Thanks to his small-screen success with McHale’s
Navy (1962-1966) and The Carol Burnett Show (1967-1978), funnyman
Tim Conway earned a shot at big-screen starring roles in the mid-’70s. With his
impressive ability to play even the stupidest scenarios straight, Conway was
ideally suited to ensemble work or to functioning as part of a comedy duo—hence
his G-rated buddy movies with Don Knotts—but, inevitably, Conway wanted to
topline his own pictures. And that brings us to The Billion Dollar Hobo,
one of the most depressingly unfunny comedies ever made. Part of a two-picture
deal Conway made with an indie outfit called the International Picture Show
Company (the other picture being the equally awful 1978 romp They Went
That-A-Way & That-A-Way), this misfire borrows narrative elements from Frank
Capra and Preston Sturges, and then delivers its storyline by way of shtick so
moronic it would embarrass Benny Hill. Conway stars as Vernon Praiseworthy, a
well-meaning nincompoop who discovers he is heir to a railroad tycoon’s
fortune. There’s a catch, of course, so Vernon is tasked with traveling the
country as a hobo to learn life lessons before he’ll be granted his
inheritance. How dumb is The Billion Dollar Hobo? Well, let’s see. In
the first scene, Vernon gets hired as a short-order cook and left alone to run
a kitchen after less than a minute of training, at which point Vernon fails to
accomplish even the simplest kitchen functions, eventually blowing up the
diner. Need more? How about the fact that the tycoon (Will Geer) assigns as
Vernon’s traveling companion a dog whom the tycoon correctly believes is
smarter than Vernon, and will keep Vernon out of trouble? And then there’s the
whole business of Vernon stumbling into a criminal plot to kidnap a shar pei
dog named “Lee Ching Win.” Can we stop now? Or must we dwell on scenes of
Conway walking into doors and/or standing with his mouth open and his shoulders
slumped, giving the impression that he’s just been lobotomized? Save yourself a few brain cells by giving The
Billion Dollar Hobo a wide berth.
The Billion Dollar Hobo:
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I'm a huge fan of 'The Carol Burnet Show' and consider it a classic. However, Conway on his own never seems all that funny and his movies are painfully unfunny. I had to chuckle about his 'lobotomized' look that you describe as that is something that he does do often even in his routines today.
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