Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueFarce / Spoof Comedy: President Nixon and V.P. Agnew, as if they were Laurel and Hardy. Done in a black-out style, mainly just an excuse to present gags which allow Rich Little to do a littl... Tout lireFarce / Spoof Comedy: President Nixon and V.P. Agnew, as if they were Laurel and Hardy. Done in a black-out style, mainly just an excuse to present gags which allow Rich Little to do a little of his Richard Nixon persona and a lot of his Oliver Hardy.Farce / Spoof Comedy: President Nixon and V.P. Agnew, as if they were Laurel and Hardy. Done in a black-out style, mainly just an excuse to present gags which allow Rich Little to do a little of his Richard Nixon persona and a lot of his Oliver Hardy.
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John McDonald
- Agent O'Flaherty
- (as John Mc Donald)
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I first became aware of this movie back in 1971 when Rich Little plugged it on Dick Cavett's show. A clip showed 3 minutes worth of Nixon & Agnew doing Laurel & Hardy's dance steps from "Way Out West." Not only that, Rich Little as Nixon and Herb Voland as Agnew were dead-ringers. The uncanny part is the President and Vice-President spoke and even moved like Stan & Ollie. Sounds like a riot right? Well...if playing golf with Hitler, and getting duped into eating Alice B. Toklas brownies where they go into a "Blotto" laughing fit and hallucinate seeing white robed Ku Kluk Klan members playing hardball in slow motion, doesn't discount you, then this may be your movie of all time for political incorrectness. You won't find it in the credits but Steve Martin makes his feature film debut as a long haired hippie. Steve was writing for the Smothers Brothers back them. In short, the L&H stuff is fun. The padding, i.e. Secret Service (Bob Einsein) is painful. They'll never release this, but I hope they do.
I'm glad this film finally has been listed! I thought that it was locked away in a vault, unseen, and was lost forever.
The only thing I ever knew about this film was that, sometime around 1972, Rich Little appeared on the Tonight Show and told Johnny Carson a little bit about the making of the film. He also told how, as a gag, he, in full makeup, was in the back seat of a limo that pulled into a gas station for refueling. Mimicking Nixon's voice, Little then threw a mock temper tantrum much to the amazement of the gas station attendant.
I never, ever heard of Another Nice Mess having any release whatsoever. I remember, also, that I'd swear Little referred to the film's title as Another FINE Mess. Maybe there was a last-minute title change?
Anyway, I'm hoping for an eventual DVD release.
The only thing I ever knew about this film was that, sometime around 1972, Rich Little appeared on the Tonight Show and told Johnny Carson a little bit about the making of the film. He also told how, as a gag, he, in full makeup, was in the back seat of a limo that pulled into a gas station for refueling. Mimicking Nixon's voice, Little then threw a mock temper tantrum much to the amazement of the gas station attendant.
I never, ever heard of Another Nice Mess having any release whatsoever. I remember, also, that I'd swear Little referred to the film's title as Another FINE Mess. Maybe there was a last-minute title change?
Anyway, I'm hoping for an eventual DVD release.
Ever have the feeling that you are the only one in the world who saw something? And everywhere you look to verify what you saw, there's nothing? So it was for years with "Another Nice Mess". If I didn't already have plenty of other reasons to doubt my own sanity, trying to find anything on this little film would have been a BIG reason. Rich Little and Herb Voland (probably best remebered today as General Clayton in the early run of M*A*S*H) do Nixon and Agnew as Laurel and Hardy. Need we say a lot more? Probably not. But give it a look if you ever run across it. This one truly belongs in the "What were they thinking" Hall of Fame.
..I just got the title wrong. Since it was based on Laurel & Hardy, I thought it was called "Another Fine Mess". For years, I've been trying to track this film down. Now I'm not alone in my memory of this movie. I was a teenager when it came out.
NIXON: "Tit for a tat."
AGNEW: "...And a sh*t to that."
Thanks, IMDB!
NIXON: "Tit for a tat."
AGNEW: "...And a sh*t to that."
Thanks, IMDB!
I'm amazed that this film finally showed up on IMDB. For year's I've called it the most obscure movie ever made, since not a single reference source - Maltin, Variety, Screen World - has ever listed it, despite the presence of familiar names like Smothers, Little and Einstein in the credits. Made during the brief spurt of anti-Nixon movies in the early 70s, it's a one-joke movie, and not a very good one. The premise is that Nixon and Agnew have the vocal patterns and mannerisms of Laurel and Hardy. The result is an all-too familiar collection of imitation L & H gags with hardly anything that could pass as political satire...
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFilm debut of Steve Martin.
- ConnexionsFeatures Les cuistots de sa majesté (1944)
- Bandes originalesI Am The President
Robert Emenegger (as B. Emenegger) and Steven Hoffman (as S. Hoffman)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Here's another nice mess you've got me into!
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 250 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 6min(66 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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