The Road to Hong Kong (1962) - Turner Classic Movies

The Road to Hong Kong


1h 31m 1962
The Road to Hong Kong

Brief Synopsis

A pair of con men get mixed up in international intrigue and the space race.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Musical
Release Date
Jan 1962
Premiere Information
Chicago opening: 23 May 1962
Production Company
Melnor Films
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 31m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Synopsis

Harry Turner and Chester Babcock are two vaudeville song-and-dance men touring the Far East. While hawking a phony do-it-yourself space kit in India, Chester is knocked unconscious and loses his memory. Harry takes him to a Tibetan Lamasery, where he is given a special herb that cures his amnesia and provides him with a photographic memory. At the airport, Chester meets Diane, a beautiful spy for the Third Echelon, an organization of mad scientists planning to conquer the universe. She mistakes him for a photographer assigned to copy a secret Russian formula for rocket fuel, and Chester is able to memorize the information merely by glancing at the equations. Later, the two men are captured by the organization and inadvertently become substitutes for a pair of apes on a moon reconnaissance flight when they try to escape. Upon their return the Third Echelon decides to sacrifice them to science but quarters the two men in a harem to make their final hours more pleasant. They evade their captors and flee through Hong Kong with Diane, who has come to realize that the organization's leader is a madman. An old friend, Dorothy Lamour, who is appearing at a local nightclub, helps the trio outwit their pursuers and alert the Hong Kong police. As the Third Echelon headquarters are raided, however, Harry, Chester, and Diane are trapped in a rocket that takes them to Plutonlum, a remote planet, where they are met by Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, who have arrived in another spacecraft. Musical numbers : "Let's Not Be Sensible" (Harry), "Teamwork" and "It's the Only Way To Travel" (Harry and Chester), "We're on the Road to Hong Kong" (Harry, Chester, and Diane), "Warmer Than a Whisper" (Dorothy Lamour).

Crew

Brian Ackland-snow

Draughtsmen

Eric Allwright

Makeup

A. G. Ambler

Sound

Dave Aylott

Makeup

Jack Baker

Choreography

Maurice Binder

Main titles

Biographic Cartoon Films

Animation

Sidney Braham

Sketch artist

Sammy Cahn

Composer

Syd Cain

Art Director

Bob Cartwright

Assistant art Director

Ted Clements

Draughtsmen

Jimmy Devis

Focus puller

Lee Doig

Music Editor

Jimmy Dooley

Sound Camera op

Edward Dorian

Assistant Director

Peter Dukelow

Boom Operator

Inez Easton

Prod Secretary

Robert Farnon

Music comp & Conductor

Ernie Farrer

Wardrobe master

Mrs. Fei

Chinese adv

Gerry Fisher

Camera Operator

Maurice Fowler

Set Decoration

Melvin Frank

Producer

Melvin Frank

Screenwriter

Melvin Frank

Company

Roger Furse

Production Design

Douglas Gamley

Music associate

Gordon Gilbert

Assistant Director

Maurice Gillett

Chargehand Electrician

Chris Greenham

Sound

Jack Hildyard

Director of Photography

Bluey Hill

Assistant Director

Frank Howard

Camera grip

Bill Hutchinson

Art Director

Joyce James

Hairstyles

William Kirby

Prod Supervisor

Red Law

Sound

Basil Mannin

Scenic artist

Angela Martelli

Cont

Bill Mcguffie

Music associate

Anthony Mendleson

Costume Design

Sheila Meyers

Music numbers staged by

Joan Morduch

1st Assistant Editor

Bobby Murrell

Props chargehand

Sally Nicholl

Casting

Alan Osbiston

Film Editor

Norman Panama

Company

Norman Panama

Screenwriter

Terry Parr

Prod buyer

Harry Phipps

Constr Manager

Ted Reed

Stills

Ted Samuels

Special Effects

Jim Sawyer

Draughtsmen

Joel Schiller

Draughtsmen

John Victor Smith

Film Editor

Ken Softley

1st & 2nd Assistant Director

Ray Thorne

2nd Assistant Editor

James Van Heusen

Composer

Wally Veevers

Special Effects

May Walding

Wardrobe mistress

Joan White

Hairstyles

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Musical
Release Date
Jan 1962
Premiere Information
Chicago opening: 23 May 1962
Production Company
Melnor Films
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 31m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Articles

