6/10
January 23rd - First bridge over the Mississippi opens 1855
3 January 2022
In order to really appreciate Abbott and Costello, one needs to understand where their careers fell on the timeline. Bud and Lou's careers actually can be broken down into, at least, four different eras, which is a lot when you think about it, since their partnership only lasted about 20 years total. You can break them up into the vaudeville era (1936-1940), the glory years (1940-1945), the tough years (1945-1948), the resurgence (1948-1953) and the end (1953-1956).

This film falls at a moment when they were starting to loose their audience. Unfortunately, Bud and Lou's biggest success came during World War II. A nation needing to be cheered up and needing a morale boost fell for Abbott and Costello during those four horrible years. They were the morale boosters in chief and they became the most popular and the most rich actors in Hollywood during those years. But, as the war began to wind down, so did the popularity of the boys. They needed to start making changes and you see this happening in a lot of their films moving forward into the 1950s.

When this film was released in 1945, Germany had already surrendered a few months before and Japan was just a few months away from surrendering. The war was over and the feelings and attitudes of a post-war America were beginning to change. Also, television was just on the horizon. People were looking towards other things to do or see.

As this film opens up, Dexter and Sabastian (Bud and Lou), get work on a showboat named the River Queen. Dexter is an actor and Sabastian is his trusted "assistant". The owner of the River Queen, Captain Sam Jackson (Henry Travers), falls into the scheme of a handful of con artists, who are bent on getting the showboat for themselves, so they can run their illegal gambling casino. This is something Sam wants nothing to do with. It takes the help of the boys to come help save the Captain and his daughter, Caroline (Lois Collier), from these dastardly criminals.

What sets this film apart from a lot of Abbott and Costello's films from the same time period is this one features a smorgasbord of their different and classic acts, including their best, "Who's on First". Another thing a person needs to know about Abbott and Costello is their talent, their act and all their skits grew out of the vaudeville era. Working in vaudeville meant you were working with everybody. All the talent shared their acts, jokes and skits with each other. It was part of the vaudeville culture. So, when you see the Three Stooges, or Wheeler and Woolsey or even Martin and Lewis, do the same joke or skit that Bud and Lou did, that shouldn't be considered a negative. It's how things were.

It is true this film is not a great one. There are moments that seem sloppy in their design. It makes you wonder if the whole process was becoming stale to whoever was involved in the film or was it just becoming overly repetitious. This is most evident during the "duck shoot" skit. We may be laughing at the absurdity of it all, but we also aren't buying that any of this could possibly fool anyone. What was interesting about all of this, is watching this tired, formulaic development, that would eventually become Abbott and Costello's main direction once they get to television in the 1950s. Foreshadowing maybe?

This film is still worth a watch. It has some rough edges and might seem a little plastic in its design, but overall is a delight to see. They give us one skit after another. They intertwine all of that with a little story and textbook characters (for this kind of a romp), that get us to the end, but adults might seem slightly robbed, because there is a childish nature to some of the performances that happen in the film. But, who cares? It's Abbott and Costello, who were legends of their day. They didn't need to answer to nobody. They were the richest guys in Hollywood. You don't do that when you are making bad stuff. Plus, anything with "Who's on First", is a gold mine.

6.2 (D+ MyGrade) = 6 IMDB.
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