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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A very funny comedy from the 40's,
By
This review is from: Abbott & Costello: Here Come the Co-Eds [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This may not be prime A&C but its pretty darn close. There are many classic routines here including the oyster in the soup, the Little Red riding Hood story (AKA Jonah & the Whale), and a long set piece where Lou destroys a kitchen. The film also benefits from having a great heavy: Lon Chaney Jr! This one also has more action than usual with a hilarious girls basketball game and a great and bizarre climactic chase. The best part of the show is when Lou wrestles Lon Chaney. You will laugh!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
ONE OF THE TEAM'S BEST FILMS,
By BILLY ANTIMISIARIS "abbcos" (Karpathos, Greece) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abbott & Costello: Here Come the Coeds [VHS] (VHS Tape)
HERE COME THE CO-EDS
Universal Pictures Release Date(s): February 2, 1945 Runtime: 90 minutes Director: Jean Yarbrough Producer: John Grant Writing Credits: John Grant Edmund L. Hartmann Arthur T. Horman Cast: Bud Abbott.....Slats McCarthy Lou Costello....Oliver Quackenbush Peg Ryan........Patty Milt Bronson....Ring Announcer Lon Chaney Jr...Johnson Donald Cook.....Benson Don Costello....Diamond June Cuendet....Basketball Player Charles Dingle..Jonathan Kirkland Margaret Eversole..Basketball Player Dorthory Ford....Bertha Martha Garotto...Basketball Player Marilyn Hoeck....Basketball Player Joe Kirk.........Honest Dan Carl Knowles.....Basketball Coach Richard Lane.....Nearsighted Man Ruth Lee.........Miss Holford Martha O'Driscoll...Molly Phil Spitalny....Himself Sammy Stein......Tiger McGurk Bill Stern.......Sports Announcer June Vincent.....Diane Anthony Warde....Timekeeper Music by: Edgar Fairchild Frank Skinner Cinematography by: George Robinson Film Editing by: Arthur Hilton Art Direction: John B. Goodman Other Crew: Plot Summary: At 90 minutes, "HERE COME THE CO-EDS" is one of the longest of Abbott and Costello's Universal starring vehicles. It manages to sustain a high comic content throughout. The scene is a financially strapped girl's college, where professional dancer Molly (Martha O'Driscoll) lands a scholarship. Molly's manager/brother Slats (Bud Abbott) has arranged this as a means to publicize his sister's showbiz career, which angers the college's chairman of the board (Charles Dingle), who threatens to foreclose on the school. To keep tabs on Molly and also find ways of raising mortgage money, Slats and his pal Oliver (Lou Costello) take jobs as school caretakers, immediately running afoul of ill-tempered groundskeeper Johnson (Lon Chaney, Jr.) One of Slats' schemes involves a championship basketball game, in which Oliver, hypnotized into thinking that he's petite female student "Daisy Dimple", effortlessy sinks one basket after another. What ultimately saves the college is a concert by Phil Spitalny and His All-Girl Orchestra, featuring "Evelyn and Her Magic Violin". ROUTINES & HILARIOUS MOMENTS: Jonah And The Whale Soup Routine Trivia (...): (1)Lou Costello, in his youth a basketball player who specialized in dead-eye free-throw shooting, pumped in many of the shots himself during the film's basketball game.(2)This was the first of only two Abbott and Costello films produced by their writer John Grant.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good Not Great.,
By "hedeschance" (Toronto, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abbott & Costello: Here Come the Co-Eds [VHS] (VHS Tape)
In this film, Abbott & Costello get Abbott's sister enroled in an all girls school.The guys are brought along as caretakers. The best performance is from "The Man with A Thousand Faces" Lou Chaney. Some fair gags but not their best.
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