Soitenly
Moronika
The community forum of ThreeStooges.net

Hold That Ghost (1941) - Abbott and Costello

0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline metaldams

 https://vimeo.com/312653508

Watch HOLD THAT GHOST in the link above.


   Like mentioned in the IN THE NAVY review, the majority of HOLD THAT GHOST was filmed before the former but released after due to the success of BUCK PRIVATES.  BUCK PRIVATES provided Universal the formula for Abbott and Costello comedies that lasted right around the end of World War II - comedy, romance, and musical numbers, all in relatively even doses.  Your mileage on this formula may vary, but those of us who like pure comedy would have to wait until later on to see Bud and Lou do straighter comedy films.  HOLD THAT GHOST is interesting in this respect.  Since the majority of this was filmed before Universal knew they had a commercially successful formula with BUCK PRIVATES, we actually do get a straightforward comedy for the most part, a horror comedy.  All the musical numbers serve as a framing device for the comedy, tacked on at the beginning and the end and filmed much later only because of BUCK PRIVATES success.  In other words, The Andrews Sisters were an after thought.  We see them for the last time here and compared to most of the other music we get later, I’ll miss them.

      I’ve made it known over the years horror comedy is generally not my favorite genre.  While I don’t flat out hate it, it does seem a little one note due to the fact we get cheap thrills and scared comedians with not much else.  Here, it’s an exception.  HOLD THAT GHOST is the CITIZEN KANE of horror comedy, with Bud and Lou’s 1948 entry in the genre being, I don’t know, CASABLANCA.  In other words, they both rule, dudes and dudettes.  One of the reasons this film works is Universal themselves.  Going back to the silent era with their two Chaney blockbusters, Universal knew how to soak in the horror atmosphere and in 1941, they were in the middle of their second great sound horror cycle, which lasted from 1939 - 1946.  In addition to being a comedy, this films falls as a borderline entry in this Universal Horror cycle.  The second they enter the haunted house, notice how creepy that cobweb is on Lou’s head.  Check out how brilliantly done those hands poking out of the wall grabbing its victim are.  A great horror cliche done by Universal as far back as 1927 in THE CAT AND THE CANARY.  Check out that hallway and the way it’s lit.  Other studios of the day did good horror films, but none of them had the atmosphere of Universal and Bud and Lou do reap the benefits of this here.

      As far as the comedy itself, we get an actual comic film this time instead of a bunch of fun burlesque routines mixed in between musical and romantic moments.  Yes, the one note remains, we get a bunch of thrills with scared reactions, yet this one note has never been in better pitch than here.  Lou Costello puts on a performance that rivals the genius of prime Curly Howard during the same era.  He just doesn’t let up, a pure ball of energy.  The whole candle scene is classic, the way he slowly gets scared, whispers the, “Oh, Chuck” until it gets louder and louder, just wonderful timing.  My favorite bit would be Lou’s bedroom going back and forth between his room and a speak easy, totally freaking Lou out and turning back to his normal room just in time so Bud doesn’t believe Lou.  There is this one point during the speakeasy part where they’re by a doorway, Lou totally freaking out and Bud getting angry and covering Lou’s mouth - I just lost it from laughter here.  Brilliant, brilliant stuff, and it doesn’t let up for an hour.

      The rest of the cast is great too.  Joan Davis plays a good comic role as Lou’s quasi girlfriend.  The dance scene she has with Lou is wonderful.  Again, check out the way Universal lit the room for starters.  They both work wonderful together, Ms. Davis slashing that water from the ground gracefully and Lou dancing a good mixture of buffoonery and grace.  The romantic couple is hardly intrusive for once.  In fact, their scenes are quick, both characters are likable and it doesn’t hurt the leading lady is Evelyn Ankers.  One of my personal old Hollywood crushes, she was the Christine McIntyre of 40’s Universal Horror.  She gets a brief scene with Joan Davis where they work as a mini comedy team and Evelyn plays a fairly good straight woman.  Also a great scream as well.  Shortly after this, she would be the leading lady in THE WOLF MAN and things would take off from there, that scream coming in handy.  The way everybody is thrown together in the cab is a bit rushed, but really, who cares?  Once they’re all together in that spooky house we have a wonderful ensemble cast.

      Part of me wishes BUCK PRIVATES wasn’t such a hit because maybe we’d get more films like HOLD THAT GHOST early on.  A true standout of the early films and a real comedy classic.
- Doug Sarnecky


Offline larrysfinenose

  • Grapehead
  • *
  • my mother knows my name
Nice review, metaldams.

