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Easy Come Easy Go [VHS]

4.2 out of 5 stars 35 customer reviews


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Product Details

  • Actors: Elvis Presley, Dodie Marshall, Pat Priest, Pat Harrington Jr., Skip Ward
  • Directors: John Rich
  • Format: Closed-captioned, Color, HiFi Sound, Original recording reissued, NTSC
  • Rated:
    PG
    Parental Guidance Suggested
  • Number of tapes: 1
  • Studio: Paramount
  • VHS Release Date: October 27, 1998
  • Run Time: 95 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: 630021592X
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #266,837 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD
Elvis Presley stars as Lieutenant Ted Jackson, a Naval SCUBA diver, who discovers a sunken ship while deactivating a mine. He decides not to re-enlist and teams up with his former band member and partner Pat Harrington, the notorious maintenance man of "One Day at a Time" fame, to help him find a possible treasure in the shipwreck. However, the best character in this movie is yoga teacher Elsa Lanchester, who played the Bride of Frankenstein, co-starring with Boris Karloff. The soundtrack is excellent, with Elvis singing and strumming six wacky tunes, including the unforgettable "Yoga Is as Yoga Does".
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Format: VHS Tape
Yesterday (10-11-01) I saw Easy Come, Easy Go for the first time. As it got underway with Elvis in the Navy in charge of getting rid of mines, I thought it had a chance to be one of Elvis' best, particularly with the catchy title song and the fact that Elvis had trimmed down some from his 1966 efforts (he probably also did it as he was getting ready to marry Priscilla.)
The basic storyline had potential, and I was really getting into the movie until the "Yoga" song and the portrayal of the beatnick theme that was popular in the 1960s. After that, you think "Elvis just going through the motions again. How can he let himself be treated this way by the Colonel?"
The movie does make somewhat of a recovery as the race to the treasure begins and Elvis gets into one of his best fight scenes on the opposition's boat.
Definitely boilerplate Presley vehicle that, with a few changes, could have been deemed among his top five movies out of the 33 he made.
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Format: DVD Verified Purchase
I LIKED THE MOVIE, BUT I ALMOST SENT IT BACK TO THE SELLER BECAUSE WHEN IT ARRIVED IT WAS WRAPPED IN A KENNY ROGERS GIFT BOX, SO I PRESUMED THAT THAT WAS WHAT IT WAS. I COULD READ THE WRITING THROUGH THE TAPRE. MY INSTINCTS TOLD ME IT WAS MY ELVIS MOVIE AND IT WAS, GLAD I OPENED IT. THANKS, johnny marco
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Format: DVD Verified Purchase
I like the way he finds the mine and tries to think to himself what reward he can get if the treasure is really worth a lot of money he's willing to share it with friends if they help him with recovering it to the top of the water and sell it,then at the end just donates it to his friend for her dream.
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Format: DVD
If Easy Come, Easy Go is not the worst film Elvis ever did, it is one of his worst. Not that his performance is bad, but the script and storyline are. It was obvious that Colonel Tom was cutting back on the what he was paying script writers inorder to try to make a quick buck. Even the songs in this one are not very good. Movies like this one are what killed Elvis' movie career and reputation as an actor. His management should have been fired for getting him into this one!

Pass on this and get one of his early movies (Jaihouse Rock or King Creole are good) or maybe Blue Hawaii or GI Blues (they are far better than this one).
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Format: VHS Tape
"Easy Come, Easy Go" is a likeable in some sense. Elvis is a Navy frogman who's on a search for buried treasure hidden in a sunken ship under the sea. He finds it's linked to Dodie Marshall and with her help he tries to find it. But, there are some unwelcome searchers looking for it too. One of them being the enticing Pat Preist of "Munsters" fame. When the treasure is found, it's all in copper. But, they're able to get some money out of it. A good thousand or so dollars. Elvis' characters were never money hungry. This film has got all the '60s fads and fashions: yoga crazes, body painting, spaghetti/body art, swinging dance moves, swinging music, and a wheel full of girls called "The Love Machine". That one's a great movie song that's often looked down upon. It's so '60s themed like the Bond movie "Casino Royale" is. Take about 95 minutes out of your life and see this swinging flick.
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Format: DVD
Easy Come, Easy Go (1967) is a fairly comedic adventure featuring Elvis Presley as a financially challenged ex-Navy diver, looking to recover some underwater treasure.

Presley is Ted Jackson, who while on his last mission as a demolitions expert for the US Navy, discovers some treasure in a sunken ship. Unfortunately Gil Carey (Skip Ward), another diver in the area, snaps a photo while he is making the discovery. Upon getting his release from the service, Jackson begins making plans to go treasure hunting, partnering with Navy buddy Marty Schwartz (Sandy Kenyon) and Judd Whitman (Pat Harrington Jr.) a beatnik type who owns the bar, Easy Go-Go. He rents diving equipment from Captain Jack (Frank McHugh), and enlists Jo Symington (Dodie Marshall), to join the treasure hunt. Cary and his rich girlfriend Dina Bishop (Pat Priest) figure out that Jackson may be after underwater treasure, and begin shadowing Jackson and his partners, trying to beat them to it.

This is not one of Presley's best efforts, but the film's ocean settings and underwater scenes at least offer a nice change of scenery. After being in Presley's Spinout (1966), Dodie Marshall is elevated to a starring role, the first and last, in her brief acting career. After being sweet Marilyn Munster on TV, Pat Priest displays a lot of skin, and a little avarice in her role. The songs are average at best, with the corny performance of "Yoga Is As Yoga Does" featuring a grating duet with yoga instructor Elsa Lanchester.
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