This DVD item from Universal Studios was reviewed on 11-Dec-2008. Road to Zanzibar Reference DVD. Classifications : General Comedy Genres DVD Video Cons & Scams By Theme Comedy Genres DVD Video Fish Out of Water By Theme Comedy Genres DVD Video Classic Comedies Comedy Genres DVD Video Comedy Kids & Family Genres DV . Click the following link to view the cover of Road to Zanzibar. Related topics: 1941-04-11. General. Comedy. Genres. DVD. Video. Cons & Scams. By Theme. Comedy. Genres. DVD. requestid: 5e3f43d3-8a2d-406c-a148-9eebfef7553f requestprocessingtime: 0.0544880000000000 salesrank: 44238 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 6073025540
1) DVD DVD Road to Zanzibar by Universal Studios. Bing and Bob´s second outing is about as much fun as you can have at the movies. Bing´s "Rhythm on the River" director of the previous year, Victor Schertzinger, allowed the boys to ad-lib so much screenwriters Don Hartman and Frank Butler must have been frantically turning pages trying to see where that line came from! The end result of Bing and Bob´s great chemistry was a delightfully funny film with a couple of nice songs and a formula that lovely Dorothy Lamour and the boys would make legendary.
The film has a hilarious opening as Fearless Frazier (Bob) is about to be shot out of a cannon at a carnival by his pal Chuck (Bing). When things go south and the carnival burns to the ground, they take the show on the road. Chuck always has the ideas, as usual, which have "Fearless" doing everything from wrestling an octopus to becoming the human bat. One of Chuck´s greatest ideas is to put Fearless in a lead coffin and submerge it in water. As for how Fearless is to escape, well Chuck hasn´t quite worked out all the details yet!
And so it goes. There is some usual nonsense about a diamond mine the boys get hoodwinked into buying and in turn snooker someone else into buying, but it´s only an excuse for the boys to end up in darkest Africa with the gorgeous Lamour. Donna Latour (Lamour) and her pal Julia (Una Merkel) are running a con pretending to be captured by slave traders when Julia discovers all that dough Chuck and Hubert (Fearless!) made off their diamond mine map and the girls decide to take them on safari, and take them for a ride!
Lamour is sexy and mischievous in her knee high socks and gorgeous hats but begins to worry her pal Julia when she starts to fall for one of the boys. Fearless thinks it´s him, of course, when she gets his motor going singing "You´re Dangerous" on a moonlit night. But the audience knows it´s Chuck, even if there is a complication involving the rich guy named J. Theodore Bradley she´s suppose to marry.
Some of the best moments come when the boys get lost and discover some drums in an old cave and begin to have fun. You can guess the rest! Will the boys be supper for the natives in the interior of darkest Africa? Will Lamour go with her heart and go for Chuck? It´s certainly fun finding out as Bing and Bob throw the script out the window, filling Zanzibar with their easygoing charm and funny one-liners.
Dorothy Lamour is really pretty here and was the perfect choice to partner with the boys. They just seem like they belong together, both then and now. Victor Young does the music score and Bing gets to sing to Lamour while they´re rowing on the river. Watching this one is a fun way to remeber Bing and Bob, who are no longer with us. But as long as great films like this one are available, their memories will remain forever.¤ 2) DVD DVD Road to Zanzibar by Universal Studios. This road picture is my off again, on again pick for the best one. Utopia and Zanzibar both are excellent.
The first half hour of this movie just flies by everytime I watch it. It always seems like the pace slows down once they hook up with Dorothy Lamour. Nothing against Dottie, per se, but she is not funny. Great actress, great singer, but she couldn´t get a laugh if her life depended on it. Some pretty good lines are given to her, and they fall flat every time.
But the boys are in top form here. Great scene at the night club where they are forced to do an impromptu dance and comedy routine.
The plot doesn´t always make sense, but it doesn´t seem to matter. I read where the competition between Bing and Bob to be the funnier guy was pretty intense during the filming of Zanzibar ... and maybe that´s why the final product is so very funny.
A lot of laughs in The Road to Zanzibar.
¤ 3) DVD DVD Road to Zanzibar by Universal Studios. No one dose it better then Bob Hope and Bing Crosby! I love this movie.If you like classic hollywood you will love this one.¤ 4) DVD DVD Road to Zanzibar by Universal Studios. ROAD TO ZANZIBAR has always been one of my two or three favorite Road movies, in part because it´s more of a comedy and less of a musical than many entries as well as having the bonus of having that great comedienne Una Merkel along for the ride. And the great Dorothy Lamour is incredibly sexy here (wasn´t she always!!)
I´m happy that the DVD version of ROAD TO ZANZIBAR pictures Dorothy Lamour - unfortunately it is the ONLY DVD of the series by Universal to do so. It is an improvement on the VHS which did not picture her, nor did the other videos. She was an EQUAL star to Hope and Crosby - one of the biggest women stars of the era. She has a lot of fans even today who are probably passing on the prerecorded tapes to this series because of this slight. Wake up Universal and reissue this series picturing the third STAR of these movies on the boxes!¤ 5) DVD DVD Road to Zanzibar by Universal Studios. This is not the best of the "Road" pictures, but it´s still a lot of fun to watch the chemistry between Hope and Crosby. The plot is a bit preposterous, and just how dumb can Hope´s character be to be anything but Fearless? However, the hijinks are first rate scams, and there are nice turns by Dorothy Lamour and Una Merkel. The tunes are not the best of the "Road" series, although Bing´s voice always seems stronger in films than in comparably dated records. Get this one not because it´s a classic (not quite), but just because it´s fun.¤ 6) DVD DVD Road to Zanzibar by Universal Studios. The second Road movie from Paramount Pictures finds barnstorming con artists Chuck Reardon (Bing Crosby) and Hubert "Fearless" Frazier (Bob Hope) at liberty after their act goes haywire. (In these movies, Crosby generally lures the suckers into the tent, while Hope is always stuck getting shot out of the cannon.) A phony map to a diamond mine brings our boys into the middle of Africa, which means there´s a good chance they´ll end up sitting in a cauldron while natives perform a cannibal dance around them. These stereotypes would be offensive if the movie wasn´t actively parodying the kind of jungle movie popular in 1941 (just as Road to Morocco would satirize the Arabian nights picture). Dorothy Lamour is along for the ride, of course, and her scene in a tight clinch with Hope established a tradition of steamy comic exchanges through the series (as she croons a love song to him, he checks to see if his wallet is still in his pocket). This is the first Road movie to actively wink at the audience; in one scene, Lamour mocks the way movies always have characters break out into song in the middle of nowhere with a full orchestra backing--which is exactly what happens next. The chatter between Crosby and Hope already feels improvised, and it should be noted that the secret of their chemistry is not a sentimental friendship but a cheerfully hostile rivalry between the two characters, a cheeky approach that must´ve delighted audiences used to the Andy Hardy niceness of most Hollywood movies of that era. Oh, and they do their patty-cake routine, too. --Robert Horton¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 8-Jan-2009, 0783255276025192123221, 72B-F7B-F8B-F9B-FAB-30B-8  Road to Zanzibar, DVD, Image © Universal Studios
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