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The Bobo

  • 1967
  • Approved
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
1K
YOUR RATING
The Bobo (1967)
The Bobo Clip
Play clip2:49
Watch The Bobo Clip
1 Video
18 Photos
Romantic ComedyComedyRomance

To get his big break, a singing matador must win over the most beautiful and most elusive woman in all of Barcelona, in only three days.To get his big break, a singing matador must win over the most beautiful and most elusive woman in all of Barcelona, in only three days.To get his big break, a singing matador must win over the most beautiful and most elusive woman in all of Barcelona, in only three days.

  • Director
    • Robert Parrish
  • Writers
    • David R. Schwartz
    • Burt Cole
  • Stars
    • Peter Sellers
    • Britt Ekland
    • Rossano Brazzi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Parrish
    • Writers
      • David R. Schwartz
      • Burt Cole
    • Stars
      • Peter Sellers
      • Britt Ekland
      • Rossano Brazzi
    • 25User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Bobo Clip
    Clip 2:49
    The Bobo Clip

    Photos18

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    Top Cast15

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    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Juan Bautista
    Britt Ekland
    Britt Ekland
    • Olimpia Segura
    Rossano Brazzi
    Rossano Brazzi
    • Carlos Matabosch
    Adolfo Celi
    Adolfo Celi
    • Francisco Carbonell
    Hattie Jacques
    Hattie Jacques
    • Trinity Martinez
    Ferdy Mayne
    Ferdy Mayne
    • Silvestre Flores
    Kenneth Griffith
    Kenneth Griffith
    • Pepe Gamazo
    Al Lettieri
    Al Lettieri
    • Eugenio Gomez
    • (as Alfredo Lettieri)
    Marne Maitland
    Marne Maitland
    • Luis Castillo
    John Wells
    • Pompadour Major Domo
    Don Lurio
    • Ramon Gonzales
    La Chana
    La Chana
    • Flamenco Dancer
    Los Tarantos
    • Flamenco Company
    Alfredo Chetta
    • Ilya
    • (uncredited)
    Giustino Durano
    • Druggist
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Robert Parrish
    • Writers
      • David R. Schwartz
      • Burt Cole
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    5.51K
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    Featured reviews

    5blanche-2

    some fun sequences

    Peter Sellers stars with his then-wife, Britt Ekland, and Rosanno Brazzi in "The Bobo" from 1967.

    The always funny Sellers plays a singing matador named Juan, who comes to Barcelona to make his fortune. He sings for an unimpressed local impresario (Adolfo Celi), who agrees to book him on one condition. Juan has to spend an evening with Olimpia (Ekland), a flirt who gets whatever she wants from men, including apartments and sports cars, and then she drops them.

    Juan pretends he is the messenger of a wealthy count and works at seducing her.

    Anything with Sellers is good, I think, but in this period of time he was going through some kind of identity crisis. He was married to beautiful Britt Ekland and trying to change his image somewhat. The movie isn't very good, but there is some fabulous dancing, music, and atmosphere, and chemistry between Sellers and Ekland. Sellers has funny moments as well.

    The film has an unexpected ending which a lot of people did not like. I thought it fit. There's not much here, but if you want to see flamenco dancing like you'll never see it again, see this film for the nightclub scene.
    negevoli-44

    Beautifully filmed and charming movie with first-rate cast.

    I think this is one of Peter Sellers' best movies, along with "Dr. Strangelove...", "Only Two Can Play," "Two-Way Stretch," "A Shot in the Dark," "After the Fox," and of course the original Pink Panther...

    Sellers is charmingly funny and Britt Eklund is deliciously stunning, and perfect for her role as a femme fatale who toys with men only to succumb to Sellers' rather pathetic efforts at courtship.

    There are a number of creative and funny scenes but the "Hermitage" restaurant scene during Sellers' and Eklund's first "date" is especially maginative and hilarious...not to be missed.

    Not a shoot-'em-up, but a rather lovely film with a great cast and great production values.
    4SnoopyStyle

    I'd ask for cash

    In Barcelona, Olimpia Segura (Britt Ekland) is a materialistic girl obsessed with a new Maserati. Struggling bullfighter Juan Bautista (Peter Sellers) arrives in town looking to be the greatest singing matador.

    Comedians often construct new characters. That's what Peter Sellers is doing. It's a new construction and it's not funny. Ok! The torn cheque is a little funny. Quite frankly, Olimpia is more compelling. It doesn't mean that I want a whole movie about her manipulating all those men for her car. When the two actually meet, it has some intriguing potential but I don't see Olimpia not asking for cash instead. She wouldn't be fooled like that. She would at least demand some sort of down payment. I do like the dancer. She probably does the most compelling performance in the whole movie. It's really cool. Obviously, the Retreat is meant to be wacky fun but I just couldn't believe that Olimpia wouldn't see through Juan. The premise falls apart. I like the blue although I would want her to do it without the gun. All in all, I don't buy the premise but I do like a few moments.
    5moonspinner55

    Mostly for Sellers-completists...a slow-moving sex comedy with some good visual gags

    In order to get a booking in Spain as a "singing matador", Peter Sellers must first spend an hour alone with ravishing Britt Ekland, the local tease who has developed a bad reputation-in-reverse due to the fact she spurns all the men who desire her. Screenwriter David R. Schwartz adapted his own play, which began as the novel "Olimpia" by Burt Cole, but he seems to have left out the heart of the story. Sellers and Ekland (real-life marrieds at the time) are both good, though neither has much of a character to play. The low-keyed film is so restrained, it may confound viewers hoping for a European farce. There are minor compensations: some of Peter's shtick, including a pantomime bit on the street, is funny, also the affected way Sellers pronounces "Barcelona". The sight-gag in the final act is successfully rendered, and Francis Lai contributes a beautiful bossa nova score. Still, the picture never really takes off, remains a rather glum and meandering vehicle for its star. ** from ****
    6slokes

    Catalonian Caper Has Its Pleasures

    "The Bobo" is not a very good movie. It's arguably not even fair, though it has a history behind it. Popular opinion has it that Peter Sellers, the greatest screen comedian of his day, began a lengthy descent from the clouds of his late '50s/early '60s apogee with this silly sex farce co-starring his then-wife, Britt Ekland.

