Edward J. Montagne Jr. Movies

Edward J. Montagne Jr. had a directing and producing career sufficient for three men: He made short films in the 1940s and directed one of the finest realistic crime thrillers of that decade; he was the producer (and sometime director) of two of the most successful television comedy series of the 1950s and '60s; and he was the producer and director of a string of successful theatrical and made-for-television features during the late '60s and '70s. The movie business was part of Montagne's birthright -- his father, also named Edward J. Montagne (1882-1932), was associated with Thomas A. Edison's film company in the first decade of the 20th century and was still writing important scripts 20 years later, during the transition period from silents to talkies.

Edward J. Montagne Jr. was born in Brooklyn in 1912. Director Norman Taurog, who had entered the industry with help from the elder Montagne, brought the man's son into the business at the outset of the 1930s by recommending him for a job at Paramount Pictures. Montagne Jr. started as a gopher and moved up to production assistant and later assistant director and second-unit director. Along the way, he got to know such luminaries as W.C. Fields and Jack Oakie, and worked in various capacities on movies such as It's a Gift (which he says was unique in its time for using a three-camera setup) and Million Dollar Legs. He later passed through the organizations of independent producers Edward Small, Walter Wanger, and Hal Roach. His earliest official credits were as an assistant director on movies such as The Villain Still Pursued Her (1940), Second Chorus (1940), and Fiesta (1941, credited in those years as Eddie Montagne).

Montagne was drafted in 1942 and served in the army as a combat photographer in the European Theater of Operations -- among other events, he was the photographer on the scene in Milan when Mussolini was strung up. After leaving the service in 1946, Montagne joined the documentary unit at RKO-Pathe and made a handful of nonfiction short films, then rejoined Hal Roach very briefly and returned to RKO-Pathe in New York. In 1949, Montagne began a five-year run as the director of a television series called Man Against Crime, starring Ralph Bellamy, which was done live, 52 shows a year, for its first three seasons. (Bellamy was appearing on Broadway at the time and would do the television show from a studio located in Grand Central Station, then jump into a waiting patrol car and be taken under siren to the theater for the night's performance; partway into the run of the show, the producers brought Robert Preston in as the Bellamy character's brother, to give him a few weeks' vacation.)

Man Against Crime was shot throughout the streets of New York, and was so successful and so popular with the producers and with the New York City Police Department that it led to Montagne's first major feature film, The Tattooed Stranger (1950). A murder mystery and manhunt shot entirely on-location in New York, it followed a trail blazed by Jules Dassin in The Naked City, but carried that movie's verisimilitude one step further, staying away from actors who even looked or sounded like Hollywood performers. The Tattooed Stranger was not only one of the grittier movies of its era in its look, but one of the more violent crime dramas of its time, elements that evidently helped turn it into an art-house favorite in France and possibly a serious influence on various New Wave directors in the making.

Montagne's next big success was, again, on the small screen, when he took over as production manager and then producer for the last four seasons of Phil Silvers' hit military sitcom, Sgt. Bilko (aka You'll Never Get Rich). He did two pilots with Silvers that didn't sell after that series left the air, and joined Universal Pictures' television unit in the early '60s, by which time he was pegged as a comedy expert. It was there that, at the suggestion of executive Sam Northcross, he was asked to take a look at a failed pilot for an hour-long World War II drama about a PT boat crew in the Pacific, called "Seven Against the Sea." He re-thought it as a comedy, eliminated one role and wrote in another for an antagonist, and he sought out the services of a young local television comic, then called Tom Conway, working in Chagrin Falls. Montagne got him signed up (and renamed Tim Conway, in deference to the British-born actor Tom Conway, long a Screen Actors Guild member), and McHale's Navy -- starring Ernest Borgnine, Joe Flynn, and Tim Conway -- was born. It was also Montagne's idea to add the character of Fuji (played by Yoshio Yoda), a surrendered Japanese sailor who was only too happy to serve the PT boat crew as their valet. This character was based on Montagne's memories of his service in Italy during the war, where his unit had surrendered Italian ex-soldiers on hand, not free but not quite prisoners, who did a lot of the heavy work required. (Montagne recalled in 2003 that years later, long after the series was over, Yoda called him from Japan and asked if he could name his just-born son after him, a rare honor in a business where actors and producers seldom see eye to eye.)

