Comic spoof of the classic horror story. Slim (Bud Abbott) and Tubby (Lou Costello) are a pair of inept US cops visiting London to study English police methods. An encounter with beautiful young suffragette Vicky Edwards (Helen Westcott) leads to the discovery that her uncle, Dr Henry Jekyll (Boris Karloff), has created a potion which transforms him into the evil Mr Hyde, monstrous scourge of the city...
K**R
Classic Comedy
Classic comedy from Abbott and Costello, great take on the classic Universal Monster film. Cross talking at its best I can easily see why they were the top comdy partnership of the time. Really enjoyed it and look forward to buying more.Now for the tech, I purchased as download, the film quality visionally and sound was very good.
G**N
Five Stars
Hi thanks for the tape nice conditionandpostwas verygood Gerald to
P**M
A CLASSIC COMEDY
A classic comedy loved by all the family.
C**R
Fun and charming adventure in the A and C monster movies.
Note: Amazon have mixed up reviews for different sets and movies, this is a review of the Dr Jekyll movie.Entertaining and charming entry in the Abbott and Costello meets movies sees horror great Boris Karloff play the Dr Jekyll role, he takes a drug which of course makes him turn into the horrific Hyde and seek vengeance on anyone that gets in his way. Kooky and spoofy of course as we see A and C in London as policemen, bumbling around, getting sacked and then trying to get their jobs back by capturing Jekyll and Hyde.Interesting opening scenes about the suffragette movement, only annoying aspect of movie is role played by Craig Stevens, who has been so badly written as the hero male that when Costello accidently hits him over the head, you kind of feel relived. Movie has a stronger first half than second but there's still plenty of goofiness to enjoy. Karloff plays it straight and while some say that a lot of the humour just isn't here, try and stay slack jawed when a cat is trapped by a severed head prop and then starts to move- classic.
A**R
very funny film
very funny film
R**.
You CAN do better... just by these 6, and the OTHER 22 Universal Studios' "COMPLETE COLLECTION".
(The Best of Abbott & Costello, Volume 4 (Abbott & Costello Meet Dr. Jekyl & Mr. Hyde / Abbott & Costello Meet the Keystone Cops / Abbott &Costello Meet the Mummy / Abbott & Costello Meet Jerry Seinfeld / Abbott & Costello Meet the Monsters / The World of Abbott & Costello)[DVD])Well, at a combined price of $104,U.S., for four of these----Aaagh!----DOUBLE-SIDED, different, volumes [missing "IT AIN'T HAY"],all I can say is just spend your money on the REGULAR [one-sided] discs in the GIGANTIC------it's BIG, it's REALLY BIG------8"x7"box with 28 of the 36 A&C movies... all The Universal Studio Ones, and bonuses, DE-luxe... on F-I-F-T-E-E-N (15!) DVDs!Buy THE COMPLETE ABBOTT & COSTELLO UNIVERSAL PICTURES COLLECTION,instead!_____________________________________________________________________I bought all four of the Volumes, and always had SKIPPING problems. The new set is notonly flawless, but cheaper!_____________________________________________________________________
J**S
The director is brilliant you will laugh at this movie so much
This is a fabulous comedy film so I would give this 5 stars just because I really like these guys.
T**R
Inevitably disappointing
Last and least in the studio's initial series of releases, the final inevitably disappointing volume of Universal's Abbott and Costello collection doesn't include the It Ain't Hay, the rights to which were still in limbo at the time (it wouldn't make it to DVD until the US released Complete Universal Collection - Abbott & Costello: Comp Universal Pictures Coll [DVD] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC] and Abbott & Costello: Complete Universal Pictures [DVD] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC] - but not its UK equivalent, forcing many who had bought the previous three volumes to double dip just for the one film, which Universal subsequently issued as a standalone DVD-R issue). Also, unlike the previous three volumes which each offered eight films, despite the cover promising '6 classics,' this only contains four films (one a cut and paste compilation) while the other two are documentaries.Abbott and Costello Meet Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is a near career low for the boys at Universal: even the mouse sequence isn't particularly funny, and that's the highlight of the weakest of their monster pictures. The less said about the recreation of Victorian London on Universal's overlit Transylvanian sets the better. Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Kops is a definite step up: a long way from their best and let down by the weakest of their chase finales (did the Keystone Kops ever do anything else but fall off the wagon?), but at least Mack Sennett gets to throw a custard pie, and there's something perversely appealing about the villain's girlfriend being named Lee Van Cleef... Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy makes a fitting finale to their Universal career, coming up with enough laughs to go down easy even if it is mainly just spins on previous routines.The World of Abbott and Costello is a clumsy compilation feature from 1965 cashing in on the unexpected success of Robert Youngson's silent compilations like Days of Thrills and Laughter. There's some good material in there, mostly in the last third, but Jack E. Leonard's irritating narration is the pits: he can't even get the name right, constantly talking about some guy called Lou Castella. Rounding out the numbers are a disappointing TV special hosted by Jerry Seinfeld that is too fond of rapid cutting to give the extracts from the boys' routines their due and a rather decent half hour featurette on their monster movies teaming them up with the studios iconic monsters that was also included on the original US DVDrelease of Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein.
R**S
Idem
Idem
A**R
Can't be beat
This are no rivals to Abbot & Costello's comedy & timing. Never loses its extreme humour.
D**D
It’s a hilarious romp
I liked the humor of the movie
M**T
The two movies it was obvious the two were coming to the end of their act together
The chemistry between Abbott and Costello was not the same in these last two movies they did together before breaking up their act, but it was well known throughout their career they did not get along off screen.Would I still recommend this volume? Yes if it's to complete the series and to see the highlight of their best comedy routines they did together, "Who's on First?" never gets tiring.
J**N
Fun horror remake, though not screamingly funny
This movie has taken a bum rap over the years. The vast majority of people who've seen it -- particularly Abbott and Costello fans -- don't like it. Some even hate it. The reason: they say it just is not funny. Actually, there are some VERY funny moments...but less than a half-dozen of them. Yet, this is a film Abbott & Costello fans will want to see (and own) -- and ANYONE who is a classic horror movie fan will want to OWN IT (remember that as we move into the 21st century this is unlikely to be available so now is the time!). Firstly, I'm a bit biased about this film. This is the very first movie I remember seeing as a kid and the first I remember seeing in a movie theater. I have not seen it since I bought it on Amazon-- and was NOT disappointed! Why? I like horror movies. And this is less of an Abbott & Costello movie than a low-budget remake of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde with Boris Karloff in the title role. If you're a Karloff fan like I am, this is a TREASURE: he is at his evil, slimiest best...even glowering at times. Special effects were clearly Universal Studios style, essentially the same effect as used in the Wolfman series. The movie seldom lags but it is made according to the Universal horror formula at the times (less like an A&C film). View this film NOT as a hilarious Abbott & Costello comedy but a remake of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde with an appearance by Abbott and Costello and you'll love it. The comedy team really doesn't do all that much in this movie and most seems derivative from their other horror spoofs. This also has far less comedy overall than those other films but as a REMAKE of this HORROR movie with A&C it is WELL worth the money. When Costello hilariously, if predictably, gets some of the transformation formula at the end it seems more like a typical A&C movie...and the final scene with the policemen sucking their Costello-monster-bitten fingers, with the final (guess?) finale result is a classic. As a FILM -- a remake of this story with Boris Karloff at his sleaziest best -- it rates an enthusiastic four stars. If you're absolutely looking for a hilarious A&C movie it would then be three and a half or a bit less. But it is WORTH seeing and owning -- and this lesser known entry will be hard to find...so if you see it's available grab it NOW!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago