Naphtali
Practically Family
- Messages
- 767
- Location
- Seeley Lake, Montana
I'll begin with four comedies, and I'm going to keep the pikers out by using BRINGING UP BABY first. I don't believe it was astonishingly entertaining, but what do I know. . . . I'll be with you in a minute, Mr. Peabody.
Here are some that fit the bill:
1. The Last Time I Saw Archie (1961) Robert Mitchum and Jack Webb. This was a droll, thinker's comedy, based sufficiently on reality that the person portrayed in the movie by Mitchum won an invasion of privacy suit from the writer, William Bowers (Jack Webb in the movie). This lasted in theaters less than two weeks in my town. I saw it and loved it. I've seen it once on television, many years ago.
2. The D.I. (1957) Jack Webb. This is a reasonably accurate, hilarious examination of drill instructors. It has perhaps the funniest disciplinary scene in the history of motion pictures. Those of you who have seen the movie know exactly what I mean.
3. Local Hero (1983) Peter Riegert and Burt Lancaster. This is a quiet comedy. No belly laughs, merely many smiles and a sense of well-being after watching.
4. A Coming-Out Party (1961) James Robertson-Justice and Leslie Phillips. A super scientist, who could have been The Man Who Came to Dinner, becomes a prisoner of war in World War II Germany. Tough luck for the Germans.
Here are some that fit the bill:
1. The Last Time I Saw Archie (1961) Robert Mitchum and Jack Webb. This was a droll, thinker's comedy, based sufficiently on reality that the person portrayed in the movie by Mitchum won an invasion of privacy suit from the writer, William Bowers (Jack Webb in the movie). This lasted in theaters less than two weeks in my town. I saw it and loved it. I've seen it once on television, many years ago.
2. The D.I. (1957) Jack Webb. This is a reasonably accurate, hilarious examination of drill instructors. It has perhaps the funniest disciplinary scene in the history of motion pictures. Those of you who have seen the movie know exactly what I mean.
3. Local Hero (1983) Peter Riegert and Burt Lancaster. This is a quiet comedy. No belly laughs, merely many smiles and a sense of well-being after watching.
4. A Coming-Out Party (1961) James Robertson-Justice and Leslie Phillips. A super scientist, who could have been The Man Who Came to Dinner, becomes a prisoner of war in World War II Germany. Tough luck for the Germans.