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Best of Abbott & Costello 1

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  • DVD Release Date: 02/10/2004
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 5,052
 
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Scene Index

Side #1 -- Disc 1
1. Love Like This (Main Titles) [3:37]
2. The Marriage Is Off [5:14]
3. Love Insurance [8:04]
4. Meet the Boys [5:37]
5. Caught in the Act [5:37]
6. You Go Your Way [2:56]
7. "Who's on First?" [4:30]
8. "You and Your Kiss" [5:54]
9. "Jonah and the Whale" [5:55]
10. "Back in My Shll" [6:05]
11. A Dirty Trick [6:17]
12. At the Bullfight [3:45]
13. "Mustard" [2:41]
14. "Your Dream Is the Same as My Dream" [5:14]
15. Call Me Lucky [2:58]
16. A Ghastly Pair [2:17]
17. Matrimonial Holdup [4:17]
18. The Payoff [1:24]
1. Main Titles [1:56]
2. New Recruits [4:57]
3. You're in the Army Now [5:34]
4. You're a Lucky Fellow. Mr. Smith [5:18]
5. The Clubhouse [3:47]
6. No Place Like Camp [4:53]
7. I Wish You Were Here [2:43]
8. Nice Move Solider [7:12]
9. I'll Be With You When it's Apple Blossom Time [4:42]
10. Drill Team [4:04]
11. Numbers Game [2:22]
12. Rifle Match [4:05]
13. On/Off [2:25]
14. When Private Brown Becomes a Captain [5:49]
15. Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B [2:25]
16. The Champ [4:32]
17. Military Maneuvers [6:30]
18. A Solider at Last [3:36]
19. Bounce Me Brother With a Solid Four [4:55]
20. You're a Lucky Fellow. Mr. Smith (Reprise) [2:11]
Side #2 -- Disc 1
1. Main Titles [2:01]
2. America's Singing Heartthrob [2:46]
3. A Clown in a Sailor's Suit [3:39]
4. Incognito [5:04]
5. "Off to See the World" [4:02]
6. Frame-Up [5:38]
7. "Find the Submarine" [6:34]
8. "Gimme Some Skin" [3:23]
9. Fighting Men [7:17]
10. "The Sailor's Life's for Me" [5:50]
11. Harnessing the Hammock [3:21]
12. "We're in the Navy Now" [6:53]
13. Sons of Neptune [3:35]
14. "Hula-Baluau" [4:23]
15. "7x13=28" [4:25]
16. The Captain's a Dope [6:39]
17. Clear the Deck for Action [5:12]
18. Double Crossed (End Titles) [4:40]
1. Main Titles [1:21]
2. Relief Waiters [4:38]
3. The Andrews Sisters [6:58]
4. Starting Trouble [5:01]
5. Beneficiaries [6:59]
6. Holdup for the Night [6:00]
7. Dirty Dancing [5:48]
8. Where's Mr. Smith? [4:47]
9. A Room for Ferdie [4:47]
10. It's Murder [4:09]
11. I'm Dreaming [5:23]
12. Testing the Water [3:48]
13. Ghostly Steps [4:46]
14. Watch the Candles [5:37]
15. Money Moose [4:59]
16. Hand it Over [4:15]
17. Everybody's Happy [5:21]
18. End Titles [1:04]
Side #3 -- Disc 2
1. Main Titles [1:54]
2. Playing Games [5:05]
3. "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You" [4:40]
4. Stick to the Union [3:45]
5. Cheapskates [5:09]
6. Double Trouble [2:41]
7. Sneaking Into the Academy [5:07]
8. Private Ground Crew [5:33]
9. "Big Foot Pete" [4:32]
10. Phone Fight [2:48]
11. "Let's Keep 'Em Flying" [2:49]
12. Runaway Torpedo [4:13]
13. In the Funhouse [8:25]
14. "The Boy With the Wistful Eyes" [3:36]
15. Grounded [8:26]
16. Fly Boys [6:37]
17. Jinxed Rescue [7:54]
18. Bail Out (End Titles) [2:37]
1. Bronco Bob (Main Titles) [5:45]
2. Peanuts and Popcorn [3:58]
3. America's Greatest Cowgirl [4:34]
4. A Narrow Escape [4:18]
5. "Wake Up, Jacob" [3:35]
6. "A-Tisket, A-Tasket" [5:24]
7. Springboard Champion [5:16]
8. Sign Up for the Rodeo [3:53]
9. Roping Wildcat [5:15]
10. "Besides the Rio Tonto Shore" [3:59]
11. Udder What? [5:52]
12. "I'll Remember April" [3:41]
13. Only a Dummy [5:59]
14. Dr. Ha Ha's Sanitarium [5:05]
15. "Rockin' Around the Square" [5:43]
16. Sunday Driver [8:40]
17. Frontier Day [2:58]
18. "Ride 'Em Cowboy" (End Titles) [1:31]
Side #4 -- Disc 2
1. Main Titles [1:28]
2. Off-Route [6:10]
3. The Four Ink Spots [5:53]
4. Disappearing Act [6:47]
5. Tip, Tap and Toe [5:00]
6. Able-Bodied Seamen [3:55]
7. All Hands on Deck [6:50]
8. Sea Rationing [4:15]
9. Uncharted Isle [4:20]
10. Mullah, The Legendary God [4:38]
11. "Lovely Luana" [7:31]
12. The Next Sacrifice [2:50]
13. "Vingo Jingo" [8:41]
14. Sacred Jewel [3:55]
15. Enter the Temple [3:49]
16. Jungle Gym [4:06]
17. Mullah to the Rescue [3:21]
18. End Titles [:18]
1. Main Titles [1:28]
2. "Murder at Midnight" [4:07]
3. Limburger Cheese [2:33]
4. Soda Jerks [4:00]
5. Murder! [6:57]
6. "Not Watts, Volts!" [4:47]
7. The Rubber Glove Clue [1:54]
8. Spruce Yourself Up [4:01]
9. Your Time Has Come [6:49]
10. Another Dead Body [6:22]
11. Secret Code [2:44]
12. The Flying Bordeilos [4:14]
13. The Line Is Busy [5:45]
14. "Every Time You Hear Those Two Guys..." [2:54]
15. Black Horse Mervyn [6:48]
16. Midnight Broadcast [3:41]
17. High-Wire Act [6:43]
18. Jr. G-Man [1:08]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