The Road to Hong Kong (1962)


Bob Hope and Bing Crosby's beloved Road series arrived at a final destination with The Road to Hong Kong (1962). For their seventh and last entry, though, Hope and Crosby encountered Joan Collins as an evil foil instead of their usual companion, Dorothy Lamour (who appears in a minor supporting role). The story begins as Chester (Hope) and Harry (Crosby), two out-of-work vaudevillians, travel through India while trying to sell an "Interplanetary Fly-It-Yourself Space Kit." Unfortunately Chester has a bout of amnesia but an ancient Tibetan cure proves so effective that he discovers he now has infallible memory. This greatly interests a secret agent (Collins) and a shadowy secret society that has developed a space-traveling rocket. The situation gets wilder and weirder from there.

The Road to Hong Kong was a departure from past Road pictures in that it parodied the current secret agent/spy movie craze as well as the Space Race. It also featured more guest appearances than any other Road movie and featured cameos by Zsa Zsa Gabor, David Niven, comedic singer/songwriter Jerry Colonna, Peter Sellers as an Indian doctor, and Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin who appear in the final scene of the film wearing futuristic headgear. Even Bing's brother, Bob Crosby and his Orchestra, make an appearance. Originally, Dorothy Lamour wasn't even considered for a part in the film until she read about the production in a newspaper and contacted the producers. Bob Hope campaigned for her involvement despite objections from Crosby who wanted someone younger but a compromise was reached with Lamour being offered an expanded cameo role and the opportunity to sing a song, "Warmer Than a Whisper."

For the major female lead, Crosby initially wanted a famous international sex symbol, commenting, "I'd like to see [Brigitte] Bardot in the part most of all. Mind you, I think she might be a little on the young side for Hope...Filming is kind of difficult for someone at my time of life. I'm too old to get the girl and not old enough to be her granddad. But still I'd sure like to work with Bardot. I only saw one film of hers, but it made a deep impression. Pretty good lines, I'd say...." Gina Lollobrigida was Crosby's second choice for the part and Sophia Loren was even considered but, in the end, the role went to Joan Collins.

Filming started August 2, 1961 at Shepperton Studios in England and was completed November 3rd, just days after the birth of Crosby's third child. Finding accommodations near the set for the two stars and their families had been a difficult task since it was the height of the tourist season in London. Luckily, producer/co-director Melvin Frank was able to rent Cranbourne Court, a stately country home with twenty-five acres and twenty-two bedrooms. Crosby suggested to Hope that they both stay there and it marked the only time in their professional lives the two men had shared lodging together with their families on a shoot. During filming, Crosby and Hope happily promoted The Road to Hong Kong in several interviews at the BBC. And when they weren't on the set, they spent their leisure time playing golf.

The Road to Hong Kong proved to be successful when it was released in England on April 1 and then in the US on May 26th, 1962. The Road pictures were always critic-proof and highly profitable for Paramount and this final venture was no exception - it was one of the top ten box office hits of 1962. "The script is spiced with a number of private jokes (golf, Hope's nose, Crosby's dough, reference to gags from previous Road films) but not enough to be irritating," stated Variety and some of the sight gags were obviously inspired by other films such as the automated feeding machine in which Hope and Crosby are force-fed bananas and milk; it was a direct nod to Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times (1936). Most of the best reviews, however, singled out Peter Sellers as the real scene stealer in the film and it marked his second of three appearances as Indians in his movies (he first played an Indian physician in The Millionairess in 1960 and later an Indian extra who inadvertently destroys a movie set in The Party, 1968). In addition to the Dorothy Lamour duet with Hope, the score by Sammy Cahn and James Van Heusen also included "Let's Not Be Sensible," "Teamwork," "It's the Only Way to Travel," and "We're on the Road to Hong Kong."