McHale's Navy ended up running four seasons and would have had a fifth if only MCA chairman Lew Wasserman hadn't hesitated to switch to color shooting, fearing that the first four seasons (done in black-and-white) would be dead in syndication if they did. The show was so popular during its run that Wasserman insisted that Montagne make a movie, McHale's Navy (1964), out of the series. The resulting script, about the PT boat's crew finding a champion Australian race horse on a Pacific island after the ship it was on is sunk, was based on a true story that Montagne remembered. That movie was so popular (perhaps the only successful feature film ever spun out of a television sitcom that was still on the air, defying the established wisdom that audiences wouldn't pay to see entertainment that they could get for free at home) that a second movie, McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force (1965), followed in short order. For that film, Montagne was left without the services of Ernest Borgnine, over a money edict from the studio. Joe Flynn was getting more money by then, and Wasserman declared that they could only afford to have two of show's three stars in the film; Montagne opted for Conway and Flynn, in what proved to be a very funny military satire, highlighted by some outrageous sight gags.

During the late '60s, Montagne was responsible for producing a string of successful feature films starring Don Knotts, most notably the poignant and psychologically complex comedy The Reluctant Astronaut (1967, which he also directed) and the Western spoof The Shakiest Gun in the West (1968), the latter a very effective remake of The Paleface starring Knotts and Barbara Rhoades. Montagne's other credits included the detective thriller P.J. (1968) and the Andy Griffith-starring feature Angel in My Pocket (1969). He was later the producer of such series as Quincy and Delta House, and produced (and wrote the original story for) the made-for-television feature Short Walk to Daylight, which was the basis for Rob Cohen's 1996 feature film Daylight. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1981  
 
This early-'80s made-for-TV movie includes most of the cast of the original Munsters TV series. An evil scientist creates android replicas of the Munster family in order to frame them for the robbery of an art-gallery. ~ John Bush, All Movie Guide

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1980  
 
Taking over for Gary Cooper, Lee Majors stars as Marshal Will Kane in this made-for-TV movie set a year after the original High Noon ends. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide

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1978  
PG  
In this broad, occasionally slapstick comedy, Dewey and Wallace (Tim Conway and Chuck McCann) are small-town lawmen who are trying to find out where some thieves have hidden their money. With the help of the governor of their state, they are able to enter the prison where the thieves are incarcerated, posing as convicted criminals in the hopes of getting the information from them. When the governor dies without informing anyone of the ruse, they are trapped in prison, as no one else knows their true identity. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Tim ConwayChuck McCann, (more)
1978  
 
Originally made for television and based on true events from 1972, the story concerns an airline crash in the Everglades and the courageous adventures of the 73 survivors. ~ John Bush, All Movie Guide

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1977  
 
In this TV movie based upon the Marvel superhero, college student Peter Parker suffers a spider bite which turns him into the amazing webbed crime fighter. The plot finds a no-good scientist using mind power techniques in an attempt to pocket big bucks by extorting world leaders. this Swackhamer-produced tale presents some excellent special effects portraying the wall climbing Spider-Man. This was also the pilot for the Spider-Man TV series that would follow. ~ All Movie Guide

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1976  
 
Francis Gary Powers: The True Story of the U-2 Spy is a TV dramatization of the notorious Cold War incident of 1960. The story is told from the point of view of Powers (Lee Majors), an American pilot who was shot down over Russia while taking photographs on behalf of the CIA. The event occurs just before a crucial summit meeting between American President Dwight D. Eisenhower (James Flavin) and Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev (Thayer David). Eisenhower tries to cover up the incident, allowing Khrushchev to make propagandistic hay of the whole affair. Robert E. Thompson's teleplay tends to depict the Americans as jerks, and the Russians as essentially good guys; even Powers' Soviet interrogator, portrayed by Nehemiah Persoff, comes off comparatively sympathetic. Also in the cast are Noah Beery as Powers' father and Lew Ayres as Allen Dulles. Francis Gary Powers: The True Story of the U-2 Spy was originally telecast September 29, 1976. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1976  
 
