Carl Reiner Movies

Carl Reiner knew he wanted to be an actor -- preferably a Shakespearean actor -- from the time he was wearing knee pants. Trained in New York's Works Progress Administration Dramatic Workshop, he spent the war years touring with Maurice Evans' G.I. Hamlet, appearing with another young hopeful, Howard Morris. After the war he accumulated scores of stock company and Broadway credits, then in 1948 made his television debut in the short-lived series Fashion Story. While starring in NBC's 54th Street Revue, he was hired as one of the regulars on Your Show of Shows, appearing on a weekly basis with Sid Caesar, Imogene Coca, and old pal Howie Morris. During the scripting sessions for Show of Shows, Reiner became friends with a bombastic staff writer named Mel Brooks, with whom he improvised a number of wild stream-of-consciousness comedy bits which would eventually crystallize as the classic "2000 Year Old Man" routines. An Emmy winner for his work on the various Sid Caesar programs, he entered films as a character actor in 1959. That same year, he wrote, produced, and starred in the pilot episode for a proposed series about a comedy writer named Rob Petrie, titled Head of the Family. The network executives liked the concept, but vetoed Reiner as the star; swallowing his pride, he retooled the property with another leading man, and that's how the Emmy-winning Dick Van Dyke Show was born. During the series' five-year run, Reiner made innumerable cameo appearances on the program, most memorably as Rob Petrie's mercurial TV-comedian boss Alan Brady. In 1967 he made his film directorial debut with Enter Laughing, an adaptation of his own semi-autobiographical 1958 novel (the book had already been transformed into a Broadway play with Alan Arkin as star). Reiner's later directing assignments included The Comic (1967), a bittersweet farce based on the lives of Stan Laurel, Harry Langdon, and Buster Keaton; the black comedy cult favorite Where's Poppa? (1970); the whimsical fantasy Oh, God (1977); and a popular series of Steve Martin vehicles, among them The Jerk (1978) and Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982). His film output decreased in number and quality in the l980s and 1990s, though critics enjoyed his offbeat 1989 working-class comedy Bert Rigby, You're a Fool and his 1997 Bette Midler starrer That Old Feeling. In 1995, he earned yet another Emmy award for his revival of the Alan Brady character on a memorable episode of TV's Mad About You. Carl Reiner is the father of directors Rob Reiner and Lucas Reiner; his wife Estelle has enjoyed a latter-day career as a night club singer and as a cameo performer in her son Rob's films (she's the lady who says, "I'll have what she's having!" in When Harry Met Sally). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
1966  
 
In keeping with producer Carl Reiner's edict, "Always leave 'em laughing," the final episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show (though not the final one to be shown) is one of the series' funniest outings. Assigned to write a cowboy sketch for his boss Alan Brady, Rob (Dick Van Dyke) dreams up an elaborate "High Noon" Western-spoof casting himself as a sheriff slated for a showdown with notorious outlaw "Big Bad" Brady (Reiner, of course). The show's entire cast joins in on the dream sequence, with Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) performing a spirited (and interminably repeated) rendition of "I Don't Care," Buddy (Morey Amsterdam) showing up as Rob's deputy, Sally (Rose Marie) appearing as the local saloon gal, and Richard Deacon, Jerry Paris, Larry Mathews, and Ann Morgan Guilbert likewise cavorting about in Old West costumes. The script contains more classic gags and one-liners than one can shake a stick at, and as the bonus, includes the only Dick Van Dyke Show sequence to be filmed out-of-doors." The Gunslinger" is everything a great series finale should be...even if it wasn't telecast as the series finale! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerRichard Deacon, (more)
1966  
 
After five long years, Rob (Dick Van Dyke) finally finishes his autobiography. As he prepares to submit the masterpiece to a publisher, the series' cast revels in selected chapters -- thereby cuing lengthy excerpts from such past Dick Van Dyke Show episodes as "Where Did I Come From?," "The Attempted Marriage," and the unforgettable "That's My Boy??." This final episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show (but not the final one filmed) comes full circle when Alan Brady (Carl Reiner) options Rob's book as a possible TV situation comedy! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerRichard Deacon, (more)
1966  
 