HOLD THAT GHOST is my favorite Abbott and Costello movie and one of my all-time favorite movies. We've had a family tradition of watching it every Halloween since I was a child, and I don't think we've missed a year yet.

This movie has a lot going for it. An excellent cast, great plot, and wonderful music from the Andrews Sisters. The background music and the lighting is the cherry on top of this film. I believe this film has some of Bud and Lou's best moments in their film career. Their comedy routines are top notch, and the chemistry they have with the other actors in the film is almost unmatched. I feel as though this team had a lot of fun on set together.

As I watched this film as I got older, I noticed a lot of little flubs. A lot of the lines are dubbed in (and the actors lips aren't even moving). I get distracted by it at times. Also, there's a couple of loose ends (like, where on Earth did those detectives go after they disappeared under the bar?). However, thinking about it now, I think it all adds to the charm of the film. I don't think the audience is supposed to notice or care, or maybe it was intentional by the filmmakers. My dad always makes a comment about it when we watch it together.

My favorite moments include the sugar daddy exchange, Lou trying to make his bed, Lou's room changing into a casino, and the end chase scene. Also the line where Bud says "Stop working yourself into one of your frenzies!" And Lou's response "What frenzies? I ain't making frenzies with nobody in here!" kills me everytime. A wonderful movie all around that sparks warm memories.

Is everybody happy?  [yay]


Offline metaldams

Nice review, metaldams.

HOLD THAT GHOST is my favorite Abbott and Costello movie and one of my all-time favorite movies. We've had a family tradition of watching it every Halloween since I was a child, and I don't think we've missed a year yet.

This movie has a lot going for it. An excellent cast, great plot, and wonderful music from the Andrews Sisters. The background music and the lighting is the cherry on top of this film. I believe this film has some of Bud and Lou's best moments in their film career. Their comedy routines are top notch, and the chemistry they have with the other actors in the film is almost unmatched. I feel as though this team had a lot of fun on set together.

As I watched this film as I got older, I noticed a lot of little flubs. A lot of the lines are dubbed in (and the actors lips aren't even moving). I get distracted by it at times. Also, there's a couple of loose ends (like, where on Earth did those detectives go after they disappeared under the bar?). However, thinking about it now, I think it all adds to the charm of the film. I don't think the audience is supposed to notice or care, or maybe it was intentional by the filmmakers. My dad always makes a comment about it when we watch it together.

My favorite moments include the sugar daddy exchange, Lou trying to make his bed, Lou's room changing into a casino, and the end chase scene. Also the line where Bud says "Stop working yourself into one of your frenzies!" And Lou's response "What frenzies? I ain't making frenzies with nobody in here!" kills me everytime. A wonderful movie all around that sparks warm memories.

Is everybody happy?  [yay]

There are actually plenty of loose ends in this film, but I think we both agree in this case, it’s part of the charm and not a knock.  When a film is this fun, why let a minor detail like plot get in the way?  I never noticed the dubbed lines, I’ll be on the lookout next time.

Sounds like you have a fun Halloween tradition.
- Doug Sarnecky


Offline metaldams

Fun picture below of Evelyn Ankers going Moe Howard on a skull as she shows off her resume to The Mad Ghoul.  Notice HOLD THAT GHOST is earliest on the list.
- Doug Sarnecky


Offline Umbrella Sam

  • Toastmaster General
  • Knothead
  • *****
    • Talk About Cinema
https://talk-about-cinema.blogspot.com/2018/05/hold-that-ghost-1941.html

Like I say in my review, my main issue is with the nightclub scenes. Actually, it’s not so much the nightclub scenes as it is how obvious they were placed in at the last minute. Give the other films credit, at least they tried to pace it out, but here they’re all lumped together, which makes it even more repetitive (as great as the Andrews Sisters are, their songs are very forgettable; I’ve heard Ted Lewis was a good performer, but it seems like he’s kind of being cut short with his act).

Otherwise, this is a great Abbott and Costello film. The later ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN is better with the suspense element, but this one leaves more opportunity for scare gags since they go to the haunted house earlier in the movie and stay there for the majority of it.