Comedian Freddie Prinze appeared in his only TV movie (in fact, his only movie of any kind) when he starred in The Million Dollar Rip-Off. Prinze plays an ex-convict who happens to be an electronics genius. He woos four toothsome young ladies and convinces them to participate in robbing the payroll of the Chicago Transit Authority. The girls have a little conference among themselves, decide they're all being taken by Freddie, and vow to bollix up the job. Million Dollar Rip-Off was written by character actors William Devane and John Pleshette, both of whom may have harbored hopes of starring in the project themselves. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1974  
 
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In this made-for-television disaster film, seven officer workers find themselves trapped in a towering inferno after a drunken janitor accidently torches the high-rise in which they work. Believing that they will surely die, the seven begin sharing their deepest secrets. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
John ForsytheAnjanette Comer, (more)
1974  
 
The made-for-TV Hurricane was based on William C. Anderson's novel Hurricane Hunters, which, in turn, was inspired by events surrounding Hurricane Camille in 1969. The scene is Cassler, MS, where a pair of hurricane chasers, patrol-plane pilot Major Stoddard (Martin Milner) and seafarer Paul Damon (Larry Hagman) do their best to rescue the citizens of the community from a devastating storm. Other key characters include: feminist TV weatherperson Lee Jackson (Michael Learned); old-fashioned (but shrewd) meteorologist Dr. McCutcheon (Will Geer); Damon's imperiled wife, Louise (Jessica Walter); and oblivious Bert Pearson (Frank Sutton in his final movie role). Hurricane originally aired September 10, 1974, as the first installment of a brand-new ABC Movie of the Week season. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1972  
 
A Short Walk to Daylight was one of the first TV movies to exploit the popularity of the theatrical feature The Poseidon Adventure (72). Eight people are trapped in a New York subway when an Earthquake rocks the surface. In darkness, the all-TV cast struggles to make its way to the upperworld. The tie-in with Poseidon was solidified by the print ads for this film, which showed the cast members sloshing about in a flooded subway tunnel. A Short Walk to Daylight was partially filmed on location in the Big Apple. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1971  
 
The first of two efforts by Universal to launch an Ellery Queen TV series in the 1970s, Don't Look Behind You stars Peter Lawford as intellectual private eye Ellery Queen. Based on the novel Cat of Many Tales, the film finds Queen investigating a series of murders. The male victims were strangled with blue cords, the females with pink ones. In addition, the killer is working his (or her) way down the age scale, knocking off older people first. E.G. Marshall and Stefanie Powers are among the special guest suspects, while Harry Morgan is on hand as Ellery's police-inspector father. The best scene, involving a flooded apartment house, has very little to do with the mystery at hand. Originally telecast November 11, 1971 (after several months on the shelf), Ellery Queen: Don't Look Behind You failed to yield a weekly series; a 1975 "Ellery Queen" pilot film starring Jim Hutton was, however, more successful. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1971  
 
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In this comedy, a bungling bookkeeper's assistant works in the Dalton city hall and finds himself framed for embezzling by his corrupt superiors. A sweet young woman helps him clear his name. He is also assisted by Leo the computer. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1969  
R  
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In this uneven comedy, Abner (Don Knotts) is the editor of a bird-watching magazine who is the victim of a hostile corporate takeover by Osborn Tremaine (Edmond O'Brien). When Abner returns from a bird-watching excursion to Brazil, he finds his publication has been purchased for the fourth-class mailing permit. Osborn turns the publication into a girlie magazine and puts his wife Elanor (Maureen Arthur) on the front cover. Still listed as an editor, Abner becomes The Love God as the public perceives him as a Hugh Hefner-like character, epitomizing the life of a swinging bachelor playboy. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Don KnottsAnne Francis, (more)
1968  
 
