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film summary
Two bumbling private detectives become involved
in helping prize-fight contender Tommy Nelson who is
trying to clear his name from the charge of murdering
his manager. Tommy injects himself with an invisibility
serum in order to hide from the police. He then sets
Lou up as a fight contender in order to draw out the
crooked promoter. This culminates in the untrained Lou
having to fight his opponent in the ring while aided
by Tommys invisible punches.
Abbott and Costello had had great success with Abbott
and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948) wherein their
clowning was paired up against Universals in-house
monsters - Dracula, the Frankenstein monster and the
Wolf Man. The two idiots then made a return to Universals
classic monsters with this encounter with the Invisible
Man and would go on to meetings with Dr Jekyll and the
Mummy. However, while the title is accurate and Abbott
and Costello do indeed meet an Invisible Man, this is
the Invisible Man in name only - with the only connection
to H.G. Wells or the film version The Invisible Man
(1933) and any of its sequels being that Gavin Muirs
scientist possess the invisibility serum used by Griffin
in the original story.
The story is an odd mix that seems one part Abbott and
Costellos low-jinks, the other a more interesting
straight invisibile man story. What makes the film watchable
over and above the usual lowbrow numbskullery the two
engage in are the excellent invisibility effects. Here
we get to see the title character dressing and undressing,
eating spaghetti and shuffling cards. Particularly good
is the marvellously choreographed fight at the climax
where Lou must fight an opponent in the ring with his
fists and body being lifted by the invisible man. For
once the boys are left high and dry by the far more
interesting set pieces.
The other Abbott and Costello genre entries are:- Hold
That Ghost (1941), The Time of Their Lives (1946), Abbott
and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948), Jack and the
Beanstalk (1952), Abbott and Costello Go to Mars (1953),
Abbott and Costello Meet Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1953)
and Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy (1955).
At the end of Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein,
the Invisible Man, voiced by none other than Vincent
Price, introduces himself to the bumbling duo. Vincent
Price would not meet Abbott and Costello in their next
monster film, but the Invisible Man would. Abbott and
Costello Meet the Invisible Man is one of the comedy
duos greatest films, surpassed only by Abbott
and Costello Meet Frankenstein. The movie is also one
of the greatest films in Universals Invisible
Man series that began with The Invisible Man in
1933 and continued with The Invisible Man Returns, The
Invisible Woman, Invisible Agent, and The Invisible
Mans Revenge. This 1951 film was the last Invisible
Man film that Universal made.
The plot is very similar to the film The Invisible
Man Returns, a film that did feature Vincent Price as
the title character. Bud and Lou are two private detectives
that are hired by boxer Tommy Nelson (Arthur Franz)
to clear his name for a murder he didnt commit.
His fiancée Helen (Nancy Guild) is the niece
of a scientist (Gavin Muir) that was friends with Jack
Griffin; the original Invisible Man. Helens uncle
had preserved the Invisibility serum. Tommy injects
himself, ignoring the warnings that the serum can bring
about insanity. Bud, Lou, and the Invisible Man are
on the track of the mobsters that framed Tommy while
trying to stay clear of the police that are on Nelsons
track. Television legends Sheldon Leonard (producer
of "The Andy Griffith Show" and "The
Dick Van Dyke Show") and William Frawley (Fred
Mertz from "I Love Lucy") play the mob leader
and a police detective.
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein is only slightly
better that this one. The only reasons I consider the
earlier one better is that 1) it has Bela Lugosi, Lon
Chaney Jr., and Glen Strange in it playing their greatest
horror characters and 2) the actual horrifying
scenes in it are quite good. In the humor department
..Meet the Invisible Man surpasses ..Meet Frankenstein.
The gags are much better in the second film than in
the previous film. Much of the gags stem not from Abbott
and Costellos trademark verbal humor, but from
ingenious sight gags involving the Invisible protagonist.
The punching bag bit, the spaghetti dinner gag, and
the climatic fight scene are all priceless pieces of
comedy. This is more of a comedy; it hardly has any
horror elements. The only factor that keeps the film
in the realm of horror-comedy and not pure
comedy is Tommy Nelsons invisibility and his growing
insanity, but these are played for gags more than horror.
The special effects are among some of the best effects
of its time. In The Invisible Man we were told that
the Invisible Man could be seen in fog or smoke. Here
we are allowed to see the transparent pugilist through
steam leaking out of a radiator. The effect is very
impressive. When Nelson becomes visible again through
a blood transfusion with Lou, we see his veins slowly
becoming visible as they pump in the new blood. Gradually
his whole body becomes visible again. This effect is
one of the most impressive shots in all of Universals
monster films.
Bud Abbott and Lou Costello are at their best in this
film, but sadly it would be the last of their monster
comedies worth watching. Abbott and Costello Meet Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Abbott and Costello Meet the
Mummy rank among the worst comedies and monster films
that Universal ever made. Even if the final two films
stunk to high heaven, Bud and Lous place in horror
history is safe because of their first two monster films.
Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man is a film
for anyone interested in classic monsters or classic
comedy. If you liked their encounter with Frankenstein,
then by all means check out this one. When director
James Whale and screenwriter R.C. Sheriff made The Invisible
Man in 1933, they understood that the concept had room
for plenty of humor. Abbott and Costello bring even
more comedy to the concept without totally destroying
the concept created by H.G. Wells. Abbott and Costello
Meet the Invisible Man is one of the true gems of the
Universal monster library. It is a true classic that
is sometimes overshadowed by the greatness of Abbott
and Costello Meet Frankenstein. Check this out and see
one of the most underrated and entertaining of Universals
monster films.
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