Looking back, yeah, there do seem to be loose ends, but...come on, it’s Abbott and Costello. As long as it’s not a ridiculously frustrating plot element, I don’t mind.
“I’ll take a milkshake...with sour milk!” -Shemp (Punchy Cowpunchers, 1950)

My blog: https://talk-about-cinema.blogspot.com


Offline Umbrella Sam

  • Toastmaster General
  • Knothead
  • *****
    • Talk About Cinema
Actually, while I have it on my mind, I was talking to my uncle recently and we somehow got to talking about Abbott and Costello. When I brought up that their movies weren’t as good as their TV series, he cited this film as being the best one. It definitely is one of the better ones.
“I’ll take a milkshake...with sour milk!” -Shemp (Punchy Cowpunchers, 1950)

My blog: https://talk-about-cinema.blogspot.com


Offline metaldams



Otherwise, this is a great Abbott and Costello film. The later ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN is better with the suspense element, but this one leaves more opportunity for scare gags since they go to the haunted house earlier in the movie and stay there for the majority of it.


Agree with this statement 100%.
- Doug Sarnecky


Offline Shemp_Diesel

Not sure what to add, except this is my favorite Bud and Lou feature, yes, even better than that '48 film they did with Chaney and Lugosi and Mr. Strange. I love this movie so much that I completely overlook the pox-marks that would otherwise be Ted Lewis (and his shadow, bleh) & the damn Andrews Sisters. I know that in the past, some of us posters have obviously compared A & C to the Stooges (obviously) & what certain patterns each team did better.

Me personally, I think maybe Bud & Lou topped the stooges in the plumbing department in their film In Society & I've always though Lou was way better than the any combo of the stooges when it came to "spookhouse antics." The changing rooms, running from the various spooks & the timeless moving candle bit are superb. And Joan Davis is quite a revelation as a comic partner to Lou--a pity they didn't re-team in future films or maybe the odd episode of the tv show.

Btw, this may not fit, but here's some live Bud & Lou I thought hilarious I would share for the "halibut"...





Talbot's body is the perfect home for the Monster's brain, which I will add to and subtract from in my experiments.


Offline larrysfinenose

  • Grapehead
  • *
  • my mother knows my name
And Joan Davis is quite a revelation as a comic partner to Lou--a pity they didn't re-team in future films or maybe the odd episode of the tv show

I agree, Shemp_Diesel. Joan Davis is such a joy, and her and Lou together are quite amazing. I wonder how well they got along off screen.


Offline Woe-ee-Woe-Woe80

9/10 for me, I thought this was one of A&C's funnier films and the haunted house scenes were the highlight of the film, the musical scores due hurt the film a little bit but not as much as some of the other films, I wish Joan Davis had gotten to be in more A&C films, she and Costello could've made a good comedy team IMHO.


Offline NoahYoung

When WPIX in NYC would run this film, it always started with the scene at the gas station, so all the music at the start was cut out. The rest of the film was intact, including the final music scenes. This was probably the only A&C film where WPIX cut out music. Believe it or not, they would cut out A&C comedy routines and leave each and every song intact!

Then for some reason WPIX aired this one in a longer timeslot and showed the entire film uncut, and I was glad to finally see the full movie.

I think that HOLD THAT GHOST is much funnier that A&C MEET FRANKENSTEIN, though the latter is still one of my favorites as well. That film actually dresses two routines from the former film in new clothing. The scene in the House of Horrors with Dracula's coffin is the moving-candle gag. When the boys explore Dracula's castle and go through the revolving panel, it is basically the changing-room scene from HOLD THAT GHOST. What makes A&C MEET FRANKENSTEIN great, though, is that it is not a parody a la YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN. It is instead basically another entry in the Universal monsters series that also happens to star A&C. It is a great film, but at the end of the day, HOLD THAT GHOST is funnier. A&C MEET FRANKENSTEIN terrified me as a young kid, while HOLD THAT GHOST did not.

In the Bob Furmanek book, A&C IN HOLLYWOOD, it says that when they were watching the dance scene with Joan Davis at the studio, perhaps the rushes, Lou was a bit peeved at the laughs Joan Davis got. He felt he was being upstaged. This was according to Robert Lees, one of the script writers on the film. I wonder if this was before they knew what a hit BUCK PRIVATES had become -- and perhaps Lou wasn't yet confident with his film career.

(Jerry Lewis in interviews usually comes across as a self-aggrandizing snob to many, but in the DVD for his classic THE BELLBOY, there is a commentary track with himself and Steve Lawrence, where the latter asks Jerry about a comic scene that does not contain Lewis. He basically asks him how he felt about another comic getting such big laughs. Jerry's response make sense, since he says something to the effect that he wanted to make a good comedy, and he didn't care who in the film generated the laughs. It was an interesting question to ask, but since Lewis wrote, directed, and produced the movie, he obviously had complete control. )

Later in their career, there are a few examples where other comics were featured or got big laughs in an A&C movie, such as Sid Fields (MEXICAN HAYRIDE, LITTLE GIANT), Murray Leonard (LOST IN A HAREM), Joe Besser (AFRICA SCREAMS), Shemp (AFRICA SCREAMS.) And of couse Besser and Fields were in their TV show.