Director: Norman Panama
Producer: Melvin Frank
Screenplay: Melvin Frank, Norman Panama
Cinematography: Jack Hildyard
Editor: Alan Osbiston, John C. Smith
Art Direction: Syd Cain, William Hutchinson
Music: Robert Farnon
Cast: Bing Crosby (Harry Turner), Bob Hope (Chester Babcock), Joan Collins (Diane), Dorothy Lamour (Herself), Robert Morley (The Leader).
BW-92m.

by Lang Thompson

SOURCES:
The Films of Bing Crosby by Robert Bookbinder (Citadel Press)
Bing Crosby by Donald Shepherd & Robert F. Slatzer (St. Martin's Press)
The Films of Bob Hope by Donald W. McCaffrey (Praeger)
www.afi.com
IMDB
The Road To Hong Kong (1962)

The Road to Hong Kong (1962)

Bob Hope and Bing Crosby's beloved Road series arrived at a final destination with The Road to Hong Kong (1962). For their seventh and last entry, though, Hope and Crosby encountered Joan Collins as an evil foil instead of their usual companion, Dorothy Lamour (who appears in a minor supporting role). The story begins as Chester (Hope) and Harry (Crosby), two out-of-work vaudevillians, travel through India while trying to sell an "Interplanetary Fly-It-Yourself Space Kit." Unfortunately Chester has a bout of amnesia but an ancient Tibetan cure proves so effective that he discovers he now has infallible memory. This greatly interests a secret agent (Collins) and a shadowy secret society that has developed a space-traveling rocket. The situation gets wilder and weirder from there. The Road to Hong Kong was a departure from past Road pictures in that it parodied the current secret agent/spy movie craze as well as the Space Race. It also featured more guest appearances than any other Road movie and featured cameos by Zsa Zsa Gabor, David Niven, comedic singer/songwriter Jerry Colonna, Peter Sellers as an Indian doctor, and Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin who appear in the final scene of the film wearing futuristic headgear. Even Bing's brother, Bob Crosby and his Orchestra, make an appearance. Originally, Dorothy Lamour wasn't even considered for a part in the film until she read about the production in a newspaper and contacted the producers. Bob Hope campaigned for her involvement despite objections from Crosby who wanted someone younger but a compromise was reached with Lamour being offered an expanded cameo role and the opportunity to sing a song, "Warmer Than a Whisper." For the major female lead, Crosby initially wanted a famous international sex symbol, commenting, "I'd like to see [Brigitte] Bardot in the part most of all. Mind you, I think she might be a little on the young side for Hope...Filming is kind of difficult for someone at my time of life. I'm too old to get the girl and not old enough to be her granddad. But still I'd sure like to work with Bardot. I only saw one film of hers, but it made a deep impression. Pretty good lines, I'd say...." Gina Lollobrigida was Crosby's second choice for the part and Sophia Loren was even considered but, in the end, the role went to Joan Collins. Filming started August 2, 1961 at Shepperton Studios in England and was completed November 3rd, just days after the birth of Crosby's third child. Finding accommodations near the set for the two stars and their families had been a difficult task since it was the height of the tourist season in London. Luckily, producer/co-director Melvin Frank was able to rent Cranbourne Court, a stately country home with twenty-five acres and twenty-two bedrooms. Crosby suggested to Hope that they both stay there and it marked the only time in their professional lives the two men had shared lodging together with their families on a shoot. During filming, Crosby and Hope happily promoted The Road to Hong Kong in several interviews at the BBC. And when they weren't on the set, they spent their leisure time playing golf. The Road to Hong Kong proved to be successful when it was released in England on April 1 and then in the US on May 26th, 1962. The Road pictures were always critic-proof and highly profitable for Paramount and this final venture was no exception - it was one of the top ten box office hits of 1962. "The script is spiced with a number of private jokes (golf, Hope's nose, Crosby's dough, reference to gags from previous Road films) but not enough to be irritating," stated Variety and some of the sight gags were obviously inspired by other films such as the automated feeding machine in which Hope and Crosby are force-fed bananas and milk; it was a direct nod to Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times (1936). Most of the best reviews, however, singled out Peter Sellers as the real scene stealer in the film and it marked his second of three appearances as Indians in his movies (he first played an Indian physician in The Millionairess in 1960 and later an Indian extra who inadvertently destroys a movie set in The Party, 1968). In addition to the Dorothy Lamour duet with Hope, the score by Sammy Cahn and James Van Heusen also included "Let's Not Be Sensible," "Teamwork," "It's the Only Way to Travel," and "We're on the Road to Hong Kong." Director: Norman Panama Producer: Melvin Frank Screenplay: Melvin Frank, Norman Panama Cinematography: Jack Hildyard Editor: Alan Osbiston, John C. Smith Art Direction: Syd Cain, William Hutchinson Music: Robert Farnon Cast: Bing Crosby (Harry Turner), Bob Hope (Chester Babcock), Joan Collins (Diane), Dorothy Lamour (Herself), Robert Morley (The Leader). BW-92m. by Lang Thompson SOURCES: The Films of Bing Crosby by Robert Bookbinder (Citadel Press) Bing Crosby by Donald Shepherd & Robert F. Slatzer (St. Martin's Press) The Films of Bob Hope by Donald W. McCaffrey (Praeger) www.afi.com IMDB

