Producers have spent years trying to mimic It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963),
the all-star comedy epic about an international treasure hunt. Lesser
attempts, such as Scavenger
Hunt, succumb to predictable problems including bloated running times and
underwritten characters. Trying to adequately service roles for a dozen or more
principal actors seems to vex even the most well-meaning filmmakers.
Additionally, trying to maintain the desired level of hellzapoppin excitement
for an entire feature film usually drives the people behind pictures like Scavenger Hunt to rely on chases,
screaming, and slapstick—all of which get tiresome. Inevitably, the initial
sugar rush leads to a crash. Although Scavenger
Hunt is largely a disappointment, especially considering the incredible
array of gifted comic actors appearing in the film, it has some meritorious
elements. Cowriter/producer Steven Vail and his team (mostly) avoid taking
cheap shots at ethnic stereotypes, and they play a clean game by opting for family-friendly
jokes instead of lurid ones. It’s not difficult to see the frothy confection
the filmmakers had in mind.
The premise, naturally, is simple. When
multimillionaire board-game titan Milton Parker (Vincent Price) dies, his
would-be heirs are forced to compete in a scavenger hunt that will determine
who inherits the Parker fortune. On one team is Parker’s greedy sister (Cloris
Leachman), along with her idiot son (Richard Masur) and her slimy lawyer
(Richard Benjamin). Another team includes Parker’s son-in-law (Tony Randall)
and the son-in-law’s kids. Next up is a duo comprising two of Parker’s nephews (played by
Willie Aames and Dirk Benedict). Still another team features Parker’s household
help—the butler (Roddy McDowall), the chauffeur (Cleavon Little), the chef
(James Coco), and the maid (Stephanie Faracy). The wild-card contender is a
dimwitted taxi driver (Richard Mulligan), whom Parker included because the cab
driver accidentally killed Parker’s business partner, making Parker rich.
You
can figure out where this goes—as the teams pursue items on their lists, the
evil people bicker and steal while the virtuous people help each other. Some
scenes that presumably were meant to be comic highlights fall flat, including a
lengthy bit of McDowall supervising his team’s theft of a toilet from a hotel
bathroom. Cameos from random actors (Ruth Gordon, Meat Loaf, Arnold
Schwarzenegger) add little, and the gags are uninspired. Nonetheless, director
Michael Schultz keeps everyone upbeat and moving fast, so several sequences
generate mild amusement, especially the anything-goes finale. Additionally,
while none of the performances truly stand out (excepting perhaps Benjamin’s
vigorous turn as a long-suffering schmuck), the vibe is consistently and
pleasantly silly.
Scavenger
Hunt: FUNKY
I LOVE this movie! Great cast and so much fun. I wish they would release it on DVD.
ReplyDeleteNew personal life goalL "maintain the desired level of hellzapoppin excitement...until the anything-goes finale." Peter Hanson you are brilliant!
ReplyDeletePretty amazing to see Crothers bravely participating in all of this tomfoolery, even singing & strumming "Ain't She Sweet?" quite nicely -- just one year prior to his immortal, masterful turn in "The Shining" !
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