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FOR PARENTS
Commentary by Barbra Streisand (scene specific); Feature-length audio commentary by director Peter Bogdanovich; Featurette: screwball comedies- remember them?; Interactive menus; Theatrical trailer; Scene access; Languages: english & français; Subtitles: english, français & español
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Credits [3:10]
2. Lookalike Bags [5:42]
3. "What's Up Doc?" [4:47]
4. A Person Name Eunice [1:32]
5. Shenanigans on 17 [5:04]
6. Croatian Competition [3:58]
7. Burnise [1:54]
8. Bag and Identity Shuffle [4:31]
9. Under the Table [2:16]
10. Use Your Charm [2:10]
11. Saying Goodbye [2:53]
12. Guy with Pants Down [4:30]
13. Out on a Ledge [2:50]
14. Fired Up [2:35]
15. Manager of What's Left [3:05]
16. As Time Goes By [2:41]
17. $20,000 Embrace [2:12]
18. The Eunice Situation [2:40]
19. Rock Query [2:07]
20. Screwball Soiree [4:49]
21. Breaking Up Frisco [3:20]
22. Entering the Dragon [1:35]
23. Wreckful Driving [3:35]
24. "We Can Make It!" [1:46]
25. Judge Dreadful [2:22]
26. The Charges [2:46]
27. Making Things Clear [2:53]
28. "Hello, Daddy." [:55]
29. The Airport [3:10]
30. Back in the Money [2:36]
31. What Love Means [1:45]
32. You're the Top Cast List [1:21]
Director Peter Bogdanovich followed up the critical success of The Last Picture Show with one of the blockbuster comedy hits of 1972, a paean to the classic screwball comedies of the 1930s, particularly Howard Hawkes’s Bringing Up Baby. Bogdanovich, himself a film critic and historian, demonstrates his fluency with the genre and packs the film with inspired reprises of every great gag, pratfall, and plot twist that have had audiences laughing since the dawn of film. What’s Up Doc? is the story of nerdy musicologist Howard Bannister (Ryan O’Neal), who meets up with the free-spirited Judy Maxwell, a professional college dropout played by a very young and very appealing Barbra Streisand. Confusion over identical suitcases and some priceless jewels sets the stage for a classic farce filled with mishaps and misunderstandings, madcap chases and silly slapstick, nutty characters and endless wisecracks. Watching What’s Up Doc? today provides historical fun of another kind: the chance to see Streisand just as she was making the transition from nice Brooklyn girl to Hollywood royalty, and Ryan O’Neal when he was a bona fide movie star. There are also plenty of inside jokes that film fans will appreciate. Bogdanovich assembled a top-drawer team, including Buck Henry, Robert Benton, and David Newman as screenwriters, and a supporting cast featuring a mildly manic turn by Austin Pendleton as an eccentric tycoon, as well as the hilarious film debut of Madeline Kahn as Eunice, Howard’s uptight and controlling fiancée. David Sobel, Barnes & Noble
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One mild joke as Eunice tells the judge she "They tried to molest me," and he replies "That's...unbelievable."
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About What's Up, Doc?
Parents need to know that this movie doesn't have any inappropriate content. It's a lot of fun, even if it doesn't come close to meeting the standards of the screwball comedies it's trying to emulate.
Families can talk about what they think about the way Judy behaved. Did she ever think ahead, or did she just do what seemed right at the moment? Eunice tells Howard that she does not want romance because she wants something stronger -- trust. What is the point of view of the movie about that? How can you tell? Which is the funniest part of the movie? Were there any parts that were supposed to be funny that you did not think were funny? Why?