A professor comes into possession of an amulet with magical powers.A professor comes into possession of an amulet with magical powers.A professor comes into possession of an amulet with magical powers.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Fred Aldrich
- Cop
- (uncredited)
Leon Alton
- Observer on Street
- (uncredited)
Phil Arnold
- Bald-Headed Man
- (uncredited)
Ella Mae Brown
- Maid
- (uncredited)
Oliver Cross
- Country Club Member
- (uncredited)
George DeNormand
- Country Club Member
- (uncredited)
Susan Dorn
- Nurse
- (uncredited)
Angus Duncan
- Sergeant
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWilliam Castle: [gimmick] Upon its initial theatrical release, "Zotz" plastic coins were given to ticket buyers.
- GoofsWhen Professor Jones is being given directions, the officer tells him that the five sides of the Pentagon building are lettered A through E. This is not correct. The letter designations are given to the five pentagonal "rings", with A the innermost and E the outermost. Ten numbered corridors connect the rings. Offices are designated by floor number, ring letter, corridor and room number, e.g., 4C515, a system that is far less complicated than the one being explained.
- Quotes
William Castle: [points at the Columbia logo] Zotz!
Torch Lady: Zotz? What's Zotz?
- Crazy creditsAt the end of the closing credits, the Torch Lady in the Columbia Pictures logo smiles and says "Zotz all!"
- ConnectionsFeatures Homicidal (1961)
- SoundtracksYou're in the Army Now
(uncredited)
Music by Isham Jones
Lyrics by Tell Taylor and Ole Olsen
Played in the Pentagon scenes
Featured review
Filmmaker William Castle has great fun with one of his silliest stories, based on a novel by Walter Karig. The ever-likeable Tom Poston plays Jonathan Jones, a professor of ancient languages who comes into possession of a mystical coin. It gives him highly amusing powers: by pointing at a living thing or object, and uttering the word "ZOTZ!", he can cause A) sudden pain, B) VERY slow movement, and......C) silent death. He's not above using said powers for self-gain, but must do some quick thinking when enemy agents "Josh Bates" (Carl Don) and Igor (notable tough-guy actor Mike Mazurki) want to get their hands on this valuable object.
"Zotz!" is good, light-hearted, and slapstick-heavy entertainment, a purely comedic change of pace for a director who'd made his name with gimmicky horror movies and thrillers. While "Zotz" does seem like a pure nonsense word, apparently it IS an actual surname used in foreign locations. There are some real laughs to be had here; the good thing is that for a movie that recycles the same gags over and over, they're a hoot every time. When "sudden pain" is dealt out, people bend over and clutch themselves. And when "slow movement" occurs, the actors involved do a priceless job of acting in slow motion. One of the highlights happens when Jones finds a way of embarrassing his professional rival, Horatio Kellgore (the always great Jim Backus).
Poston, who reteamed with Castle the following year for the Hammer film "The Old Dark House", is as endearing and funny as he's ever been. He's very well supported by Backus, Cecil Kellaway as the amiable dean at the college, Fred Clark as a military general who doesn't take Jones seriously, the lovely Julia Meade as the colleges' new languages professor (and requisite love interest), the enchanting Zeme North as Jones' nubile niece, old Marx Brothers foil Margaret Dumont as Kellaways' wife, James Millhollin as a disbelieving psychiatrist, a hilarious Jimmy Hawkins as Kellgores' jargon-spewing son, and Louis Nye as a man peddling a homemade weapon to the Pentagon. Don and Mazurki are classic comedy villains.
"Zotz!" really hits the spot if one is looking for good, goofy comedy. This viewer had a fine time with it.
Seven out of 10.
"Zotz!" is good, light-hearted, and slapstick-heavy entertainment, a purely comedic change of pace for a director who'd made his name with gimmicky horror movies and thrillers. While "Zotz" does seem like a pure nonsense word, apparently it IS an actual surname used in foreign locations. There are some real laughs to be had here; the good thing is that for a movie that recycles the same gags over and over, they're a hoot every time. When "sudden pain" is dealt out, people bend over and clutch themselves. And when "slow movement" occurs, the actors involved do a priceless job of acting in slow motion. One of the highlights happens when Jones finds a way of embarrassing his professional rival, Horatio Kellgore (the always great Jim Backus).
Poston, who reteamed with Castle the following year for the Hammer film "The Old Dark House", is as endearing and funny as he's ever been. He's very well supported by Backus, Cecil Kellaway as the amiable dean at the college, Fred Clark as a military general who doesn't take Jones seriously, the lovely Julia Meade as the colleges' new languages professor (and requisite love interest), the enchanting Zeme North as Jones' nubile niece, old Marx Brothers foil Margaret Dumont as Kellaways' wife, James Millhollin as a disbelieving psychiatrist, a hilarious Jimmy Hawkins as Kellgores' jargon-spewing son, and Louis Nye as a man peddling a homemade weapon to the Pentagon. Don and Mazurki are classic comedy villains.
"Zotz!" really hits the spot if one is looking for good, goofy comedy. This viewer had a fine time with it.
Seven out of 10.
- Hey_Sweden
- Apr 26, 2021
- Permalink
- How long is Zotz!?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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