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Easy Come, Easy Go

  • 1967
  • PG
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Elvis Presley, Dodie Marshall, and Pat Priest in Easy Come, Easy Go (1967)
Navy frogman, Ted Jackson (Elvis Presley), balances his time between twin careers as a deep sea diver and nightclub singer. During a dive, Ted spots sunken treasure and returns with hope to retrieve it.
Play trailer3:03
1 Video
66 Photos
AdventureComedyMusic

Navy frogman, Ted Jackson (Elvis Presley), balances his time between twin careers as a deep sea diver and nightclub singer. During a dive, Ted spots sunken treasure and returns with hope to ... Read allNavy frogman, Ted Jackson (Elvis Presley), balances his time between twin careers as a deep sea diver and nightclub singer. During a dive, Ted spots sunken treasure and returns with hope to retrieve it.Navy frogman, Ted Jackson (Elvis Presley), balances his time between twin careers as a deep sea diver and nightclub singer. During a dive, Ted spots sunken treasure and returns with hope to retrieve it.

  • Director
    • John Rich
  • Writers
    • Allan Weiss
    • Anthony Lawrence
  • Stars
    • Elvis Presley
    • Dodie Marshall
    • Pat Priest
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Rich
    • Writers
      • Allan Weiss
      • Anthony Lawrence
    • Stars
      • Elvis Presley
      • Dodie Marshall
      • Pat Priest
    • 34User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:03
    Official Trailer

    Photos66

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Elvis Presley
    Elvis Presley
    • Ted Jackson
    Dodie Marshall
    • Jo Symington
    Pat Priest
    Pat Priest
    • Dina Bishop
    Pat Harrington Jr.
    Pat Harrington Jr.
    • Judd Whitman
    • (as Pat Harrington)
    Skip Ward
    Skip Ward
    • Gil Carey
    Sandy Kenyon
    Sandy Kenyon
    • Schwartz
    Frank McHugh
    Frank McHugh
    • Captain Jack
    Ed Griffith
    • Cooper
    Read Morgan
    Read Morgan
    • Ship's Officer
    Mickey Elley
    • Ship's Officer
    Elaine Beckett
    • Vicki
    Shari Nims
    • Mary
    Diki Lerner
    • Zoltan
    Robert Isenberg
    • Artist
    Elsa Lanchester
    Elsa Lanchester
    • Madame Neherina
    Tom Hatten
    Tom Hatten
    • Lieutenant Junior Grade
    • (uncredited)
    James Hibbard
    James Hibbard
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    Jonathan Hole
    Jonathan Hole
    • Coin Dealer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John Rich
    • Writers
      • Allan Weiss
      • Anthony Lawrence
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    5.22K
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    Featured reviews

    5bkoganbing

    This Captain Hates the Sea

    Elvis Presley was coming to the end of his cycle as a big name movie box office star when Easy Come, Easy Go was made for Paramount. We were deep in the flower power era by 1967 and Elvis was ceding his top spot to the lads from Liverpool and their imitators.

    The one thing about Elvis films were was that the whole film was sold on the personality of its star. If it was a good script with an intelligent story line that was gravy. Easy Come, Easy Go was a steak tartar of a film.

    No hit songs came out of this movie, but Colonel Tom Parker as he always did made sure the King was always given a good supporting cast of veteran Hollywood players. In this case we have two of the best. Elsa Lanchester has a brief bit as a yoga instructor who literally ties the King in knots. And she even sings a line or two with Elvis. Not a duet combination anyone would ever have dreamed.

    Also Frank McHugh plays Captain Jack who owns a marine supply store who's never been to sea. Mr. McHugh graced just about every other Warner Brothers film during the hay day of the studio system and was always a welcome whimsical presence. He's no less welcome here in what turned out to be his feature film swan song. McHugh's problem is that he gets seasick in a row boat.

    Elvis is a Navy Seal who on his last day in the service discovers some buried treasure at the same time some other folks have. He enlists the help of his former partner Pat Harrington, Jr. and McHugh in trying to get to the treasure. Of course Elvis has a couple of girls after him, Dodie Marshall and Pat Priest.

    It's pleasant and entertaining enough, but not up to the standards of stuff like Blue Hawaii or Jailhouse Rock for Elvis.
    raysond

    Its Elvis on the high seas!!!

    Anything that was associated with Elvis Presley was one of those Hollywood pictures where Elvis just did naturally....pop up in some strange town,sing his heart out,have the kids dancing to the music,or in other cases, gets the girl and saves the day.

    This was one of his films had that authenticity. Even though it would be the last association with producer Hal Wallis(who would take over production at Universal) and the last film he would do for Paramount Pictures before he would go into his next feature film.

    The basic formula was simple: Any feature that starred the King of Rock and Roll would bring box-office success,and that was what "Easy Come,Easy Go" was just that. I had the chance to see this film on Encore just the other day,and I thought it was well enjoyable by all aspects. You have an action-packed adventure yarn that is filled with the music of the sixties that is swinging and grooving.

