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I'll Take Sweden

  • 1965
  • Approved
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
1K
YOUR RATING
I'll Take Sweden (1965)
An executive, unhappy with his daughter's choice for a future husband, accepts a transfer to his firm's Stockholm branch and takes her along, only to discover that Sweden is far more sexually liberal than the United States.
Play trailer3:23
1 Video
75 Photos
Comedy

An executive, unhappy with his daughter's choice for a future husband, accepts a transfer to his firm's Stockholm branch and takes her along, only to discover that Sweden is far more sexuall... Read allAn executive, unhappy with his daughter's choice for a future husband, accepts a transfer to his firm's Stockholm branch and takes her along, only to discover that Sweden is far more sexually liberal than the United States.An executive, unhappy with his daughter's choice for a future husband, accepts a transfer to his firm's Stockholm branch and takes her along, only to discover that Sweden is far more sexually liberal than the United States.

  • Director
    • Frederick De Cordova
  • Writers
    • Nat Perrin
    • Bob Fisher
    • Arthur Marx
  • Stars
    • Bob Hope
    • Dina Merrill
    • Tuesday Weld
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frederick De Cordova
    • Writers
      • Nat Perrin
      • Bob Fisher
      • Arthur Marx
    • Stars
      • Bob Hope
      • Dina Merrill
      • Tuesday Weld
    • 27User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:23
    Trailer

    Photos75

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Bob Holcomb
    Dina Merrill
    Dina Merrill
    • Karin Granstedt
    Tuesday Weld
    Tuesday Weld
    • JoJo Holcomb
    Frankie Avalon
    Frankie Avalon
    • Kenny Klinger
    Jeremy Slate
    Jeremy Slate
    • Erik Carlson
    Rosemarie Frankland
    Rosemarie Frankland
    • Marti
    Walter Sande
    Walter Sande
    • Bjork
    John Qualen
    John Qualen
    • Olaf
    Peter Bourne
    • Ingemar
    Fay DeWitt
    Fay DeWitt
    • Hilda
    • (as Fay deWitt)
    Alice Frost
    Alice Frost
    • Greta
    Roy Roberts
    Roy Roberts
    • Ship's Captain
    Maudie Prickett
    Maudie Prickett
    • Spinster
    Beverly Powers
    • Electra
    • (as Beverly Hills)
    Siv Marta Aberg
    • Inger
    The Vulcanes
    • Vocal Group
    Don Anderson
    Don Anderson
    • Restaurant Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Phil Arnold
    Phil Arnold
    • Hotel Guest Watching TV
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Frederick De Cordova
    • Writers
      • Nat Perrin
      • Bob Fisher
      • Arthur Marx
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    5.31K
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    Featured reviews

    4LarryBrownHouston

    Yawn. 90 minutes of 1960s comedy sex talk and situations just like so many others.

    This film is in the style of Doris Day films that feature compromising sexual situations and innuendo while on the surface everything remains innocent fun. That may have been titillating in 1965 when you couldn't say the word "pregnant" on TV and Rob and Laura Petrie had separate beds, but now it's just boring and adolescent. I get tired of this innuendo quickly, but it's always fun explaining each joke to my wife, because the entire thing goes way over her head.

    This film features blatant sexual material centering around the question of Bob Hope's daughter: will she or won't she?

    The film presents Sweden as a sexually free place, while America stands for a higher morality. On the surface the movie preaches this higher morality while actually presenting and capitalizing on the intriguing images and ideas of a free-lovin' society.

    One problem with this type of film is that the writers think that the innuendo will carry the film. They think that just the fact that they are covertly, or in this case, overtly, talking about sex will keep us nervously giggling and entertained, gasping in shock or winking at each other. It's like a comedian whose act relies on dirty language. Ok, they may get nervous laughs, but after some time it gets boring or even distasteful. In this film, because the writers are overconfident, they don't bother with good characters, a good plot, clever dialog, motivations, or any thing else that makes for good drama or comedy, they just let the subject of sex carry it. That just doesn't cut it, especially not in modern times when any shock value it might have had is completely gone.
    dougdoepke

    Not The Usual Hope Romp !

    For a Hope fan like me, the flick was a disappointment. Don't look for his comically flustered style til the last part, when he runs amusingly through the many stranger-filled hotel bedrooms -- and just what is it those bedroom couples are doing? It's then that the movie really gels.

    That's not to overlook the opening scene where gyrating teens of the mid-1960's could light up a city, while Hope's strait-laced father looks on disapprovingly. So how's he going to keep daughter Weld from marrying into Avalon's reckless crew. By moving to sophisticated Sweden, of course. Trouble is, as Dad finds out, Sweden's even looser sexually than back in the good old USA. Good thing Sweden's Dina Merrill is there to help ease his protective tension. But what about the stiffly handsome Slate whose got his Swedish eye on Weld. So what's Dad to do.

    Basically the movie's about sexual innuendo at a time when American mores were changing from the conformist 1950's. (A couple more years and the free-wheeling Hippie movement would appear.) So in that cultural sense the movie appears unfortunately dated with its cutting-edge emphasis of the time. I'm surmising, but I suspect Hope was hoping to connect with the younger generation, given the flick's key aspects. Too bad his brand of delightful humor wasn't better served.

