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The Man with Bogart's Face (1980) Reviews

The Man with Bogart's Face (1980)
Member Rating:  
In The Man With Bogart's Face, an affectionate send-up of the Bogart detective films of the 1940s, Robert Sacchi plays a man who idolizes Humphrey Bogart so much he has his features altered to look exactly like his idol. He then opens up a detective agency under the name Sam Marlowe (an amalgam of the names of Bogart's characters from The Maltese Falcon and The Big Sleep). Sam hires the Duchess (Misty Rowe) as his secretary ("She looked like Marilyn Monroe and made about as much sense as Gracie Allen") and "Sam Marlowe, Private Eye" is in business. Sam gets a meager response until a shooting puts his picture in the paper and business starts to flourish. Particularly attracted to Marlowe's services are a collection of characters -- Gena (Michelle Phillips), an attractive Gene Tierney type; Commodore Anastas (Victor Buono), a Greek shipping tycoon and Sidney Greenstreet lookalike; and the mysterious Mr. Zebra (Herbert Lom doing a Peter Lorre imitation). They are all trying to find the famous Eyes of Alexander -- a priceless set of stones from a statue of Alexander the Great. Also on hand are old Hollywood pros George Raft, Yvonne DeCarlo and Mike Mazurki. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi

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Starring:
Robert SacchiFranco Nero, (more)
Director(s):
Robert Day
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG
Format(s):
DVD
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Average Ratings

(1 member review)  


Member Reviews


Ken B.

Labor of love from producer Fenaday, with great list of character actors in small roles and cameos. I saw it at Dallas' USA Film Festival, back when it was first released, where both Fenaday and his film were well received by the festival crowd. A truly special highlight for vintage film fans comes about a quarter of the way into the film, when Turner Classic Movies host, Robert Osborne, appears in speaking role as one reporter in small crowd of reporters throwing questions at the hero after one of his shootouts. Osborne was quite a handsome guy in his early days, and easy to spot here, with same familiar voice and prematurely gray hair. You have to take it for the tongue-in-cheek small production that it was, but if you give this film some non-critical time, you'll be rewarded with a pleasant experience. It did well enough at the boxoffice to generate a sequel, and I always thought it would end up as a tv series, but that never happened.

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    Member Reviews
     
    Ken B.

    Labor of love from producer Fenaday, with great list of character actors in small roles and cameos. I saw it at Dallas' USA Film Festival, back when it was first released, where both Fenaday and his film were well received by the festival crowd. A truly special highlight for vintage film fans comes about a quarter of the way into the film, when Turner Classic Movies host, Robert Osborne, appears in speaking role as one reporter in small crowd of reporters throwing questions at the hero after one of his shootouts. Osborne was quite a handsome guy in his early days, and easy to spot here, with same familiar voice and prematurely gray hair. You have to take it for the tongue-in-cheek small production that it was, but if you give this film some non-critical time, you'll be rewarded with a pleasant experience. It did well enough at the boxoffice to generate a sequel, and I always thought it would end up as a tv series, but that never happened.

    Yes   |   No

     
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