Minister Sam (Andy Griffith) and his wife Mary Elizabeth (Lee Meriweather) move to a Kansas town divided by political concerns that stall the town's progress. Will Sinclair (Henry Jones) and Alex Gresham (Edgar Buchanan) have allowed a long-standing family argument to impede the progress of the small rural community. Sam must contend with his mother-in-law (Kay Medford) and his wild brother-in-law Bubba (Jerry Van Dyke) when Bubba sets up a moonshine still in the church basement with the help of his friend Calvin (Parker Fennelly). Art Shields (Gary Collins) is the ambitious young country lawyer who runs for mayor in hopes of bringing peace to the families, and he works for the best interests of the divided community. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Andy GriffithJerry Van Dyke, (more)
1968  
 
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This hilarious oater finds Jesse Heywood (Don Knotts) as a Philadelphia dentist who leaves his home to open a new practice on the western frontier. The hapless dentist is saved by the expert gun handling of Penny (Barbara Rhoades), a reformed bandit trying to earn a pardon by intercepting gun shipments to hostile Indians. After several more situations in which Penny saves the nervous newcomer, Jesse believes he has exceptional firearms prowess and believes himself to be a hero. Comedy ensues when the jumpy Jesse faces a bevy of bad men and nervously clutches a six shooter with a very unsteady hand. Penny has to help the pseudo-hero out of even more trouble before they can ride off together into the sunset. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Don KnottsBarbara Rhoades, (more)
1968  
 
In this detective drama, a struggling private detective is hired to protect a millionaire's mistress. After repeated attempts on her life, the PI moves her, the tycoon, and his family to the Bahamas. There, another attempt is made to kill the mistress, but this time the detective kills the murderer -- who turns out to be the tycoon's business partner. The detective is incarcerated for his crime, but is then released. Upon his parole he discovers that the family his abandoned him and that he was framed for the death. He eventually confronts the conspirators who end up killing each other during a struggle in their offices. This frees the detective who takes off to look for better assignments. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
George PeppardRaymond Burr, (more)
1968  
 
After registering well in supporting roles in such Bob Hope farces as Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number and Eight on the Lam, raucous comedienne Phyllis Diller attempted to carry a picture all by herself. Alas, Did You Hear the One About the Travelling Saleslady? proved to be as bad as its title. Borrowing elements previously utilized in Joan Davis' Travelling Saleswoman (1950) and the Ginger Rogers-Carol Channing vehicle The First Travelling Saleslady (1956), the film casts Diller as a player-piano saleslady, dispatched to the Wild West. TV-sitcom perennials Bob Denver and Joe Flynn offer their usual overplayed support; at times they're funnier than Diller, though that's not saying much. The film's highlight is a cattle stampede, which should give you some idea. Did You Hear the One... was scripted by John Fenton Murray, soon to be a mainstay of such Sid & Marty Krofft kiddie fare as The Bugaloos and Lidsville; compared to the Diller film, the Krofft stuff was a step upward. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Phyllis DillerJoe Flynn, (more)
1967  
 
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Roy Fleming (Don Knotts) is signed on to the space program at NASA by his father Buck (Arthur O'Connell), a gung-ho former World War I vet who is trying to make something out of his son. Roy becomes a janitor who is afraid of heights and mistaken for an astronaut through a series of comedic mishaps. (Jesse White) plays Roy's boss Donelli, with (Leslie Nielsen) as space hero Major Gifford. Knotts uses his patented brand of nervousness to perfection in this lighthearted situation comedy. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Don KnottsLeslie Nielsen, (more)
1966  
 