Fed up with their boss Alan Brady's tyrannical behavior, Rob (Dick Van Dyke), Sally (Rose Marie), and Buddy (Morey Amsterdam) capriciously dash off a script for the show festooned with insults directed at Alan. Of course, they've only done this to let off steam, and have no intention of submitting the script to their egotistical employer. Inevitably, however, the renegade script ends up on Alan's desk -- and subsequently finds its way to Alan's home, leading to a slapstick-filled nocturnal foray by a group of decidedly amateur burglars! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerRichard Deacon, (more)
1966  
 
It is hardly surprising that Rob's overbearing, egotistical boss Alan Brady (Carl Reiner) has commissioned a filmed documentary about a "typical" day in his life. Nor is it unusual that Alan wants to film a key scene from the documentary in the living room of Rob (Dick Van Dyke) and Laura (Mary Tyler Moore). But it is highly inconvenient -- and ultimately disastrous -- when Alan and his camera crew insist upon invading the Petrie home on the night that Rob and Laura are throwing an anniversary party for Jerry and Millie Helper (Jerry Paris, Ann Morgan Guilbert). Perennial dumb blonde Joyce Jameson figures prominently into the (literally) gut-wrenching climax of this episode. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerRichard Deacon, (more)
1966  
 
Rob (Dick Van Dyke) comes across a crumpled network memo ordering his boss Alan Brady (Carl Reiner) to fire one of his writers. Certain that his job is on the chopping block, Rob reluctantly violates the edicts of his contract by looking for an outside writing assignment. His search leads to a bizarre encounter with neurotic ventriloquist Claude Wilbur (Paul Winchell) and an abusive, insulting -- and extremely popular -- hand puppet named Jellybean. And the moral of this episode? "Alan Brady may be many things, but he's certainly not nice!" ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerPaul Winchell, (more)
1966  
 
Although he has grown accustomed to being insulted by his boss (and brother-in-law) Alan Brady (Carl Reiner), Mel Cooley (Richard Deacon) is nevertheless devastated when Alan loudly humiliates him in public. Disgusted by this spectacle, Rob (Dick Van Dyke) advises Mel to go into Alan's office and demand an apology. Emboldened, Mel acts upon Rob's advice -- and is promptly fired! This is the episode in which even Mel's longtime nemesis Buddy Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam) stands up for Mel's rights, casting a vote from "Mr. Jewish" against Alan "Captain Bligh" Brady. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerRichard Deacon, (more)
1966  
 
Francois, the magical mouse of France, entertains Alice on an adventure to meet the country's storybook characters as The Frowning Prince, Anatole and Madeline. ~ All Movie Guide

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1966  
 
Unfortunately, the comedy in this film is just about as crummy as its title. On the bright side, it does feature a number of veterans from popular TV sitcoms. It is set in a run-down diner where a bumbling short-order cook and a klutzy waitress work. They are so terrible at their jobs that they soon lose them. Next the two go to help a pal run her recently inherited bookstore. There they found trouble when a Russian spy mistakenly identifies the former cook as a defecting cosmonaut. Meanwhile, two would-be bank robbers are secretly sneaking 'round the bookstore trying to tunnel into the bank vault next door. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Morey AmsterdamRichard Deacon, (more)
1965  
 
Season five of The Dick Van Dyke Show opens with one of the series' best episodes -- and an Emmy Award-winner to boot. While in the audience of "The Johnny Patrick Show," Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) is coerced to join host Patrick (Dick Curtis) on-stage, even though she's been warned that Johnny specializes in getting his guests to make embarrassing statements. True to form, Patrick maneuvers Laura into revealing that Alan Brady (Carl Reiner), the comedian boss of her writer husband Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke), wears a toupee. The climax of this episode contains some of the funniest lines ever written for the show, beginning with Alan's melancholy farewell speech to a row of expensive hairpieces, and culminating with Laura's far-from-helpful reference to "needy bald people"! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerRichard Deacon, (more)
1965  
 
