A Manhattan bank teller gets fired after growing a beard due to a bee sting rash, while his colleagues support him, in this comedy about conformity.A Manhattan bank teller gets fired after growing a beard due to a bee sting rash, while his colleagues support him, in this comedy about conformity.A Manhattan bank teller gets fired after growing a beard due to a bee sting rash, while his colleagues support him, in this comedy about conformity.
Benny Baker
- The Cabbie
- (as Ben Baker)
Jonathan Hole
- Second Vice President
- (as Jonathon Hole)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Extremely Zany with a few funny moments
Zany far out satire about a man who is fired from his job when he grows a beard to cover up a bee sting. Thus begins a long line of wacky characters, wild camera angles and situations. Has a few funny moments to keep this from being the complete bomb all the other critics say it is. Best part comes when in a show of solidarity all the co-workers begin to wear fake beards, even the women! Angie Dickinson helps the scenary and Johnny Mandel gives a very bouncy score.
Awful film with an obnoxious Van Dyke and two beautiful blondes
This is really an awful film. In 1968, Garson Kanin was very highly regarded - most famously, he wrote "Born Yesterday" - but this was the first film he had directed since "Tom, Dick and Harry" in 1941 (this film was started before Kanin's second film of the year "Where It's At" in the spring of 1968, but was halted in mid-production, and was finished after the latter film) and the results were a disaster. The script sucks and Van Dyke is thoroughly obnoxious and unlikeable in the lead. About the only positive thing I can say about the film is the presence of the two beautiful blonde female leads - the sexy Angie Dickinson and the classy, elegant Rosemary Forsyth.
Bucking-the-system comedy a complete misfire for Garson Kanin...
The opening 10mns of "Some Kind of a Nut" feature New York City bank teller Dick Van Dyke and a female co-worker trying to avoid getting stung by a bee in Central Park on their lunch hour (they end up tearing each other's clothes off, and getting ticketed for disorderly conduct). Writer-director Garson Kanin is straining so hard to be with-it, he turns even a comic genius like Dick Van Dyke into a person we'd rather be without. After Van Dyke grows a beard to cover the bee sting on his chin, he's ordered by his conservative employer to shave it off; after he refuses, he's fired and branded a rebel for "bucking the system". A prime example of old-fogey Hollywood (i.e., the entertainment Establishment) trying to "keep up with the kids" in 1970. Unfortunately, "Some Kind of a Nut" isn't nutty enough. As a history lesson for cinephiles, it's interesting--but as a comedy, it's an embarrassment. NO STARS from ****
Eager To Stretch, Van Dyke Strains Badly
It is obvious that Van Dyke was begging his agent to get him something different to prove that he could play a lead character that was unlikable. He must've admired his friend Andy Griffith's bravura performance in "A Face In The Crowd" very much. Friend Carl Reiner directed him in the overlooked gem, "The Comic" in 1968. Van Dyke and the script were perfect, but the movie bombed, thus threatening to pigeonhole him more than ever in Disney-ish tripe. Mind you, I'm just extrapolating from the facts I know, but it sure seems that Van Dyke was a desperate man when he agreed to star in this uneven amalgamation of nihilist farce, cultural satire, and moralistic claptrap. And Van Dyke seemed determined to force the darkest side of his unreasonably unlikable and self-destructive character down the audience's throat. I found it very hard to take in the theaters as an adolescent, but recently watched it on tape to see if I felt the same way as an adult. Not quite. As an adult, I found it a fascinating time capsule but otherwise, an all-too-annoying and impossible attempt to capture the essence of theater d'absurd with American TV actors, then compounding its own futility by eventually copping out on its only reason to exist.
Avoid this mess unless you are doing a film studies paper.
Avoid this mess unless you are doing a film studies paper.
Garson Kanin failure
Kanin holds all the responsibility for the train wreck that this is since he wrote and directed it. Much ado about a beard. A complete waste of talent and seems to be some misguided attempt to reflect the push back against social norms of the time. It's 1969 and only the fringe, biker gangs, hoods and hippies would be caught in a beard, or maybe your grandfather or great-grandfather.
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to the book "A Diamond for Moorpark" by Norma Gunter, the working title of this film was "The One with the Fuzz".
- GoofsWhen Fred and Pamela are supposedly driving through New Orleans, a California highway sign is visible along the road.
- Quotes
Pamela Anders: Behind every great man is a woman. Behind that woman is his wife.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dick Van Dyke 98 Years of Magic (2023)
- How long is Some Kind of a Nut?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The One with the Fuzz
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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