Average customer rating:
- Why was this released this way?
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Abbot White
Starring:
Abbot White
Manufacturer: Crash Cinema Media
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
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ASIN: B00006G8GC
Release Date: 2002-07-23 |
Customer Reviews:
Why was this released this way?.......2002-11-08
Abbot White was a true disappointment, and it did'nt have to be. The key to Abbot White's faliure to be a decent film was the awful dubbing. THe company that released this verison of the movie used the worst possible method for dubbing a film. Basically they used the origianl sound track with the music and CHinese language, and turned it down to dub in English when the actors spoke. As a result you have a constant distraction of the music suddenly disappearing and English being spoken. When the conversation pauses, the music suddenly comes back up, and goes down again when the actors speak. You also have times where you can still hear the original Chinese language being turned up or down. It sounds as if they had a guy at the volume control trying to time the volume unsuccesfully throughout the movie.
Needless to say the film became annoying to watch, which is a real shame because the story looked like it was fairly decent. I only sat through about 40 minutes of the movie before I had to turn it off. Don't waste your time or money on this DVD (unless you like being aggrivated). It's not worth it. Wait to see if it's re-released by a better company like Tai Seng. At leat Tai Seng dubs better and if they don't, at least they have the good sense to use the original language track, with English subtitles.
Average customer rating:
- Two if by train
- A bargain for Lum & Abner fans
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Two Weeks to Live
Manufacturer: Digiview
ProductGroup: DVD
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ASIN: B00080MQJU |
Product Description
In the zany tradition of their hilarious radio show, Lum & Abner bring their act to the big screen. On the trail of a large inheritance, the boys travel to Chicago and instead find they are responsible for the benefactor's debts.
Customer Reviews:
Two if by train.......2006-06-14
I had no idea who Lum and Abner were before I bought this DVD, so I did a little Internet research before I watched this moving picture. (Yes, I do research for these reviews. Stop laughing). Lum and Abner got their start in radio, starring in a serial comedy simply titled "Lum and Abner", each episode running 15 minutes. The series lasted thirteen weeks a year starting in 1932 and finishing in 1954 with minor changes to the format in that time. In 1940, they began supplementing their radio entertainments with feature length movies using the same characters and fictional setting.
Their celebrity doesn't seem to have lasted into the modern age as memorably as Laurel and Hardy, or Abbott and Costello, but they were extremely popular in their day. The series was set in the fictional town of Pine Ridge, Arkansas, which based itself and its inhabitants on the real town and colorful characters of Waters, Arkansas. According to the Wikipedia, the popularity of this radio series led to a name change. The town of Waters, Arkansas became Pine Ridge, Arkansas, the name of the fictional locale it had inspired.
Based only on viewing this movie, I can see how their comedy may not have aged as well as others of this time. The jokes seemed a little lame to this modern viewer. The punchlines are obvious about half a beat before the characters even begin reciting them. They don't even have the extreme groan-inducing corniness power of a Wheeler and Woolsey film. That said, I did enjoy this movie, though I doubt I will ever feel the need to watch it again.
Introductions aside, here's how the movie proceeds. Lum and Abner are two elderly hillbillies living in the middle of nowhere in rural Arkansas. A letter slowly makes its way to Abner and informs him that he has inherited a railroad company from his deceased Uncle Ernie. Abner names himself the railway's chief conductor and Lum talks himself into becoming the company's president.
Lum, as president, decides that the railroad needs to have a stop in Pine Ridge, so they sell shares in the company to the townsfolk and use the money to buy all the land needed to divert the rail. However, once they arrive in Chicago and see the railroad for themselves, they realize that there has been a serious misunderstanding (a staple of all these type of films). They've completely wasted the townsfolk's money, and will need to find some way of raising money to pay back their neighbors.
Later, at the lawyer's office building Abner falls down a flight of stairs. He's taken to a doctor's office, but due to a mix up, he mistakenly believes that he has only two weeks to live (you saw that coming from the title, didn't you?). Given Abner's condition and their own desperate situation (and egged on by a friendly, Shakespeare-quoting window-washer), Lum decides that Abner should sell himself out as a daredevil, figuring that even if Abner kills himself in some crazy stunt, he's only going to miss out on two weeks anyway.
I found the first portion of the film a bit slow going and relatively dull. It's not actively bad, it's just not especially funny or entertaining. The action only really picks up after Abner's misdiagnosis and the subsequent stunts he finds himself performing. This is where the film breaks out of tired "dumb hillbillies in the city" clichés and becomes relatively original.
Among the various stunts that Abner is forced to perform are: painting a flagpole on the top of a skyscraper, staying the night in a haunted house, drinking a mad scientist's potion, and piloting the first rocketship to Mars. These gags aren't laugh-out-loud funny, but they are somewhat amusing, especially in their implementation. For goofiness, I'd put this movie about midway between a Three Stooges film and a Cary Grant comedy -- not exactly a fully zany, off-the-wall experience, but a little more wacky that a straight comedy. I found them to be falling between two stools, but I could see how someone else would enjoy this somewhat gentle sense of humor.
I viewed the Digiview Productions release of this movie. The picture and sound quality are adequate; it's certainly watchable. Given that these comedians are virtually unknown today, I suppose it's only down to luck that a halfway decent print even exists.
I could imagine other period comedy teams taking this simple premise and making a better film from it. The Marx Brothers, for example, would probably create something delightfully perverse (I'm picturing Harpo as the poor schmuck leaping from planes, scaling the sides of buildings and attempting to reach escape velocity). I did enjoy Lum and Abner's take on this, even though I doubt I'll ever feel the need to pop this DVD into the player ever again.
A bargain for Lum & Abner fans.......2005-11-19
I don't know much about the radio team of Lum & Abner, except that even their staunchest fans admit that movies weren't their best medium. Most of their films are already available from Alpha Video, but at this price, I was willing to take a chance on this title. It's a mildly entertaining comedy, perhaps better appreciated by an L&A fan than a casual viewer. The quality is hardly outstanding, though it's better than I expected-certainly better than the washed-out print they used to run on local TV a few years back.
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