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poster of Fancy Pants
Rating: 5.6/10 by 16 users

Fancy Pants (1950)

An American actor, impersonating an English butler, is hired by a rich woman from New Mexico to refine her husband and headstrong daughter. The complications increase when the town believes the actor/butler to be an earl and President Roosevelt decides to pay a visit.

Directing:
  • George Marshall
  • Oscar Rudolph
  • Michael D. Moore
  • Ronnie Lubin
Writing:
  • Edmund L. Hartmann
  • Harry Leon Wilson
  • Robert O'Brien
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Jul 19, 1950

Rating: 5.6/10 by 16 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 32 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: daughter, butler, musical, president, nouveau riche
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Bob Hope
Humphrey / Arthur Tyler
Lucille Ball
Agatha Floud
Bruce Cabot
Cart Belknap
Lea Penman
Effie Floud
Hugh French
George Van Basingwell
Eric Blore
Lionel Boswell / Sir Wimbley
John Alexander
Teddy Roosevelt
Norma Varden
Lady Maude
Ida Moore
Elderly Mother
Oliver Blake
Mr. Andrews

John Chard

Hey fancy pants-you're a pussyfooting critter. Fancy Pants is directed by George Marshall and adapted from the Harry Leon Wilson story by Edmund L. Hartmann & Robert O'Brien. It stars Bob Hope, Lucille Ball, Bruce Cabot, Jack Kirkwood and Lea Penman. A Technicolor production, it's scored by Van Cleave and cinematography is by Charles Lang. Plot is a reworking of Ruggles of Red Gap, which was made into a successful film in 1935, directed by Leo McCarey and starring Charles Laughton. This take finds Bob Hope as a low grade American stage actor who gets hired by a Western family in the hope that his refined manner will rub off on the more rough and tumble members of the family. Finds start to spiral out of control when the town mistake him for a noble lord, bringing the attention of one president Teddy Roosevelt, who plans a visit to the family home. Not only that, but Hope has to contend with town bully Bruce Cabot, who is convinced that Hope is trying to steal his girl, Lucille Ball. Bright and bubbly comedy musical fare, played purely for laughs and given a good quality production. Hope and Ball featured together in a total of five film's, their chemistry a winning formula, even if the material wasn't always that beneficial to their respective comedy leanings. Fancy Pants is one of the better ones, but it's bookended by indifference. The start is laborious, and not really setting the standard for what is to come, but once we land in the Wild West it not only lets Hope shine, but also it brings into play Kirkwood and Cabot (excellent). Then it's a case of letting Hope ponce about as a noble butler/Lord, while Ball and Kirkwood plot to have his nuisance self sent packing back to England. It's during this meaty middle section that we get some genuine laugh out loud moments, briskly constructed by Marshall and scripted as sharp as a razor. We even have time for a couple of tunes, with the quite wonderful "Home Cookin" the stand out. Sadly the ending lacks impact and comes all too quickly, which is doubly disappointing since the big build up was great fun. A good but not great Bob Hope film as a whole, but when it's good it's very good and therefore easily recommended to the comedy classic fan. 6.5/10


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