IMDb RATING
5.9/10
3.8K
YOUR RATING
Dexter Riley and his friends accidently discover a new chemical mixed with a cereal seems to give anyone temporary superhuman strengthDexter Riley and his friends accidently discover a new chemical mixed with a cereal seems to give anyone temporary superhuman strengthDexter Riley and his friends accidently discover a new chemical mixed with a cereal seems to give anyone temporary superhuman strength
Richard Bakalyan
- Cookie
- (as Dick Bakalyan)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThird and final time Cesar Romero played the character A.J. Arno in a Disney film.
- GoofsIn the very last scene, Phil Silvers does a karate chop on the cereal table at the weight contest. A split second before he "chops" the table, he turns his hand downward and instead slaps the table. They try to hide this with a cereal box, but you can still see the error.
- Quotes
Mercedes: Professor Quigley's here to pick up his severence check.
Dean Higgins: Professor Quigley, hmm? Well you inform Professor Quigley that we don't give out severence checks anymore.
Mercedes: But we always give out severance checks.
Dean Higgins: Well, we don't anymore! We just ran out of money!
- Crazy creditsAfter Dexter Riley lifted the 1111 pound barbell, as Medfield College defeated State College Phil Silvers's character, Kirwood Krinkle, left the Medfield team celebrating and in another room he tried a karate chop on a metal statue. As soon as his hand hits the statue, filming stops. Then he appears in extreme pain, mouth wide open as if screaming OUCH! With his open mouth and still photograph, the words "The End" appear, after which the closing credits begin.
- ConnectionsFollows The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1969)
Featured review
I grew up with the Dexter Riley/Medfield college trio of films. Well kind of, I was in grade school with The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes came out and a freshman in High School when Now You See Him Now You Don't was released. I enjoyed both of them and kind of got an image (mostly false as it turned out) of what lay in store for me at college. They were silly Disney fare that I loved then and still do today because they take me back to my youth.
By the time this movie came out I was a senior in high school and wasn't much interested in Disney moves any longer. But I did see it later on TV and I have to say it failed to live up to the first two. The first two movies were silly and fun, this movie was just silly, not so much fun. It seemed strained, as if all the actors from the first two were trying to squeeze the magic out of their characters one final time and having trouble succeeding. Kurt Russell was a no-show for much of the film, probably because he was trying to distance himself from Disney at the time and it was just as well. He was in his twenties by this time and the Dexter Riley persona no longer fit him. Cesar Romero seemed like he was just going through the motions. As if they asked him to play A.J. Arno one more time and he agreed either for a paycheck or out of nostalgia for what once was. And Joe Flynn, back as Dean Higgins was another story. He passed away not long after filming this movie and it's very apparent throughout the film that he's not well and is just a shadow of his former self. It's really sad to watch.
This movie was the last in a long line of live action Disney college/teenager movies and it barely manages to stumble across the finish line. Watch the first two Dexter Riley movies, they're well worth your time. This one not so much.
By the time this movie came out I was a senior in high school and wasn't much interested in Disney moves any longer. But I did see it later on TV and I have to say it failed to live up to the first two. The first two movies were silly and fun, this movie was just silly, not so much fun. It seemed strained, as if all the actors from the first two were trying to squeeze the magic out of their characters one final time and having trouble succeeding. Kurt Russell was a no-show for much of the film, probably because he was trying to distance himself from Disney at the time and it was just as well. He was in his twenties by this time and the Dexter Riley persona no longer fit him. Cesar Romero seemed like he was just going through the motions. As if they asked him to play A.J. Arno one more time and he agreed either for a paycheck or out of nostalgia for what once was. And Joe Flynn, back as Dean Higgins was another story. He passed away not long after filming this movie and it's very apparent throughout the film that he's not well and is just a shadow of his former self. It's really sad to watch.
This movie was the last in a long line of live action Disney college/teenager movies and it barely manages to stumble across the finish line. Watch the first two Dexter Riley movies, they're well worth your time. This one not so much.
- How long is The Strongest Man in the World?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- The Instant Muscle Man
- Filming locations
- Glendale, California, USA(chase scene)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.75 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was The Strongest Man in the World (1975) officially released in India in English?
Answer