THE ROAD TO HONG KONG, THE FACTS OF LIFE and Other Comedies Are Featured in Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection


"I do Bob Hope all the time. The reason people don't see it is that I'm not as good." When Woody Allen commented on his idol he could easily have been speaking of millions of people who turned to Hope for some laughs and a little entertainment. He seemed to be everywhere in a career that stretched nearly a century and encompassed stage, radio, records, movies, television, USO shows, comic books – anything was fair game. But no matter where or what, he was still recognizably Bob Hope. Contrasted to somebody with an equally varied career like Orson Welles who took each medium as a new challenge, Hope's basic persona stayed mostly the same. If you saw a wisecracking, somewhat cowardly layabout but who got the job done, then that's Hope (and clearly much of Allen's early work as well).

This is plainly visible in the sampling of his films on the DVD set Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection. Ranging over three decades, the films show Hope in full Hope mode whether he's rushing merrily through some trifling story or trying to heat up a script that somebody should have rethought. His film career started with several shorts in the mid-30s before moving to a few supporting spots and finally graduating to lead roles in 1938's Give Me a Sailor. (He gained a theme song in that February's The Big Broadcast of 1938 and then used it for a film title before the year was out: "Thanks for the Memory".) In 1940 he was teamed with Bing Crosby in Road to Singapore and Hope's place on the silver screen was assured. He consistently found time for a string of starring roles until 1972 and then settled into cameo appearances after that.

The earliest film here, 1943's They Got Me Covered, is also one of the best. Hope plays a hapless reporter in wartime Washington DC who blunders into a spy ring, dragging girlfriend Dorothy Lamour along with him. The film looks like it was shot quickly and has a charming disregard for reality: the Nazi spy base is an improbably large fashion salon and their safe house has--for no apparent reason--Donald Meek who believes he's protecting President Lincoln from the Confederates. But reality hardly matters. Hope is in fine form tossing off sharp gags and standing up to the spies when his first impulse is to flee in panic. Lamour matches him move for move and provides a solid foil for Hope's antics, not just a straight person to play against but a full and smarter partner.

Two more efforts toss Hope into genre films. The Princess and the Pirate (1944) imagines him as one of the world's worst touring actors accidentally captured by pirates and eventually rescuing disguised princess Virginia Mayo. In Alias Jesse James (1959), Hope is a New York insurance agent who unknowingly takes out a life policy on Jesse James and then has to head out West to be sure nothing happens to his client. Among the sagebrush, he gets tangled up with saloon girl Rhonda Fleming. You see the pattern of pairing him against beautiful leading ladies though neither Mayo nor Fleming are up to Lamour's standard, which could be due to the scripts. Both films are lively though Princess is clearly the funnier and more inventive of the two. Western fans will definitely want to see an inspired sequence at the end of Alias Jesse James that can't be revealed here without ruining the gag.

