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The Pink Panther Strikes Again

 
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The Pink Panther Strikes Again

 
  • Director: Blake Edwards
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Farce, Crime Comedy
  • Themes: Kidnapping, Police Corruption, Bumbling Cops
  • Main Cast: Peter Sellers, Herbert Lom, Colin Blakely, Leonard Rossiter, Lesley-Anne Down
  • Release Year: 1976
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 103 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

Most Inspector Clouseau fans regard The Pink Panther Strikes Again as the best of the clumsy Parisian detective's "comeback" films of the 1970s. Driven insane by the stupidities of Clouseau (Peter Sellers), ex-inspector Dreyfuss (Herbert Lom) transforms into a master criminal. Kidnapping the inventor of a death ray, Dreyfuss threatens to use the demon device indiscriminately unless Clouseau is offered as a "sacrifice." A hunted man, Clouseau is forced to adopt one transparent (but hilarious) disguise after another. He is rescued from being incinerated by Dreyfuss when Soviet spy Olga (Leslie Ann Down) falls in love with him and strives to protect him. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Filled with brilliant lunacy and over-the-top comedic flourishes, The Pink Panther Strikes Again delivers the absurd goods for which the series is known. Played even broader than its predecessors, Strikes Again finds Inspector Clouseau (Peter Sellers) in the super-spy role pitted against his incredibly evil nemesis Dreyfus (Herbert Lom. In one wacky moment after the next, Sellers throws subtlety out the window to match the film's exaggerated tone -- a tactic well-suited for delivering even more immediate laughs from the bumbling hero. The slo-mo kung fu scene is unbelievably funny, as are the moments in the interrogation scene, which border on Clouseau's best. As far as the supporting cast, Lom hams it up in his wide-eyed Bond villain role, while Lesley-Anne Down makes the screen sizzle every time her Russian minx character appears. With a cartoon-like bouncy feel to it, The Pink Panther Strikes Again is the perfect idiocy for the slapstick soul. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Burt Kwouk - Cato; Andre Maranne - Francois; Marne Maitland - Deputy Commissioner; Michael Robbins - Jarvis; Briony McRoberts - Margo Fassbender; Byron Kane - Secretary of State; Julie Andrews - Singing voice of Ainslie Jarvis; Geoffrey Bayldon - Dr. Duval; Robert Beatty - US Admiral; Harold Berens - Hotel Clerk; Phil Brown - Virginia Senator; Claudia Cardinale; Anthony Chinn - Chinese Assassin; John Clive - Chuck; Jackie Cooper - Repair Man; Dick Crockett - Gerald Ford; Joanna Dickens - Fat Lady; Hal Galili - Danny Salvo; Vanda Godsell - Mrs. Leverlilly; Fred Haggerty - Munich Hotel Doorman; Patrick Jordan - Detective; Murray Kash - Dr. Zelmo Flek; Chris Langham - Police Driver; David Niven; Dinny Powell - Marty, the Mugger; Terry Richards - Bruce, the Knife; Gordon Rollings - Inmate; Omar Sharif - Egyptian Assassin; Bob Sherman - C.I.A. Agent; Patsy Smart - Mrs. Japonica; Howard K. Smith - Himself; Graham Stark - Clerk; Jerry Stovin - Presidential Aide; Dudley Sutton - McLaren; Robert Wagner; Peter Brace - Kidnaper; Bill Cummings - Hindo Harry; Paul Maxwell - CIA Director; Joe Powell - Taxi Passenger; Kevin Scott - M.C; Eddie Stacey - West German Assassin; John Sullivan - Tournier; Richard Vernon - Dr. Hugo Fassbender; Fran Fullenwider - Fat Lady; Damaris Hayman - Fiona; James Warrior - Police Constable; George Leech - Mr. Stutterstut; Norman Mitchell - Mr. Bullock; Tony Sympson - Mr. Shork; Terry Plummer - 1st Kidnapper; Terry Yorke - Cairo Fred; Richard Bartlett - Young Man

Credit

John Siddall - Art Director, Richard Williams Studio - Animator, Tony Adams - Associate Producer, Richard Williams Studio - Credit Sequences, Tiny Nicholls - Costume Designer, Bridget Sellers - Costume Designer, Blake Edwards - Director, Alan Jones - Editor, Don Black - Composer (Music Score), Henry Mancini - Composer (Music Score), Harry Frampton - Makeup, Peter Mullins - Production Designer, Harry Waxman - Cinematographer, Blake Edwards - Producer, Fred Carter - Set Designer, Kit West - Special Effects, Peter Sutton - Sound/Sound Designer, Blake Edwards - Screenwriter, Frank Waldman - Screenwriter, Don Lusher - Musical Performer