    Anyway, for Hope fans, hang on til the last part when the tempo picks up. In the meantime, there's cutie Weld to entertain the eyes of hormonal guys like me.
    6tavm

    I'll Take Sweden was quite an enjoyable '60s Bob Hope vehicle for me

    After weeks ago taping this and the one that preceded it-Kings Go Forth-on DVR off the THIS movie channel, I finally decided to watch Bob Hope's I'll Take Sweden. Unfortunately, while the previous picture's enjoyment was marred a little bit by having the scenes freeze and then fade out constantly while the audio was still running during the ending scenes, so it was with this one during the beginning ones. Still, once that was fixed, I did find this one quite amusing if not completely hilarious despite, or maybe because of, the silly contrivances that permeated the whole screenplay written by Nat Perrin, Robert Fisher, and Arthur Marx, the latter of which happens to be the son of the one and only Groucho. I mean, Mr. Hope still has a way with a punchline and Frankie Avalon provides some energy with his slacker role with enjoyable, if a little forgettable, music interludes. Dina Merril is appealing enough as Bob's paramour and Tuesday Weld provides her own charms as his stunning daughter. Then there's Jeremy Slate as the Swedish rival with Avalon for Ms. Weld's attentions. While he and Ms. Merril are close to overdoing the Scandinavian accent, his is almost close to irritating. Good thing it all turns out the way it does. But all in all, with competent direction from Frederick De Cordova, I rather enjoyed I'll Take Sweden.
    5Uriah43

    When in Sweden

    "Bob Holcomb" (Bob Hope) is an oil company executive who comes home and finds out that his teenage daughter "JoJo" (Tuesday Weld) is throwing a party with all of her friends and essentially wrecking the house in the process. If that wasn't bad enough she tells him that she has fallen in love and introduces him to a young man by the name of "Kenny Klinger" (Frankie Avalon) who she wants to marry. Bob realizes at once that Kenny is a bit too wild and immature for his daughter so in order to create some distance between the two of them he decides to accept an assignment to Sweden and take her with him. But things don't work out exactly as he plans because once there she finds a Swedish boyfriend named "Erik Carlson" (Jeremy Slate) who is much more sexually sophisticated and aggressive than Kenny ever was. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this film shares a similarity to the "beach movies" produced in the early 60's which typically evolved around young men and women dancing to rock-and-roll music and getting romantically acquainted while having to overcome a host of weird obstacles along the way. This film is no exception and carries with it the same light humor and dated quality. True to form, Bob Hope throws some good one-liners here and there which certainly helps a comedy of this type. Likewise, the presence of an attractive actress like Tuesday Weld doesn't hurt this film in anyway either. Even so, neither of them could offset the uneven production quality or the rather predictable plot and because of that I have rated this movie accordingly. Average.
    6wes-connors

    Fun with Frankie Avalon

    Wise-cracking widower Bob Hope (as Robert "Bob" Holcomb) arrives home to discover his pretty blonde daughter Tuesday Weld (as JoJo Holcomb) is engaged to pseudo-rock 'n' roll singer Frankie Avalon (as Kenny Klinger). Mr. Avalon has dropped put of college, rides a motorcycle, lives in a small trailer, and takes Ms. Weld out to strip clubs. Hope is horrified. In order to get Weld away from Avalon, he accepts a job transfer to Stockholm. There, Hope discovers a Swedish custom regarding pre-marital sex...

    We are told, in order to determine how well they are "suited for each other," Swedes have sex before getting married. This insures a low divorce rate. Hope romances attractive Dina Merrill (as Karin Granstedt Martoni) and Weld prepares to lose her virginity during a two week vacation with playboy Jeremy Slate (as Erik Carlson). Hope declares, "Nobody's gonna chalk up any mileage on JoJo without getting a driver's license first!" To make Weld change her mind, Hope contacts Avalon in America...

    Avalon returns to the storyline and gives the film a final burst of energy. The highlight is his performance of "I'll Take Sweden, Ya Ya Ya!" In brief blue swim trunks, Avalon gyrates around a boatyard, attracting Rosemarie Frankland in a white bikini. The beauty queen with obvious assets moved from Hope (one of the comedian's many alleged companions) to Grass Roots singer Warren Entner. Avalon was no longer selling rock 'n' roll records, but he is funnier and more appealing than all others, herein.

    ****** I'll Take Sweden (6/2/65) Frederick de Cordova ~ Bob Hope, Frankie Avalon, Tuesday Weld, Dina Merrill

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      As a publicity stunt, the studio offered a role to one of then-US President Lyndon B. Johnson's daughters. She declined.
    • Goofs
      All of the boats at the dock have California registrations even though the scene is supposed to be in Sweden.
    • Quotes

      JoJo Holcomb: Kenny doesn't have to work: his grandmother left him *twelve hundred* dollars!

      Bob Holcomb: [touch of sarcasm] Twelve hundred dollars? With that kinda' dough and a credit card, you got it made.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Wipeout: Episode #5.27 (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      Watusi Jo
      Composed by Jimmie Haskell and Jim Economides

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 18, 1965 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Swedish
    • Also known as
      • Schweden - Nur der Liebe wegen
    • Filming locations
      • Lake Arrowhead, San Bernardino National Forest, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Edward Small Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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