    Check out the co-star of Pat Harrington(who was Schinder on TV's "One Day at a Time"),as his mate in search of buried treasure and a beau of lovely dames in distress.
    5blanche-2

    Benign Elvis fare

    Well, I'll give Easy Come, Easy Go this - it's not as unwatchable as Harum Scarum.

    Watching Elvis films is a bittersweet experience. I love seeing him - he had such an incredible voice, presence, and energy, but what a waste as far as his films. Had he not been tied to Colonel Parker, film-wise, he could have done some interesting roles.

    I'd say let's not dwell on the past, but unfortunately, with Elvis, it's all we've got. "Easy Come, Easy Go" was one of his last films, and it was made during the hippie movement, so Elvis has to deal with a lot of free spirits. He's after some underwater salvage, and he has competition. There's the story right there.

    There is a yoga class headed by Elsa Lanchester who sings a little song - I guess at this point, they threw everything but the kitchen sink into these films to make them bearable.

    Frank McHugh turns in the best performance of the film. He's wonderful and very funny in what would be his last film.

    Elvis is charming, of course, although by 1967, doing these films was a painful and angry-making experience for him.

    The songs are terrible - my understanding is that Colonel Parker figured out by the mid-60s that the lower the budget, the more money he made, so apparently, there were no songs written expressly for the movie.

    Elvis could have been in "Midnight Cowboy" or the Streisand remake of "A Star is Born" but the Colonel was afraid of losing control of him, and Elvis was afraid to leave. Colonel Parker was his lucky charm. Colonel Parker had given him all his success.

    Colonel Parker was taking 50% of everything Elvis made. Colonel Parker made Elvis a slave to the Hilton Hotel because he kept telling the management to take his gambling debts out of Elvis' deal.

    Colonel Parker wouldn't look at Elvis' dead body, but took Vernon aside and made him sign a document that the court later negated since it was detrimental to Lisa Marie's inheritance.

    Yes, Colonel Parker was a prince. This movie is just one example of everything he did for Elvis.
    Michael_Elliott

    Decent

    Easy Come, Easy Go (1967)

    ** (out of 4)

    Elvis plays a former Navy frogman who discovers a buried treasure and must try and reach it before anyone else can. This is a pretty bad and stupid film but it thankfully enters into the camp territory and gets a few laughs along the way. The story is pretty bland and something we haven't seen in countless other films and lets not forget the subplot of Elvis and his women, which we've also seen in countless other films of his. As for Elvis, he isn't horrible here but there's not too much to the performance. He seems a bit livelier here than in the previous picture I watched but he's still a long way off from an actual good performance. The title track and "The Love Machine" are pretty good tunes but "Yoga Is As Yoga Does" is pretty embarrassing. "I'll Take You", written by Ed Wood's former lover Dolores Fuller, isn't too bad and Ray Charles' "Leave My Woman Alone" comes off fairly good.
    6hitchcockthelegend

    It completely depends on your expectations?

    By 1967 Elvis Presley had long since had enough of the formula of his movies, where he would triumph over the bad guys, kiss the girls and sing songs to all and sundry. Even when a good Presley movie surfaced, and there are a few bona fide good ones, casual film fans are required to be in a light and unforgiving mood to enjoy the malarkey on offer. Easy Come, Easy Go is pretty average stuff, both in quality of narrative and performances and that of the tunes within. Dialogue is unleashed in scattergun fashion without due care and attention for dramatic worth, there's no strong female lead for Presley to bounce back and forth from, and the humour is tired and weary.

    Yet for all of the evident problems, it's a safe enough recommendation to those after a time filler who are armed with the knowledge this isn't going to tickle the cranium! It's all very colourful with nice exterior work at Long Beach Naval Station, Presley looks just terrific in uniform and the cast is spruced up by the presence of Elsa Lanchester and Jack McHugh; the former of which sings a bit and gets the giggles as a hippie type yoga teacher who ties "The Pelvis" in knots. Stand out tune is I'll Take Love, while the race for buried treasure plot remains airy enough to let the adventure yarn breathe.

    Foot tapping assured and unintentional giggles, too, set the dial for family friendly fodder and wallow in the froth. 6/10

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    Related interests

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    Music

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The soundtrack for this movie was released on a 7" EP. It sold less than 30,000 copies, making it the worst selling record that Elvis ever released for RCA Victor.
    • Goofs
      When 'Jo' (Dodie Marshall) asks 'Ted' (Elvis Presley) to drive her home from the club she is clearly wearing a red dress, but when they arrive at her house she is in a striped top and white trousers.
    • Quotes

      Ted Jackson: What are you protesting?

      Woman Carrying "We Protest!" Sign: Well, if you don't know I'm certainly not going to tell you!

    • Connections
      Featured in This Is Elvis (1981)
    • Soundtracks
      Easy Come, Easy Go
      Written by Sid Wayne and Ben Weisman

      Performed and Sung by Elvis Presley

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 14, 1967 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • A Girl in Every Port
    • Filming locations
      • Long Beach Naval Station, San Pedro, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Wallis-Hazen
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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