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Wikipedia: The Pink Panther Strikes Again
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The Pink Panther Strikes Again

theatrical poster
Directed by Blake Edwards
Produced by Blake Edwards
Written by Blake Edwards
Frank Waldman
Starring Peter Sellers
Herbert Lom
Lesley-Anne Down
Music by Henry Mancini
Cinematography Harry Waxman
Editing by Alan Jones
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) 15 December 1976 (US)
22 December (UK)
Running time 103 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget $6,000,000 (est)
Gross revenue $33,833,201 (US)
$19,882,532 (rentals)
Preceded by The Return of the Pink Panther
Followed by Revenge of the Pink Panther

The Pink Panther Strikes Again is the fifth film in the Pink Panther series and picks up where The Return of the Pink Panther leaves off. Released in 1976, Strikes Again is the third entry to include the words "Pink Panther" in its title, despite the fact the story does not involve the Pink Panther diamond. Unused footage from the film was later included in Trail of the Pink Panther.


Contents

Plot

Clouseau (right) drives Dreyfus (left) insane once again.

At a psychiatric hospital, former Chief Inspector Charles Dreyfus (Herbert Lom) is largely recovered from the murderous insanity that saw him repeatedly attempt to kill the thorn in his side, Inspector Jacques Clouseau. He is about to be released but Clouseau (Peter Sellers), who is now Chief Inspector and has arrived to speak on Dreyfus's behalf, comes to visit and his clumsiness and proneness to accidents drive Dreyfus insane again.

Soon thereafter, Dreyfus escapes from the asylum, intent on killing Clouseau. His first attempt involves planting a bomb whilst Clouseau destructively duels with his manservant Cato (Burt Kwouk), who is under orders to keep Clouseau alert by randomly attacking him. The bomb merely destroys Clouseau's apartment whilst Clouseau himself is unharmed, largely because Clouseau has been distracted by an inflatable costume and a telephone call. Cato ends up in the hospital.

Dreyfus sets his sights higher. Using his knowledge of the underworld, he enlists the help of an army of vicious criminals, kidnaps nuclear physicist Professor Hugo Fassbender (Richard Vernon) and the Professor's daughter Margo (Briony McRoberts), forcing the professor to build a "doomsday weapon" in return for his daughter's freedom. Because Hugo Fassbender fears to have his daughter harmed, he agrees.

Clouseau travels to England to investigate Fassbender's disappearance, with typically chaotic results, as Scotland Yard Section Director Alec Drummond (Colin Blakely) and Superintendent Quinlan (Leonard Rossiter) painfully learn. Meanwhile Dreyfus broadcasts himself to the world to announce his ultimatum: destroy Clouseau or he will destroy mankind. Disintegrating the United Nations headquarters in New York City before the disbelieving eyes of the world, he blackmails the leaders of the world, including the President of the United States (a thinly veiled impersonation of Gerald Ford, advised by a similarly poorly camouflaged Henry Kissinger), into assassinating Clouseau.

Forced to take Dreyfus's threat seriously, several nations send assassins to kill Clouseau at the Oktoberfest in Germany. Many of the Nations, however, instruct their assassins to kill other assassins if necessary in order to win Dreyfus's favour and possibly get hold of the Doomsday Machine. This, combined with Clouseau's typical bumbling fashion, enables Clouseau to evade each assassination attempt just as it is about to happen, so that the assassins all kill each other instead. The assassins of twenty-six nations are killed in the attempt, so that the only survivors are the Egyptian (an uncredited cameo by Omar Sharif) and Soviet operatives. The Egyptian assassin, sneaking into Clouseau's hotel room, shoots a man he believes to be Clouseau (who is in fact one of Dreyfus's henchmen, who had taken it upon himself to kill Clouseau). The Russian operative, Olga Bariosova (Lesley-Anne Down), who has sneaked into Clouseau's room, seduces the Egyptian, similarly mistaking him for Clouseau. His passionate sexuality convinces her not to assassinate him; when the real Clouseau makes an appearance, he is surprised to discover a beautiful woman in his bed who confuses him further by declaring her undying passion for him, and by finding a dead man in his bath. A tattoo on the dead man, combined with Olga's dismissively revealed knowledge, reveals to Clouseau Dreyfus's location at a castle in Bavaria.

Dreyfus is elated at Clouseau's apparent demise, but his joy is soured by a bad case of toothache. Clouseau, who has arrived in the village near Dreyfus's castle and has unsuccessfully attempted to breach the castle, thwarted every time by a drawbridge that appears to be mocking him, eventually infiltrates Dreyfus's castle hideout disguised as a dentist, intoxicates Dreyfus with nitrous oxide, and pulls one of Dreyfus's healthy teeth. Realising the deception and laughing hysterically, Dreyfus orders Clouseau killed, but Clouseau escapes.

