The Ghost and Mr. Chicken with Don Knotts: DVD Cover
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The Ghost and Mr. Chicken Director: Alan Rafkin Cast: Don Knotts, Joan Staley, Liam Redmond, Dick Sargent

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  • DVD Release Date: 09/02/2003
  • Original Release: 1966
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 483
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Features

Closed Caption; Original theatrical trailer

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. Main Titles [3:28]
2. Luther's Story [4:43]
3. About the Simmons House [4:47]
4. The Newspaper Office [5:22]
5. Mortar, Stone and Wood [4:12]
6. Lunch With Alma [4:05]
7. Ghost Stories [2:42]
8. A Dark, Stormy Night [6:44]
9. Things Go Bump [4:57]
10. Psychic Occult Society [3:18]
11. A Picnic [12:11]
12. Dinner With Alma [4:01]
13. The Trial [12:36]
14. The House Tour [6:29]
15. It's All Over [2:00]
16. Organ Music [4:45]
17. Take the Word of the Press [2:50]
18. End Titles [:24]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Don Knotts definitively demonstrates that "calm and murder" don't go together in this 1966 comedy, which, along with The Incredible Mr. Limpet, ranks as his best. Certainly, of all his films it is the one most fondly remembered by baby boomers. Knotts is in peak pipsqueak form as small-town "boob" Luther Heggs, the put-upon typesetter at a small-town newspaper, who yearns to be a reporter. But to get a front-page byline, he must spend the night at the local "murder house," the scene of a grisly, unsolved crime that took place 20 years before. Knotts is at his bug-eyed best as he navigates the house's various terrors. When his incredible reports of ghostly organ music and a bloodstained portrait are discredited by the scheming heir who wants to demolish his family's infamous abode, Luther rises to the occasion, solves the mystery, and even gets the pretty girlfriend (Joan Staley, the November 1958 Playboy Playmate of the Month!) of his taunting rival. Look early on for Hal Smith, who played Otis the town drunk on The Andy Griffith Show. And if the home looks eerily familiar, there is a reason why: It was the stabbing grounds of Norman Bates in Psycho. Talk of murder-suicide may be inappropriate for younger viewers, who might quake along with Luther, but older kids should scream with laughter. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Ghost and Mr. Chickenby Anonymous

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April 17, 2008: I remember first viewing this movie as a child. I thought this was one of the funniest movies Don Knotts ever made. As an adult, I still get a kick out of watching this film.

Ghost and Mr. Chickenby Anonymous

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December 01, 2003: I was a young kid when this I first saw this classic and I was sure I was too cool to be caught off guard laughing out loud at an 'old' movie. I still have the casette tape I recorded of the movie while watching it. I now crack up listening to myself laugh my a*s off. I highly, highly recommend this movie for ALL ages. Don Knotts was a brilliant comedian and the fact he was snubbed for the Oscar that year is one of the greatest injustices in motion picture history.


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