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Luther Heggs (Don Knotts) is a typesetter at a newspaper who longs for a chance to be a reporter. Editor Beckett (Dick Sargent) gives Luther his big break and assigns him to spend the night in a house generally considered to be haunted. The situation allows a broad canvas for Knotts to react to sight gags with the special brand of eye-popping nervousness that made him a star. Former Playboy Bunny Joan Staley plays the pretty girlfriend of star reporter Ollie Skip Homeier. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Don KnottsJoan Staley, (more)
1965  
 
In this comedy, another entry in the slapstick series based on a popular TV show, meek little Ensign Parker finds himself getting promoted for no apparent reason. He gets himself rip-roarin' drunk one night and finds himself wearing an Air Force uniform and mistaken for a big-wig. He continues to mess up, but to no avail, no matter what he does, he continues to get promoted. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Joe FlynnTim Conway, (more)
1964  
 
Captain Wallace Binghamton (Joe FLynn), St. Comdr. Quinton McHale (Ernest Borgnine) and Ensign Charles Parker (Tim Conway) brought their wacky antics to the big screen for this feature, spawned from the popular '60 television program of the same name. McHale and his crew get involved in a betting scam aboard their PT boat. Soon, they find themselves owning money to a group of Marines. In order to pay off their debts, they plan a sure-fire way of making money--involving the transportation of a disguised racehorse on board their boat. ~ Kristie Hassen, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ernest BorgnineJoe Flynn, (more)
1951  
 
Adapted by Samuel W. Taylor from his own novel, The Man with My Face is an acting tour de force for Barry Nelson. The star is cast as an accountant who returns home late one evening, only to discover that a look-alike has taken his place. So persuasive is the phony man that the real one is regarded as an impostor. Even his wife (Lynn Ailey) and business partner (John Harvey) seem to have fallen for the look-alike's subterfuge. Accused of bank robbery, the poor man must rely on his ex-sweetheart Mary (Carole Mathews) and her brother Walt (Jack Warden in his film debut) to help him clear himself and expose his "evil twin." The climax borrows a gimmick from an earlier "doppelganger" melodrama, The Black Room (1935). Man with My Face was filmed on location in Puerto Rico. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Barry NelsonLynn Ainley, (more)
1950  
 
A man walking his dog in New York's Central Park finds a young woman dead in a car, killed with a shotgun. Veteran Lt. Corrigan (Walter Kinsella) is assigned the case along with Detective Tobin (John Miles), a "college boy" in Corrigan's eyes, newly promoted out of the crime lab. The police can't even figure out who the woman was; her fingerprints aren't on file anywhere, she fits no missing persons description, and the only identifying mark of any significance is a small anchor-and-globe tattoo -- and it is obliterated by an alcoholic derelict who was apparently hired to enter the morgue to do the job and is killed for his trouble (but not before the coroner got a photograph of it). Corrigan and Tobin find the artist who did the tattoo, but that only raises more questions -- especially after he's bludgeoned to death. As Corrigan says, looking over the dead woman's mail, "She wasn't a girl, she was a roll call" -- the victim was a waitress and a professional grifter, specializing in marrying merchant sailors, marines, and anyone else in high-risk jobs during the war, and collecting their allotment checks and their insurance when they died. It seems like someone wanted her dead, but every man she was married to is either dead or accounted for at sea. Working closely with a botanist (Patricia White), Tobin spends his time tracking down one clue, a single blade of a species of grass found in some rare patches in the Bronx; that clue, coupled with unusual properties in the grains of sand found near the murder scene, lead the detective to within a few feet of the killer, who is equally dogged about covering his trail and killing anyone who gets in his way. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
John MilesPatricia White, (more)
1949  
 
Project X was one of a cycle of anti-Red films produced in the late 1940s. Keith Andes plays an ex-Communist who is strongarmed into cooperating with the Feds. Pretending to become a "comrade" again, Andes rejoins the local Communist cell. Moving about freely, he is able to track down a gang of spies who are smuggling atomic secrets. Filmed on location in New York, Project X has the surface "feel" of a documentary, though the dialogue is strictly from the funny papers. Keep an eye out for a very young Jack Lord. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Keith AndesJack Lord, (more)

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