Even though it was only 3 movies, they sure wore out the service comedy theme pretty quickly. At least we have HOLD THAT GHOST to break up the monotony.

It is interesting that as those service comedies progressed, they did alter the formula slightly, though. In BUCK PRIVATES, they start out as civilians, in IN THE NAVY they are already, well, in the navy. In KEEP'EM FLYING, they technically join the Army Air Forces, but they are only ground crewmen. To me, the latter is the weakest of the service trio.

So the musical numbers in HOLD THAT GHOST are just bookends, and don't interfere with the film proper. The following year, they made WHO DONE IT? which has no musical numbers at all, and ranks as one of their best.

A lot of the magic of HOLD THAT GHOST comes from the fact that it was essentially only the second starring film that they made. It has been well documented in various published books on A&C about how their energy diminished as their film career progressed, no doubt exacerbated by the tragedy in Lou Costello's life in 1943. But the energy in HOLD THAT GHOST leaps off the screen. You wouldn't notice it from watching their early films, but Bud Abbott was already 46 in 1941! (BTW, Wikipedia makes him 2 years younger, but all my published books say he was born in 1895.) Lou was much younger at 35.

Other than the bookends, it is almost all A&C. The only brief lulls are the romance, but since they contain Evelyn Ankers, I don't mind. Richard Carlson plays the male romance lead, and he gives a great performance, since he plays a kind of absent-minded professor. A few months ago, I saw THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON for the first time, and he was in it! I said to myself, "That's the guy from HOLD THAT GHOST!" I don't think I've seen any other of the movies he was in.

Joan Davis is great, and she was given her own sitcom (I MARRIED JOAN) in the 50s, co-starring Jim "Mr. Howell" Backus. I don't think I've ever seen an episode, since it was pulled from syndication in the early 60s when Davis died, due to legal issues with her estate, according to Wikipedia. Wiki also claims it has been shown on cable as recently as 2018.

The candle-moving gag, the Lou/Davis dance, and the changing room gag, are the highlights, but the film is packed with amusing dialogue involving the boys with each other, and with the other actors, throughout.

I'm surprised that nobody has mentioned that Shemp is in this film! I always enjoy Shemp in A&C's movies, but the only one where he remotely resembles his Stooge character is in AFRICA SCREAMS. Otherwise, he usually plays normal people, and is a straight-man for Lou, or others like W.C. Fields in THE BANK DICK.

There are probably no other films they made after this one that are funnier, although THE NOOSE HANGS HIGH comes pretty darn close, and was made 7 years later as an independent production. That film to me is vey much underrated.

A&C basically "remade" this film, condensed, in the HAUNTED HOUSE episode of the first season of their TV Series. They did make lots of changes, though, since the plot involves having to stay with Hillary overnight in a house so she can get an inheritance. Pity that they had to introduce a gorilla into the finale. Still a fun episode, and one of the best in the series.








Burt Lancaster was too short!
- The Birdman of Alcatraz


Offline metaldams

Geez, I’ll be 46 in December, so crazy to think Bud was my age when these films started.  I really would have thought he was younger.  The energy these two give off indeed amazing and among the best they would ever show.  I see we share a thing for Evelyn Ankers, but being 46, the sober realization is that the version of her in this film I can be her father!  Yikes.

It’s been a while since I’ve watched this, probably since I’ve written the review, but man, I even forgot Shemp was in this!  I never thought Universal really gave him his due.  Definitely going to rewatch this one soon.
- Doug Sarnecky


Offline NoahYoung

It’s been a while since I’ve watched this, probably since I’ve written the review, but man, I even forgot Shemp was in this!  I never thought Universal really gave him his due.  Definitely going to rewatch this one soon.

I became a Shemp fan from the A&C and WC Fields movies before I became that familiar with his Stooges work. (There was a long stretch as a kid when the Stooges weren't on my local channels, but I had vague memories of seeing Shemp in the Stooges when I was even younger.)

It was weird at Universal -- was he considered a comic character actor? Yes and no. They never gave him anything silly to do, but I've only seen him with Fields and A&C at Universal. I love in IN THE NAVY when Costello asks him how long until he's getting out of the navy, and Costello expects an answer from 1 to 10 (in weeks or months), and Shemp says "90 days." Costello then doesn't know what to do! Then he winds up giving Shemp too much change of $10 since there are 3 months in 90 days!

Burt Lancaster was too short!
- The Birdman of Alcatraz