Al Stewart and Wilbert are magicians doing a stage act when they run into Wilbert's cousin, Dorothy McCoy. They find out that Wilbert's grandfather, Squeeze-box McCoy, had treasure hidden in the hills of Kentucky, which they go to find.
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Reviews
Don't listen to the Hype. It's awful
Simple and well acted, it has tension enough to knot the stomach.
It was OK. I don't see why everyone loves it so much. It wasn't very smart or deep or well-directed.
The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.
With its 5 hillbilly songs sung by Dorothy Shay, this is definitely a musical comedy in the mold of "Buck Privates", rather than a straight comedy. Dorothy made an early career out of singing hillbilly songs in urban settings. This was her only movie, where she held her own as an actress. True, about every stereotypical aspect of Appalachian mountain folk is played up. I think that's good for a comedy about these people. In contrast to most reviewers, I found this adequately humorous for a A&C comedy, especially for kids, as usual. I do agree that about 3 songs, rather than 5, would have been better. I did find the lyrics unusually good.The boys begin as an inept magic show, following Dorothy's singing. Dorothy was raised as a backwoods McCoy, and figures out that Lou's grandfather was 'Squeeze-box' McCoy, who left a fortune in gold in a secret place. She suggests she accompany A&C to their community and try to find out more information about where this treasure might be found. Lou puts on his skunkskin cap and the 3 arrive at the family settlement. Turns out the McCoys sometimes have arguments or physical contests with the neighbor Winfields.At the carnival, Lou gets a facefull of blackberry pie, then a facefull of mustard that squirted out of a hotdog bun. He finds out that Matt, a 14y.o. girl, often treated like a boy, has a crush on him.The crazy McCoys choose Lou to represent them at the annual turkey shoot, Lou never having fired a gun. Matt fires from behind a tree next to Lou at the same time he fires. Her multiple shots hit the target, severing the tree and causing it to catch fire. Lou's declared the winner: the first time in 30 years a McCoy has outshot a Winfield. Granny doesn't take kindly to people referring to her as 'an old lady'. She takes out her revolver and shoots the pipe out of their mouth or whatever. This becomes a running gag.Granny says it's time for Lou to marry. He chooses Dorothy, but she prefers Clark Winfield. Besides, Granny says he doesn't get to choose a wife. The family as a whole chooses one for him. They chose Matt, who is agreeable. But Lou doesn't think she is appropriate. The boys do their routine where Abbott supposes there is a 40y.o. man in love with a 10y.o. girl, Should he wait until she's 30 and he's 60 before marrying her? He'd only be twice her age then, etc.. This routine was previously done in "Buck Privates". Granny suggests Lou go to see reclusive Aunt Huddy(Margaret Hamilton) about making up a love potion to give to Dorothy to make her change her mind about Lou. Huddy looks like a witchy old hag, rather similar to Margaret's getup for "The Wizard of Oz". She makes a voodoo doll in the likeness of Lou, and he reciprocates. They stab the doll in the derriere, and feel it in their buttocks. Lou finds Huddy's magic broom, which even has a windshield wiper on it! He gets on , presses one area, and zooms out the window into a tree. Meanwhile, Huddy does make the desired potion. Lou tricks Dorothy into taking some, and she immediately gets romantic with Lou. Unfortunately, it soon wears off. Lou takes some and gets romantic with Matt, then Matt takes some and gets romantic with Abbott! Eventually, a double wedding is arranged, with Dorothy marrying Clark, and Matt marrying Lou. However, there is still some lingering uncertainty about the desired pairings. A Winfield discovers that a Winfield is about to marry a McCoy, and gets riled up. In the commotion, the buggy Dorothy and Clark are in takes off with them still unmarried. Devil Dan Winfield goes after the boys. Lou says if he kills them he will get 'the chair'. Just then, Matt hits him over the head and back with a chair. A bullet knocks a hole in the jug of potion above Devil Dan's head, and drips on his face. He tastes some of it and gets friendly with Lou. Devil Dan agrees to take them to the mine where Matt says the treasure is hidden, having overheard granny. Some other Winfields show up at the mine, so the boys get on one of the counterbalanced lifts and descend. The Winfields get on the other lift, and the boys go up while they go down. The boys put some heavy rocks on their lift, then tell the Winfields to get off their lift. As a result, they rocket down with such force that they go through the bottom of the floor, and guess what they find. I will let you see the last bit.There, doesn't it sound like much more than just the witch scene, which many reviewers overemphasized?
Comin' Round the Mountain (1951) ** (out of 4)Wilbert Smith (Lou Costello) meets a female country singer (Dorothy Shay) and soon realizes that he's a long lost relative to a famous redneck in Kentucky who rumor has it has a buried treasure. Their agent Al Stewart (Bud Abbott) decides they should all go back to the sticks to get the money but soon a bloody rivalry starts back up.Abbott and Costello made several Western spoofs including the highly entertaining THE WISFUL WIDOW OF WAGON GAP but sadly this film isn't in the same league and on the whole it ranks near the bottom of the duo's films. That's not to say this is an awful movie because it isn't. There are several funny moments scattered throughout the film but there's just not enough to keep it fully entertaining and the musical numbers are all rather bland.In fact, why on Earth would you start your movie off with Shay singing? This was an Abbott and Costello movie yet they open with Shay and then we get the duo doing a small gag before going back to the singer. I'm really not sure if they were just trying to force Shay into some sort of stardom but her songs here are rather lame and, to be honest, the skit from the boys isn't all that funny. There are a few funny moments scattered throughout but the highlight is the math game of a 40-year-old man falling in love with a 10-year-old girl and needing her age to catch up with his.Both Abbott and Costello are in good form here but I think even they realized that the material wasn't all that great. Shay delivers a decent performance but the songs are forgettable. Joe Sawyer adds some nice support as does Glenn Strange and Margaret Hamilton steals the film in her sequence as a witch. Her and Costello's voodoo match being another highlight of the picture. COMIN' ROUND THE MOUNTAIN isn't one of the boy's best pictures but fans will still find a little humor in it.
The feud is on between the Wingfields and the McCoys when Bud Abbott discovers his clients, hopeless magician Lou Costello and the Park Avenue hillbilly Dorothy Shay are both McCoys and Costello's inherited concertina holds the secret to a treasure of hidden gold. So off they go to the Appalachins where Costello's arrival sets off the feud that had pretty much died down.Bud and Lou get themselves a good supporting cast with a group of players used to rustic roles. I'm wondering how the folks at Universal missed getting Judy Canova and Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride in this film. Lou's best scene involves him haggling with a hag played by Margaret Hamilton in her wicked witch makeup over some love potion with each making a voodoo doll of the other to poke holes in.Dorothy Shay was just about at the end of her peak of popularity which started post World War II. She was a singer with a warm contralto who decided to play up her southern roots. Dorothy made a whole lot of hillbilly ditties popular back in those days and her big hit song, Feudin' a Fussin' and a Fightin' was still selling good in 1951 when Comin' Round the Mountain came out. I have it and also a vinyl record of a Bing Crosby radio show where she sang that song as a trio number with herself, Bing, and Groucho Marx. She did what very few did in Abbott and Costello pictures, hold her own with the boys and not get lost in the supporting cast.It's not the best of their films, but still enjoyable and just wait till you see the treasure that they do find.
In my rewatching of the Abbott and Costello series that I loved in my youth, this is by far the worst of the series that I have rewatched. The problem is not in the subject material. The problem is in the script, the execution and the performances. Abbott and Costello have never been more bland and the songs from the Manhatten Hillbilly take up seemingly half of the movie's length. The song about a half an hour in goes on forever. The old granny is fun but isn't allowed to do enough. The "courtship" between Costello and the 14 year old hillbilly girl is ghoulish. Bud Abbott is non-existent and the hillbilly clans do nothing whatsoever. There are a few chuckles and nothing more. The opener and the conclusion are awful. On the bright side, Glenn Strange is great here and Costello's duel with the witch is funny. Costello's "christening" is a gut buster. But that's it. Has a little of the same flavor as The Wistful Widow of Wagon Gap but isn't in the same league, much less the same ballpark.