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The Glass Bottom Boat

  • 1966
  • Approved
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
5.5K
YOUR RATING
The Glass Bottom Boat (1966)
A way-out world of space and spies in this trailer
Play trailer2:46
1 Video
39 Photos
FarceSpyComedyRomance

After a series of misunderstandings, the head of an aerospace research laboratory begins to suspect that his new girlfriend is a Russian spy.After a series of misunderstandings, the head of an aerospace research laboratory begins to suspect that his new girlfriend is a Russian spy.After a series of misunderstandings, the head of an aerospace research laboratory begins to suspect that his new girlfriend is a Russian spy.

  • Director
    • Frank Tashlin
  • Writer
    • Everett Freeman
  • Stars
    • Doris Day
    • Rod Taylor
    • Arthur Godfrey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    5.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frank Tashlin
    • Writer
      • Everett Freeman
    • Stars
      • Doris Day
      • Rod Taylor
      • Arthur Godfrey
    • 73User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    The Glass Bottom Boat
    Trailer 2:46
    The Glass Bottom Boat

    Photos39

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    Top cast72

    Edit
    Doris Day
    Doris Day
    • Jennifer Nelson
    Rod Taylor
    Rod Taylor
    • Bruce Templeton
    Arthur Godfrey
    Arthur Godfrey
    • Axel Nordstrom
    John McGiver
    John McGiver
    • Ralph Goodwin
    Paul Lynde
    Paul Lynde
    • Homer Cripps
    Edward Andrews
    Edward Andrews
    • Gen. Wallace Bleecker
    Eric Fleming
    Eric Fleming
    • Edgar Hill
    Dom DeLuise
    Dom DeLuise
    • Julius Pritter
    • (as Dom De Luise)
    Dick Martin
    Dick Martin
    • Zack Molloy
    Elisabeth Fraser
    Elisabeth Fraser
    • Nina Bailey
    George Tobias
    George Tobias
    • Mr. Fenimore
    Alice Pearce
    Alice Pearce
    • Mrs. Fenimore
    Ellen Corby
    Ellen Corby
    • Anna Miller
    Dee J. Thompson
    • Donna
    David Ahdar
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Alden
    Richard Alden
    • Executive
    • (uncredited)
    Don Anderson
    Don Anderson
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Tom Anfinsen
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Frank Tashlin
    • Writer
      • Everett Freeman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews73

    6.45.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8Andrew_Eskridge

    A pleasure for fans of Alice Pearce, Paul Lynde, Edward Andrews, et al

    This fast and wild James Bond spoof is not the usual Doris Day bedroom comedy of the 60s. It's different in that it has a bevy of talented comic actors in supporting roles, who all have their moments to shine.

    Paul Lynde in drag is sublime. He looks spectacular in a red bouffant wig and aqua satin gown, and looks even more glamorous than Doris. They have a "powder room" scene together that is hilarious slapstick.

    Alice Pearce recreates her Gladys Kravitz-type character from "Bewitched" and is wonderful as usual. It's her last movie role, unfortunately, as she died too young.

    A young Dom DeLuise has a couple of funny scenes that he does mostly in pantomime. Dick Martin shows up with good reaction takes, and the great character actor Edward Andrews is in fine blustering form.

    The stars, Doris and Rod Taylor, are quite appealing, although looking a bit too mature for their fluffy romance.
    8arturus

    Sweet 60s comedy

    This picture wasn't thought to be much when it was released. Most people thought it was a silly sitcom style comedy not up to Day's earlier romantic comedies. Arthur Godfrey gave it some air play on his daytime radio show, with Day and Taylor as guests, but there wasn't much else as I remember. By this point in his career Godfrey had lost his star lustre of just ten years before and his network radio show on CBS was just about all that was left, so his appearance in a major Hollywood movie was a big deal for him.

    The picture did get a Music Hall premiere run in New York, but as I say, most people just yawned.

    Seen forty years later it has a lot going for it, especially compared to today's cinema "comedies": good writing, expert direction, good pacing and editing, colorful location shots of Catalina and vicinity, good playing by the leads, who look to be having fun, and really good support from that amazing cast of 60s character actors.

    There is a surprising amount of frank sexuality in this picture for the time, without nudity or profanity (Doris' character is a widow so she plays her as sexually mature and sophisticated), Godfrey's character has a wife/girlfriend about whom he's absolutely crazy and shows it, often (!), and there's even a surprising gay subplot that's played for laughs of course, but not offensively so. There's even Paul Lynde in drag...priceless!

    Forty years later, it still makes me laugh. You will too.
    8GeeAMouse-1

    The purist of early 60s silly humor.

    A star-studded cast with the purist of early 60s silly humor. I first saw this movie on an airplane at age 6. It made me laugh then and it still makes me laugh to this day. Dom DeLouise and Paul Lynde are hysterically funny. Doris Day is as Doris as ever and Rod Taylor made a very dashing scientist! I love watching this movie for all the old styles and realizing that they are all back again. The jokes, though simple and harmless, are still humorous today and they were in 1966.

    Amazing how silly I though it was to have vacuum that did the cleaning without the assistance of a human. Amazing how they have those now ... a bit smaller that the movie version and I doubt that they would vacuum up a flip flop, but amazing that even a musical romantic comedy of the 60s would foretell us inventions to come.

