Gildersleeve, running for office, is aided by two ghosts and hindered by a mad scientist and an invisible woman.Gildersleeve, running for office, is aided by two ghosts and hindered by a mad scientist and an invisible woman.Gildersleeve, running for office, is aided by two ghosts and hindered by a mad scientist and an invisible woman.
Nick Stewart
- Chauncey - Haley's Chauffeur
- (as Nicodemus Stewart)
Tom Burton
- Newspaper Reporter
- (uncredited)
Harry Clay
- Newspaper Reporter
- (uncredited)
Christian Drake
- Newspaper Reporter
- (uncredited)
Charles Gemora
- Gorilla
- (uncredited)
Mary Halsey
- Blonde at Rally
- (uncredited)
Jack Norton
- Drunk at Rally
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaEarle Ross appears uncredited as Judge Horace Hooker, the role he played on the radio show.
- GoofsThe newspaper in the first scene is the "Summerfield Indicator" in medium shots but the "Evening Dispatch" in insert.
- Quotes
Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve: Women will back my campaign, because no one will point the accusing finger of scandal in my direction. Every woman knows that I've been the perfect gentleman in all... um, almost every woman knows that I've been... um... and in conclusion...
- ConnectionsFollows The Great Gildersleeve (1942)
- SoundtracksSweet Genevieve
(1869) (uncredited)
Music by Henry Tucker
Lyrics by George Cooper
Sung a cappella by Harold Peary
Featured review
Two Gildersleeve ghosts discover experiments being conducted by mad scientist Dr. John Wells which include an invisible woman and an escaped gorilla. Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve is running for police commissioner against the incumbent Haley. His niece and nephew want to campaign for him in costumes, Leroy in a gorilla costume. This leads a mistaken identity and a hunt for a real gorilla although Haley believes that it's a PR stunt.
It's a minor comedy. The outlandish premise has some screwball potential. I don't know much about the comedic stylings of Harold Peary. It feels like that he's one half of a comedic duo and he struggling to fill both roles. With his tone, he should be a fraidy cat running from ghosts and other monsters. Chauncey dealing with the invisible woman is probably the funniest bits but one has to ignore the bad stereotype. He has a good amount of fraidy cat tone but he can go overboard. This would work better with more slapstick and physical humor. It's all a little less funny than the wacky premise should be able to deliver.
It's a minor comedy. The outlandish premise has some screwball potential. I don't know much about the comedic stylings of Harold Peary. It feels like that he's one half of a comedic duo and he struggling to fill both roles. With his tone, he should be a fraidy cat running from ghosts and other monsters. Chauncey dealing with the invisible woman is probably the funniest bits but one has to ignore the bad stereotype. He has a good amount of fraidy cat tone but he can go overboard. This would work better with more slapstick and physical humor. It's all a little less funny than the wacky premise should be able to deliver.
- SnoopyStyle
- Jun 14, 2021
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 3 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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