Enraged, Dreyfus means to seek vengeance on the world by destroying England; as he prepares for this, Clouseau, who has been thrown into the castle's barnyard, is literally catapulted onto Dreyfus's doomsday machine. Clouseau's weight redirects the disintegrator so that the beam hits Dreyfus (causing his feet to disappear) and Dreyfus's castle. As Dreyfus's henchmen, Fassbender, and his daughter, and eventually Clouseau himself escape the dissolving castle (Clouseau nearly thwarted by the drawbridge), Dreyfus himself plays "Tiptoe Through the Tulips" on the castle's pipe organ, laughing insanely and gradually disintegrating. The castle then disappears entirely, taking Dreyfus with it and destroying him once and for all (or so it seems).

Returning to Paris, Clouseau is reunited with Olga, who has dismissed Cato for the evening and intends on completing her seduction of Clouseau. This is interrupted first by Clouseau's apparent inability to remove his clothes without a struggle, and then by Cato, who chooses this time to once more follow his orders and attack Clouseau and Olga. The consequent struggle ends when all three are hurled by a reclining bed into the Seine. Immediately thereafter, a cartoon image of Clouseau emerges from the water, which has been tinted pink, and begins swimming, unaware that a gigantic version of the Pink Panther character is waiting below him with a sharp-toothed, open mouth (a reference to the film Jaws made obvious by the thematic music).

lobbycard set

Cast


Cast notes

  • Owing to Peter Sellers's heart condition, whenever possible he would have his stunt double Joe Dunne stand in for him. Because of director Blake Edwards's preference for shooting as if viewed from a proscenium, this would occur quite frequently.
  • Julie Andrews provided the singing voice for the female-impersonator "Ainsley Jarvis".[1] The scene in the night club when Jarvis sings are in many ways similar to scenes in Edwards's later film Victor/Victoria (1982), in which Andrews plays a woman pretending to be a man who is a female impersonator.
  • Graham Stark, longtime friend of Sellers, once again makes an appearance in the series, albeit in a small cameo role as the owner of a small German motel. Since his role as Hercule LaJoy in A Shot in the Dark, he has since appeared in small roles in every Pink Panther movie except Inspector Clouseau, in which Sellers did not play Clouseau.
  • Omar Sharif appears, uncredited, as the Egyptian assassin.
  • Tom Jones sang the Oscar-nominated song "Come To Me".
  • The role of Olga Bariosova, played by Lesley-Anne Down, was originally offered to Maud Adams.
  • Blake Edwards made a cameo appearance in the background of the night club scene.

Production

The Pink Panther Strikes Again was rushed into production owing to the success of The Return of the Pink Panther.[2] Blake Edwards had used one of two scripts that he and Frank Waldman had written for a proposed "Pink Panther" TV series as the basis for that film, and he used the other as the starting point for Strikes Again. As a result, it is the only Pink Panther movie which has a storyline that explicitly follows on from the previous film.

The film was in production from December 1975 to September 1976, with filming taking place from February to June 1976.[3] The relationship between Sellers and Blake Edwards, never very good, had seriously deteriorated by the time Strikes Again was filmed. Sellers was physically in bad shape, and Edwards says of the actor's mental state: "If you went to an asylum and you described the first inmate you saw, that's what Peter had become. He was certifiable."[2]

The character Dr. Fassbender is a rather blatant nod to one of Seller's earlier films What's New Pussycat? where Sellers played a character named Dr. Fritz Fassbender.[citation needed]

The original cut of the film ran for 124 minutes, but it was trimmed down to 103 minutes for theatrical release.[citation needed] Some of the footage was later used in Trail of the Pink Panther. Strikes Again was marketed with the tagline Why are the world's chief assassins after Inspector Clouseau? Why not? Everybody else is. Like its predecessor and subsequent sequel, the film was considered a box office success.

During the film's title sequence, there are references to television's Alfred Hitchcock Presents and the films Batman, King Kong, The Sound of Music (which starred Blake Edwards's wife, Julie Andrews), Dracula AD 1972, Singin' in the Rain, Steamboat Bill Jr., and Sweet Charity, putting the Pink Panther character and the animated persona of Inspector Clouseau into recognizable events from said movies. There is also a reference to Jaws (film) in the end-credits sequence. Richard Williams (later of Roger Rabbit fame) did the animated opening and closing sequences for the film instead of DePatie-Freleng Enterprises.

Awards

  • The film was nominated for a 1977 Golden Globe Award for "Best Motion Picture", and Peter Sellers was nominated for "Best Motion Picture Actor - Musical/Comedy".[4]

Notes

External links



 
 

 

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