Funnyman Bob Hope played his last big-screen
leading role in this limp, old-fashioned farce about a cowardly smartass who
stumbles onto intrigue while vacationing near Native American land in Arizona.
Written and photographed in roughly the same style that had been employed for
Hope’s comedies since the World War II era, Cancel
My Reservation uses a contrived and silly plot as a delivery device for
rapid-fire jokes, and the wheezy gags take unkind jabs at everything from
indigenous peoples to women’s rights. The ages of the leading actors are
distracting, as well. Despite being nearly 70 years old when he made this
picture, Hope is put across as the virile center of a love triangle, with the
character’s wife (played by 48-year-old Eva Marie Saint) and a sexy squaw
(played by 25-year-old Anne Archer, decidedly not of Native American heritage)
competing for his affections. Hope’s ability to land zingers remained sharp his
entire life, so forgiving viewers might be able to chuckle a few times during Cancel My Reservation. Most folks,
however, will find the piece irritatingly artificial and moderately
distasteful. Here’s the setup. After fighting with his wife/cohost Sheila
(Saint) one too many times, Dan (Hope) takes a trip to his ranch out west, only
to find a dead body in his house. The body disappears, but not before Dan gets
into a hassle with the local constabulary. Later, he finds a live body in his
house—naked and willing “Crazy” (Archer). This doesn’t sit well with Sheila,
who arrives unexpectedly and discovers Dan with “Crazy.” Together, these three solve
a mystery involving land grabs and police corruption. In a typically dumb
scene, Dan and Sheila seek advice from Indian mystic “Old Bear” (Chief Dan
George), who looks at his visitors and says the following via subtitles: “This
chick is out of sight—and I wish he was!”
Familiar players Ralph Bellamy, Keenan Wynn, Henry Darrow, and Forrest
Tucker round out the supporting cast, while Johnny Carson, Bing Crosby, John
Wayne, and Flip Wilson all cameo in a dream sequence.
Cancel
My Reservation: LAME
4 comments:
I know this movie is terrible, however your review makes me really want to see it.
It's on youtube, and I took in a sample of it because I too was intrigued. It's as bad as Peter makes it sound, but there's something old fashioned about it that I found kind of charming. And I just like Bob Hope. *shrug*
Somehow I can't help liking the joke of Bing Crosby gloating at the sight of Bob Hope in jail. Sure, it's the kind of joke they'd done a hundred times before, but I can't help it.
I really enjoyed this movie. Far better than 'The Private Navy Of Sgt. O'Farrell'.
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