    Dig those computers in this flick! And Dom DeLouise has been known (and seen) to eat many a gourmet item, but a transistor hors d'oeuvres? Silly, but sooooo funny.

    Take a trip to the blue room or red room and enjoy this fun film. But be careful, Doris Day just might be spying on you!
    7bkoganbing

    Vladimir, Answer the Phone

    Just think that if Doris Day had not for some reason named her dog, Vladimir there might have been no plot at all for this Frank Tashlin comedy.

    That might have been bad because this was the best of Doris Day's films in the late sixties as she was beginning a downward drop in her box office appeal. The Glass Bottom Boat was the second film she did with Rod Taylor as co-star and the first of two she did with Frank Tashlin as director. And this one was the best product in both associations.

    Doris works in public relations at a space lab in California where scientist Rod Taylor is developing new stuff for the Defense Department and NASA. She also doubles and helps her dad Arthur Godfrey on his glass bottom boat tourist vehicle. One of the things I like best about The Glass Bottom Boat is Doris sings again on screen, once in a nice duet with Arthur Godfrey on his ever present ukulele. She also sings her most famous song, Que Sera Sera once again for a new generations of film fans.

    One thing about Doris's later films, she always had excellent supporting casts and this one is loaded with some very funny people like, Edward Andrews, John McGiver, Paul Lynde, Dom DeLuise, Dick Martin, George Tobias, and Alice Pearce. They all fill roles that you would expect from them.

    The Glass Bottom Boat has Rod Taylor concerned with plant security in regard to his top secret work. An overzealous security guard played by Paul Lynde overhears Doris call her dog on the phone. What she does is that in order to give the pooch some exercise during the day she calls her own number, counts the rings and then says something to the unanswered phone. It's for the dog to get exercise because he runs around like a maniac when the phone rings.

    From that we deduce that Doris is a Soviet spy and the real CIA in the person of Eric Fleming is called in. This was Fleming's last big screen appearance before he was drowned on location in Peru. A very sad end to a career that might have been the equal of his Rawhide co-star, Clint Eastwood.

    Seeing Paul Lynde in drag, questioning an inept spy played by Dom DeLuise is worth seeing this film alone.
    6blanche-2

    frothy '60s comedy

    What a warm, wonderful actress Doris Day is, what a knockout, what a screen presence. And just think, at the age of 42 (ancient by Hollywood standards in 1966) she was playing a desirable woman lusted after by several men.

    Glass Bottom Boat is a very '60s comedy in look and subject matter - the space age and spies. Taylor has invented a gizmo and when there's a leak from his project team, suspicion falls on Day, who works for the company and calls someone named Vladimir several times a day.

    Vladimir, however, is her dog, and she's calling him so he'll run around while the phone is ringing and get some exercise.

    The film is loaded with space-age gadgets. Taylor's computerized, motorized kitchen is great, complete with a floor-cleaning robot - wonder if the inventors of today's robot vacuum saw this movie. He also pilots his boat via a remote - but as he points out during a scene where the boat runs amok with Day inside, that needs further work.

    There's lots of slapstick and comedy support from Dom Deluise, Dick Martin, and Paul Lynde. Lynde, by the way, looked great in drag, and has some great delivery in his scenes.

    Some of the scenes, especially those of Deluise, had an improv feel. The late Eric Fleming, Clint Eastwood's boss on "Rawhide," plays a CIA man. This was his last film; he drowned shortly afterwards.

    Rod Taylor, who was younger than Doris Day, is effective as Day's romantic interest. Of note, radio personality Arthur Godfrey plays Day's father. There's also an appearance by Robert Vaughan as an homage to his "Man from UNCLE" character.

    Frothy fun, and Doris Day is always a delight.

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    Related interests

    Leslie Nielsen, Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, and Lorna Patterson in Airplane! (1980)
    Farce
    Daniel Craig in Skyfall (2012)
    Spy
    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
      Robert Vaughn: briefly appears in his central role of "Napoleon Solo" from The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964) at the party, with a snatch of that show's theme music on the soundtrack. The same music is heard when Homer Cripps goes undercover in drag. Theodore Marcuse played three different guest characters on that show. Dom DeLuise appeared on the spin-off The Danish Blue Affair (1966).
    • Goofs
      Wires are visible in both scenes set in the NASA anti-gravity chamber; first on the test astronaut, and also when Jennifer accidentally enters the room.
    • Quotes

      Edgar Hill: I want to talk to you a minute. Those phone calls, there is no question about it. She's an agent, operating for the...

      Bruce Templeton: She's no more an agent than you are! And if you're the best the CIA can come up with, this country is in big trouble!

      Edgar Hill: Now, look here! We'll have to detain her.

      Bruce Templeton: Mrs. Nelson can leave here whenever she wishes!

      Edgar Hill: What's that noise?

      Bruce Templeton: What? Oh, well, I locked her in the closet.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits: The events, characters and firms depicted in this photoplay are fictitious. Any similarity to actual persons, living or dead, or to actual firms, is purely coincidental.
    • Connections
      Edited into Rowan & Martin at the Movies (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      The Glass Bottom Boat
      by Joe Lubin

      Performed by Doris Day and Arthur Godfrey (uncredited)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 9, 1966 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Spy in Lace Panties
    • Filming locations
      • Avalon, Santa Catalina Island, Channel Islands, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Arwin Productions
      • Reame Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $9,200,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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