    Sure, "The Bobo" isn't brilliant, and clearly suffers from Sellers' Charlie Chaplin complex in that he portrays himself as something of a dupe (a "bobo," as is said in the movie) in upholding the honor of a supremely designing woman. But watching the film today is not unpleasant. It's no great laugh fest, but it is amusing in parts, and Sellers and Ekland have real chemistry. Sellers, just weeks away from death in 1980 and reacting to Ekland's harsh depiction of him in her tell-all auto, "True Brit," called the mother of his youngest child "a professional girlfriend and an amateur actress" and though uncharitable, that dig isn't without merit. It's just that there's more on offer in this one time we got to see the husband and wife paired up romantically on screen.

    Sellers plays a singing matador named Juan Bautista, looking for his big break on the streets of picaresque Barcelona. Impresario Carbonell (Adolfo Celi), nursing a deep grudge against the tantalizing, unavailable Olimpia Segura (Ekland) who lives across the street from his favorite watering hole, offers Bautista a brief engagement - if the singer can bed her.

    "The Bobo" starts with real promise, taking advantage of its Catalonian setting with an aerial shot of a Christ statue above the city of Barcelona with soaring musical accompaniment that promises much. The film itself starts slowly, with the setting of the bet between Carbonell and Bautista and a demonstration of Olimpia's gold-digging cruelty. Not many actual laughs, which is alright since it's not worth setting expectations you are in for a particularly funny movie when you aren't, but it's a start.

    The middle section of "The Bobo" is good, though, at times brilliant. I'm thinking mainly of the flamenco dance in which Bautista, early on in his attempt to scam the lovely Olimpia, surrenders center-stage to one of the most amazing dances ever seen on screen. The dancer looks like Angus Young of AC/DC, but she is all woman, an arresting image of the throes of passion which totally grabs you and holds you by the throat as the camera lingers on her waist, her wrists, and the strands of caramel hair glued to her Angelina Jolie lips while her heels beat like the Four Horses of the Apocalypse. There's also a real funny exit line from Bautista, easily the best laugh in the film.

    I'd just be tempted to say hack director Robert Parrish just got lucky there, but he shows more greatness in a sequence at a ritzy retreat where Bautista, improvising like a madman, makes up excuses for a non-existent count who is standing up an annoyed Olimpia. Great '60s ambiance abounds, especially when a fey majordomo played enjoyably by John Wells prances in to explain how everything works.

    The film peters out after that, especially near the end when it comes time for Bautista and Carbonell to settle up. Celi was such a great presence in "Thunderball" you sort of know he was capable of more than the script allowed him here.

    Other parts of the film are similarly weak. There's a pathetic journalist character played by Kenneth Griffith who is too unctuous and gross to be enjoyed, and Sellers presses the pathos button too much. Ekland's character is so nasty as to make her unlikable most of the time we are watching her, which takes away from the pleasure of her sexy presence more than it should. (Ekland does a good job in her thankless role, though, better than we have any right to expect.) But Barcelona in the later Franco era makes for a very exotic and enjoyable atmosphere, especially when accompanied by a gorgeous score.

    Would that Sellers had been a reasonable man, realizing he wasn't best suited as a romantic hero but as a bumbler stealing the audience's heart. "The Bobo" has moments where he plays for laughs, and moments when he just vogues in a matador costume, and it's no trick seeing the difference and which is better. But I enjoy watching "The Bobo," and I suspect that, divorced from any great expectations, you will, too.

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    Related interests

    Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally... (1989)
    Romantic Comedy
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The third and final movie pairing of then husband and wife Peter Sellers and Britt Ekland.
    • Goofs
      Olimpia has locked Pepe Gamazo out of his apartment. In the opening scene, Pepe chases her from the street in an attempt to reenter his apartment. Before he begins running, his long straight hair has a distinct part on the left side that exposes a large portion of his bare forehead. However, Olimpia beats him to the door. When Pepe reaches the apartment door, his hair is now windblown so that the part no longer shows (now resembling Moe of the Three Stooges). Yet when Olimpia looks through the peephole, his hair is neatly parted with a large portion of his forehead again visible. After she opens the door and pushes him into the elevator, he reverts back to the windblown look without parted hair. Later in another scene when Pepe knocks on the door, his hair is windblown with his forehead covered by his hair. Again, the next point of view Olimpia sees through the peephole is him with neatly parted hair and his forehead exposed.
    • Quotes

      Olimpia Segura: Take me home!

      Juan Bautista: Senorita, I can see that you are angry and you are completely justified. You are a lady of quality and you have been inconvenienced. Well, I am not going to allow the Count the satisfaction to arrive here and find you waiting for him. I shall request the bill immediately! Waiter, give this lady the check!

    • Crazy credits
      Title card: It is said in Barcelona "A bobo is a bobo!".
    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      The Blue Matador
      Music by Francis Lai

      Lyrics by Sammy Cahn

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 15, 1967 (Finland)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Bobo ist der Größte
    • Filming locations
      • Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
    • Production companies
      • Gina Production
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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