|
|
Amazon.com's Price: $9.99 Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy Now!
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: BCI ECLIPSE LLC
EAN: 0090096098296
Format: Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
Label: Bci / Eclipse
Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product.
Manufacturer: Bci / Eclipse
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Bci / Eclipse
Region Code: 1
Release Date: November 21, 2000
Running Time: 95 minutes
Sales Rank: 26954
Studio: Bci / Eclipse
Theatrical Release Date: July 14, 1952
Editorial Review:
Product Description: Four years after his hit comedy The Paleface Bob Hope returned to the screen as Junior Potter son of Painless Peter Potter the hapless hero of the first film. The Harvard-bred Junior heads out west to claim his father's inheritance. Returning for the sequel but in a different role is Jane Russell (The Outlaw) as an outlaw named Mike who continually has to save our hapless hero. Also starring in the sequel is the King of the Cowboys himself Roy Rogers and his horse Trigger who portray themselves. Hope teams with the pair to help get to the sequel is the Oscar-winning song 'Buttons and Bows.' Co-writer and director Frank Tashlin a former cartoonist and screenwriter of the first Paleface also worked with Hope on The Private Navy of Sgt O'Farrell and wrote and directed several Jerry Lewis films such as Cinderfella and The Geisha Boy.System Requirements:Starring: Bob Hope Jane Russell Roy Rogers Iron Eyes Cody and Trigger. Running Time: (approx.) 95 mins/color. Copyright: l952 Columbia Pictures Television.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: COMEDY Rating: NR UPC: 090096098296 Manufacturer No: 60982-9
Amazon.com: Bob Hope returned to the wild West in Son of Paleface, mining the rootin' shootin' genre for gag after gag. Hope plays Junior Potter--another variation on his lascivious, cowardly, yet somehow endearing persona--a college boy who's come to California seeking his father's hidden gold. What he finds is an empty treasure chest, a pile of unpaid bills, vengeful Indians, buxom Jane Russell (as a saloon girl by day, wily bandit by night), and singing cowboy Roy Rogers. It's prime silliness, an ancestor to movies like Airplane! that never let a moment go by without an absurd joke. Russell sashays about in spectacular form-fitting outfits, Rogers yodels a few tunes, and Hope snivels and wheedles his way out of endless scrapes. Good-natured slapstick (though its depiction of Native Americans will raise the hackles on politically correct viewers). --Bret Fetzer
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Son of Paleface
It's like watching a cartoon comic but with real human actors! A very funny movie. Another reason why the humour is so intense is because the funny things that happen take place within a rather serious plot, so the humour comes when you least expect it. If you want to be caught off gaurd with a barrel full of laughs, then you must watch what I think is Bob Hope's best movie!
Rating: - Even funnier than The Paleface
This movie is even better than The Paleface. They just don't make 'em like this anymore. Comedy today is hurtfull and crass..The classic comedy actors and actresses aimed the jokes at themselves, not others. The laughs were never at the expense of anyone else. This movie belongs in any classic movie collection.
Rating: - Son of Paleface (Bob Hope)
Very funny movie but when purchasing remember you require a multi zone DVD player to play them if you live in other countries
Rating: - Son of Paleface
It had good actors and an excellence job and was funny.
Rating: - Son of Palface 1952
Four years after his hit comedy "The Palface 1948" , Bob Hope (1903-2003) returned to the screen as Junior Potter , Son of Painless Peter Potter , the hapless hero of the first film (The Palface 1948) . The Harvard-bred Junior heads out West to claim his fathers inheritance .Returning for the sequel , but in a different role , is Jane Russell (1921 - ) as a outlaw named "Mike" who continually has to save this our hapless hero . Also starring in the sequel is the king of the Cowboys himself, Roy Rogers ... Read More
|
|