Moving into the 60s, studios seemed to have less idea of what to do with Hope. His comic approach never completely went out of style, just changed forms. Still, it was easy to see Hope as outdated when surrounded by the dissolving studio system, TV's challenges and the new breed of comics (Lenny Bruce, Nichols & May, Bob Newhart). Hope no longer fit into a clear position, something the later films in the set show. Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1966) imagines Hope as a bland, devoted family man who gets tangled up with Elke Sommer as a European sex kitten running away from the set of her latest film. Probably envisioned as a classic farce, this is really the type of film whose story would fall completely apart if Hope only revealed to his wife that Sommer was hiding in their cabin. Like many films of the period, it plays at being "naughty" or "free spirited" but is utterly conventional (even Hope's gags are more restrained). At least Phyllis Diller is on hand as an assertive housemaid to spark up the proceedings.

The same faux naughtiness can be seen in 1965's I'll Take Sweden where single father Hope packs teenaged daughter Tuesday Weld off to Sweden to keep her out of the hands of her layabout, quasi-beatnik boyfriend. It's an example of how far out of touch the film is that the layabout boyfriend is Frankie Avalon. There are a few halfhearted moves toward unmarried hankypanky and several jokes at the openness of Swedish romantic life as Sweden drifts among the same realm of supposedly free-spirted farce as Wrong Number. In the end nothing out of the ordinary happens unless you count Avalon's stop-the-story and never-campy-enough songs. The film does close with a classic door-slamming, in-and-out of room sequence but overall is pretty dreary despite the best efforts of Hope and Weld (but almost nobody else).

One highlight of these later years is the seventh and final "Road" film, Road to Hong Kong from 1962. Dorothy Lamour, co-star of the previous films, was replaced by Joan Collins, probably because Collins was two decades younger but also due to a British production company wanting to showcase their own talent. As it turns out, Collins didn't showcase impressively and Lamour's brief cameo appearance proves she was smarter, funnier and simply more attractive. Nevertheless, while Hong Kong is the weakest in the series (the spies and space travel plot was barely enough for a TV skit and has dated badly) it shows why Hope and Crosby were such a good team and doesn't completely deserve its reputation as a stumbling end to the series. The duo's gags come across as actual dialogue rather than bits of something the writers concocted and both create a feeling of relaxed humor that many more aggressive comics would do well to emulate (if they can). Peter Sellers appears as an Indian doctor in a small segment that's a mini-masterpiece of double-talk. The film does have a couple of misguided sequences (one involving a feeding maching in the space capsule is particularly humiliating) and some comments about Asia are a bit dubious today but overall Hope and Crosby still displayed enough charm that you almost wish they could have done one more film.

The anomaly here is 1960's The Facts of Life, Hope's attempt at a more-or-less straight dramatic role. There are still jokes-Hope wasn't about to leap into a void-but this time they come from his character and even bring out criticism from others. Most notably that's Lucille Ball as a friend's wife who can't stand the humorous commentary and good-fellow cheerfulness in a critique, however mild, of Hope's usual persona. During a group vacation to Mexico where most of the group gets waylaid, Hope and Ball follow the Hollywood rule that opposites attract and start an affair. Played mostly straight, The Facts of Life is fairly reliable melodrama with a smear of comedy (one sequence where Hope gets lost among identical motels is clever) but never quite pulls together. The big problem is that Hope either didn't have this type of acting in him or needed more firm guidance from the director. Ball on the other hand is completely plausible as a lonely wife, almost single-handedly keeping the film from feeling by-the-book. Viewed today it's odd to think this gathered five Oscar® nominations, winning one for best black-and-white costume design.

Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection has each film on a separate disc in a slim clase. There are no extras beyond trailers though a couple of the later films have a choice of full-screen or letterboxed (but none are fully widescreen). The transfers are solid though there are a few moments in The Princess and the Pirate where it appears as if the Technicolor strips were briefly out of registration. Nothing major and a lot of viewers won't even notice. The set On The Road With Bob Hope And Bing Crosby which collects the first four "Road" films is still the best place to see Hope in action but this is a good if uneven follow-up.

For more information about Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection, visit MGM. To order Bob Hope: The MGM Movie Legends Collection, go to TCM Shopping.

by Lang Thompson

THE ROAD TO HONG KONG, THE FACTS OF LIFE and Other Comedies Are Featured in Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection

"I do Bob Hope all the time. The reason people don't see it is that I'm not as good." When Woody Allen commented on his idol he could easily have been speaking of millions of people who turned to Hope for some laughs and a little entertainment. He seemed to be everywhere in a career that stretched nearly a century and encompassed stage, radio, records, movies, television, USO shows, comic books – anything was fair game. But no matter where or what, he was still recognizably Bob Hope. Contrasted to somebody with an equally varied career like Orson Welles who took each medium as a new challenge, Hope's basic persona stayed mostly the same. If you saw a wisecracking, somewhat cowardly layabout but who got the job done, then that's Hope (and clearly much of Allen's early work as well). This is plainly visible in the sampling of his films on the DVD set Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection. Ranging over three decades, the films show Hope in full Hope mode whether he's rushing merrily through some trifling story or trying to heat up a script that somebody should have rethought. His film career started with several shorts in the mid-30s before moving to a few supporting spots and finally graduating to lead roles in 1938's Give Me a Sailor. (He gained a theme song in that February's The Big Broadcast of 1938 and then used it for a film title before the year was out: "Thanks for the Memory".) In 1940 he was teamed with Bing Crosby in Road to Singapore and Hope's place on the silver screen was assured. He consistently found time for a string of starring roles until 1972 and then settled into cameo appearances after that. The earliest film here, 1943's They Got Me Covered, is also one of the best. Hope plays a hapless reporter in wartime Washington DC who blunders into a spy ring, dragging girlfriend Dorothy Lamour along with him. The film looks like it was shot quickly and has a charming disregard for reality: the Nazi spy base is an improbably large fashion salon and their safe house has--for no apparent reason--Donald Meek who believes he's protecting President Lincoln from the Confederates. But reality hardly matters. Hope is in fine form tossing off sharp gags and standing up to the spies when his first impulse is to flee in panic. Lamour matches him move for move and provides a solid foil for Hope's antics, not just a straight person to play against but a full and smarter partner. Two more efforts toss Hope into genre films. The Princess and the Pirate (1944) imagines him as one of the world's worst touring actors accidentally captured by pirates and eventually rescuing disguised princess Virginia Mayo. In Alias Jesse James (1959), Hope is a New York insurance agent who unknowingly takes out a life policy on Jesse James and then has to head out West to be sure nothing happens to his client. Among the sagebrush, he gets tangled up with saloon girl Rhonda Fleming. You see the pattern of pairing him against beautiful leading ladies though neither Mayo nor Fleming are up to Lamour's standard, which could be due to the scripts. Both films are lively though Princess is clearly the funnier and more inventive of the two. Western fans will definitely want to see an inspired sequence at the end of Alias Jesse James that can't be revealed here without ruining the gag. Moving into the 60s, studios seemed to have less idea of what to do with Hope. His comic approach never completely went out of style, just changed forms. Still, it was easy to see Hope as outdated when surrounded by the dissolving studio system, TV's challenges and the new breed of comics (Lenny Bruce, Nichols & May, Bob Newhart). Hope no longer fit into a clear position, something the later films in the set show. Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1966) imagines Hope as a bland, devoted family man who gets tangled up with Elke Sommer as a European sex kitten running away from the set of her latest film. Probably envisioned as a classic farce, this is really the type of film whose story would fall completely apart if Hope only revealed to his wife that Sommer was hiding in their cabin. Like many films of the period, it plays at being "naughty" or "free spirited" but is utterly conventional (even Hope's gags are more restrained). At least Phyllis Diller is on hand as an assertive housemaid to spark up the proceedings. The same faux naughtiness can be seen in 1965's I'll Take Sweden where single father Hope packs teenaged daughter Tuesday Weld off to Sweden to keep her out of the hands of her layabout, quasi-beatnik boyfriend. It's an example of how far out of touch the film is that the layabout boyfriend is Frankie Avalon. There are a few halfhearted moves toward unmarried hankypanky and several jokes at the openness of Swedish romantic life as Sweden drifts among the same realm of supposedly free-spirted farce as Wrong Number. In the end nothing out of the ordinary happens unless you count Avalon's stop-the-story and never-campy-enough songs. The film does close with a classic door-slamming, in-and-out of room sequence but overall is pretty dreary despite the best efforts of Hope and Weld (but almost nobody else). One highlight of these later years is the seventh and final "Road" film, Road to Hong Kong from 1962. Dorothy Lamour, co-star of the previous films, was replaced by Joan Collins, probably because Collins was two decades younger but also due to a British production company wanting to showcase their own talent. As it turns out, Collins didn't showcase impressively and Lamour's brief cameo appearance proves she was smarter, funnier and simply more attractive. Nevertheless, while Hong Kong is the weakest in the series (the spies and space travel plot was barely enough for a TV skit and has dated badly) it shows why Hope and Crosby were such a good team and doesn't completely deserve its reputation as a stumbling end to the series. The duo's gags come across as actual dialogue rather than bits of something the writers concocted and both create a feeling of relaxed humor that many more aggressive comics would do well to emulate (if they can). Peter Sellers appears as an Indian doctor in a small segment that's a mini-masterpiece of double-talk. The film does have a couple of misguided sequences (one involving a feeding maching in the space capsule is particularly humiliating) and some comments about Asia are a bit dubious today but overall Hope and Crosby still displayed enough charm that you almost wish they could have done one more film. The anomaly here is 1960's The Facts of Life, Hope's attempt at a more-or-less straight dramatic role. There are still jokes-Hope wasn't about to leap into a void-but this time they come from his character and even bring out criticism from others. Most notably that's Lucille Ball as a friend's wife who can't stand the humorous commentary and good-fellow cheerfulness in a critique, however mild, of Hope's usual persona. During a group vacation to Mexico where most of the group gets waylaid, Hope and Ball follow the Hollywood rule that opposites attract and start an affair. Played mostly straight, The Facts of Life is fairly reliable melodrama with a smear of comedy (one sequence where Hope gets lost among identical motels is clever) but never quite pulls together. The big problem is that Hope either didn't have this type of acting in him or needed more firm guidance from the director. Ball on the other hand is completely plausible as a lonely wife, almost single-handedly keeping the film from feeling by-the-book. Viewed today it's odd to think this gathered five Oscar® nominations, winning one for best black-and-white costume design. Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection has each film on a separate disc in a slim clase. There are no extras beyond trailers though a couple of the later films have a choice of full-screen or letterboxed (but none are fully widescreen). The transfers are solid though there are a few moments in The Princess and the Pirate where it appears as if the Technicolor strips were briefly out of registration. Nothing major and a lot of viewers won't even notice. The set On The Road With Bob Hope And Bing Crosby which collects the first four "Road" films is still the best place to see Hope in action but this is a good if uneven follow-up. For more information about Bob Hope: MGM Movie Legends Collection, visit MGM. To order Bob Hope: The MGM Movie Legends Collection, go to TCM Shopping. by Lang Thompson

Quotes

Trivia

'Collins, Joan' was given the female lead in this final "Road" picture and Dorothy Lamour, a small cameo appearance. When Lamour balked, and since financial backing hinged on her participation in the project, her role was enlarged.

Notes

Filmed in England. Opened in London in March 1962. Seventh in the series of Road films starring Crosby, Hope, and Lamour.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1962

This was the last of the Hope/Crosby "road pictures".

Released in United States 1962