, it's more like an Abbott and Costello monster film, or a racy episode of "Scooby-Doo." The plot is paper-thin, but that's OK, because the screen is always brimming with 60s goodness, especially in the forms of Carol Lynley and Julie Newmar. How can you miss with character actors like Mildred Natwick, Fritz Weaver, David Hurst, Dana Elcar, and 60s TV staples Leon Askin (Hogan's Heroes) and Robert Reed (Brady Bunch)? The ending has a Pythonic twist to it (a few years before 'Holy Grail'), with a funny version of the "who shot the gun" film cliché.
All in all, this is probably a film that only veterans of the 60s will enjoy. It's mindless, but an entertaining way to spend an evening.
All in all, this is probably a film that only veterans of the 60s will enjoy. It's mindless, but an entertaining way to spend an evening.
- LCShackley
- Sep 7, 2012
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Details
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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