One of the best Bud Abbott and Lou Costello films, Buck Privates not only marks the film that put them on the map of stardom but also contains, as do many of their films, some of their classic vaudeville material. While these routines are hilariously funny, they work better mostly because of the situations the boys find themselves in. Bud and Lou enlist in the army to avoid being sent to jail and soon are in boot camp under the command of the police officer who was set to arrest them. While the rigors of military discipline naturally provide all sorts of opportunities for hijinks and pratfalls, the film holds up because it doesn't overdo them and actually has an interesting secondary plot involving a well-heeled dandy trying to use his family's influence to get out of service and his former valet, now also vying for the attention of the same woman. This may seem to be a diversion but it allows for a breather between the madcap routines that take over the film and provide the belly laughs. Veteran comic actor Nat Pendleton gives Abbott and Costello a run for their money as their drill sergeant, and the Andrews Sisters have a prominent role as themselves, appearing in many of the musical numbers that crop up throughout. Although the combination of all of these bits has a cumulative effect to make the film feel a little over-stuffed, by limiting the appearances of Bud and Lou on-screen it makes their performances that much more effective and avoids the fate some of their later films suffer in which they wear out the welcome of their good-natured characters. Stooge Shemp Howard has a small role as a cook. Dan Friedman All Movie Guide

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Customer Reviews

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Best of Abbott & Costello 1by Anonymous

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July 21, 2004: By the time Bud Abbott & Lou Costello made their way to the big screen they already had over a decade's worth of radio success. Voted in 1942 as America's best beloved movie stars, the team easily breezed through a series of classic comedies in a career that - only near the end - showed signs of their growing tempestuous relationship and that their popularity was waning. It's widely acknowledged today that the team did not get along in their private lives - a shame since their on camera shenanigans suggest a friendship that, sadly, never was. UNIVERSAL gives us eight great Abbott & Costello comedies in The Best of Abbott & Costello: The Franchise Collection. One Night In The Tropics (1940) is A&C?s first on screen appearance. They play supporting roles as a couple of front men for a wacked out 'love insurance' racket involving then resident heartthrob, Allan Jones. William Frawley?s also in it for kicks as well as the sadly forgotten Robert Cummings. The film is a pleasant mix of song, comedy and dance. The Tarentello production number is among the most lavish sequences that Universal ever produced for an A&C film. On the strength of their debut, Universal rushed Bud and Lou into Buck Privates (1941). The boys join the army to avoid a prison sentence and wind up falling in love with the trio of songbirds, The Andrews Sisters, who would remain a main staple cameo act in many of the subsequent A&C adventures that followed. Hold That Ghost (1941) is a hilarious mob hit/ghost story that cemented Bud and Lou?s popularity at the box office. Despite the intrusion of several tacked on production numbers (provided by Ted Lewis and The Andrews Sisters) the comedy on this occasion is sterling. After a big time thug, Moose Madsen is killed in the back of their car Bud and Lou inherit a run down speakeasy in which a million dollar inheritance has been hidden. Pardon My Sarong (1942) as Bud and Lou heading for the South Seas. It?s something of a disappointment though, with head and fortune hunters taking over the latter half of the plot. A drawn out chase sequence ensues with mediocre comedic results. Keep 'Em Flying (1941) has A&C crash the air force after they inadvertently become involve is a spurious circus racket. Ride 'Em High (1942) is a genuine treat, a rodeo lampoon with plenty of horse play and high comedy. Ella Fitzgerald introduces one of her all time hits, ?A Tisket, A Tasket? and several other production numbers make for a pleasant dude ranch diversion. Who Done It? (1942) is the other high water mark of comedic genius in this collection, as Bud and Lou attempt to solve a radio land murder mystery by impersonating police detectives. In The Navy (1941) tops off this collection. It?s a sort of Buck Privates on the ocean. It?s not as succinct as Buck Privates, but it does retain the familiar formula of A&C and The Andrews Sisters, the latter delivering another bumper crop of hit swing tunes that are sure to please. There?s plenty to smile over with the transfers. The films are spread, 2 per side, of two double sided discs. Certain films in this collection have benefited from prior restoration work done when they were reissued nearly a decade ago on laserdisc. Although each film represents variations in age related artifacts (dirt, scratches, dust, etc.) Universal has taken great care in digitally remastering these films to DVD. I have to say that after realizing there were two movies on each side of each disc I didn't hold out much...

Best of Abbott & Costello 1by Anonymous

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February 10, 2004: Abbott and Costello have been my favorite comedic duo since I was a kid. I was elated when I found out about this release. Having these first movies of their brilliant career on DVD is a dream come true. I cannot wait for the next volume.