Robert Ripley shows a visitor some of the more unusual and macabre items from his collection, as well as film of several people with odd or inspiring accomplishments.Robert Ripley shows a visitor some of the more unusual and macabre items from his collection, as well as film of several people with odd or inspiring accomplishments.Robert Ripley shows a visitor some of the more unusual and macabre items from his collection, as well as film of several people with odd or inspiring accomplishments.
- Director
- Stars
Featured reviews
Believe It or Not (Second Series) #5 (1932)
* 1/2 (out of 4)
Pretty weak entry in the series has Robert L. Ripley talking to a female reporter who wants to hear some of those "believe it or not" stories. We get to see the shrunken head of an Indian as well as an iron execution chamber, which was invented by the man who ended up being the first one killed in it. In North Carolina we find a hermit who has lived outside for over forty-years without ever getting a cold. Overseas we meet a sidewalk doctor who sucks the headache out of a person's head. We get more bizarre stories like these but none of them are overly interesting and for the most part this seven-minute short goes by very slowly. I'm not sure how much thought went into the "story build-up" of having the reporter actually interesting in what's going on but it adds nothing but then again, the actual stories here aren't too good either. There's a weird animated sequence with tombstones that say strange things on them but none of them are that funny.
* 1/2 (out of 4)
Pretty weak entry in the series has Robert L. Ripley talking to a female reporter who wants to hear some of those "believe it or not" stories. We get to see the shrunken head of an Indian as well as an iron execution chamber, which was invented by the man who ended up being the first one killed in it. In North Carolina we find a hermit who has lived outside for over forty-years without ever getting a cold. Overseas we meet a sidewalk doctor who sucks the headache out of a person's head. We get more bizarre stories like these but none of them are overly interesting and for the most part this seven-minute short goes by very slowly. I'm not sure how much thought went into the "story build-up" of having the reporter actually interesting in what's going on but it adds nothing but then again, the actual stories here aren't too good either. There's a weird animated sequence with tombstones that say strange things on them but none of them are that funny.
A woman shows up in Robert L. Ripley's office, and he has nothing better to do than shows her around his collection of oddities and motion pictures of the same.
Ripley speaks like he is reading his words off a card in a plodding and nasal voice that might make the modern viewer wonder why anyone would wish to hear him go through a list of things that includes rocks that float in water and a man who lives in the wild in Pennsylvania. If so they would reckon without the enormous power of sheer celebrity. Ripley's syndicated newspaper feature had been running since 1918, and was seen by easily a hundred million people daily. Indeed, it is still running. Sheer curiosity would make this a novel way of seeing the hand-drawn feature with a sense of confidence in its claims.
Ripley speaks like he is reading his words off a card in a plodding and nasal voice that might make the modern viewer wonder why anyone would wish to hear him go through a list of things that includes rocks that float in water and a man who lives in the wild in Pennsylvania. If so they would reckon without the enormous power of sheer celebrity. Ripley's syndicated newspaper feature had been running since 1918, and was seen by easily a hundred million people daily. Indeed, it is still running. Sheer curiosity would make this a novel way of seeing the hand-drawn feature with a sense of confidence in its claims.
Did you know
- TriviaThe "steel that floats" has the "Circle Bar W" logo of the "Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company" (original name of the company). The metal was called "cobalt steel", and it could be highly magnetized; this allowed a bar to "float" above another bar whose magnetic poles were oriented in the opposite direction.
- Quotes
Ripley's Visitor: They say this room is the clearinghouse for the strange information that you gather, Mr. Ripley.
Robert L. Ripley: Yes; this is the Believe It or Not hall of curiosities. I've collected strange things from all over the world here.
Details
- Runtime
- 8m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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