Add The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 05 to QueueAdd The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 05 to top of Queue
Although the ratings of The Dick Van Dyke Show had diminished since the series' all-time high during its third season, the show was still among CBS' most popular offerings -- and one of the network's most prestigious efforts, with four Emmy awards and two Golden Globes to its credit. Even so, star Dick Van Dyke and series creator Carl Reiner were both of the opinion that the series had been taken as far as it could go, and to keep it on the air any longer might tarnish its luster. Thus, by mutual consent, star and creator agreed that the fifth season of The Dick Van Dyke Show would be its last. Not that they intended to go out with a whimper; indeed the season five episodes include some of the best half-hours ever produced for any series anywhere. The season opener is the classic, Emmy-winning "Coast-to-Coast Big Mouth," in which Laura Petrie (Mary Tyler Moore), the wife of "The Alan Brady Show"'s head writer Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke), inadvertently informs the entire TV viewing public of America that the vainglorious Alan Brady (Carl Reiner) wears a toupee.

Subsequent superb episodes include "The Great Petrie Fortune," in which a "living will" left behind by Rob's Uncle Hezekiah (also played by Dick Van Dyke) yields an unexpected treasure; "Go Tell the Brids and Bees," wherein Rob and Laura's son, Richie (Larry Mathews), foments a mini-scandal by telling his school friends the facts of life -- which are nowhere near factual; "The Bottom of Mel Cooley's Heart," in which Alan Brady's long-suffering producer (and brother-in-law) Mel Cooley (Richard Deacon) finally works up the gumption to tell Alan off -- and gets fired for his troubles; "Dear Sally Rogers," a showcase for Rose Marie as Rob's coworker Sally, who gets more than she bargained for when she advertises for a husband on "The Stevie Parsons Show;" "Buddy Sorrell, Man and Boy," a superb blend of hilarity and pathos as comedy writer Buddy Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam) secretly prepares for his Bar Mitzvah, some thirty years late; and "Talk to the Snail," guest-starring Paul Winchell as an oddball ventriloquist to whom Rob goes for a job when he thinks he's been fired. Although the final episode to be telecast was the "clip show" "The Last Chapter," the last episode to be filmed was "The Gunslinger," an all-stops-out western spoof with an endless stream of quotable dialogue -- and the only Dick Van Dyke Show ever to feature an "exterior" filmed sequence. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Dick Van DykeMary Tyler Moore, (more)
1965  
 
Alan Brady (Carl Reiner) has signed on to star in the first comedy ever written by celebrated playwright Harper Worthington Yates (Strother Martin). During out-of-town tryouts, a nervous Alan decides that the play needs a lot more laughs, so he begs Rob (Dick Van Dyke) to join him for some last-minute rewriting. There's only one problem: no one is supposed to know what Rob is doing, so Alan has to improvise an elaborate -- and very hectic -- charade to "explain" Rob's sudden appearance. Listen for the audience's reaction to the line about famous play-doctor Dave Murrows, an obvious reference to real-life dramatist (and celebrated theatrical "fixer-upper") Abe Burrows. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerStrother Martin, (more)
1965  
 
In this classic episode, Rob (Dick Van Dyke) and Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) give their neighbor Millie (Ann Morgan Guilbert) the lowdown about their big weekend in New York, which was supposed to have involved a romantic getaway at a plush hotel and a fabulous night at a Broadway show. Unfortunately, the couple's plans were radically altered when, while taking a bath, Laura got her big toe stuck in the bathtub faucet! Legend has it that Mary Tyler Moore burst into tears when she read the script for this episode because it required her to be off-camera for most of the action; but when the show finally aired, she realized that it represented one of her finest half-hours. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ann Morgan GuilbertBernard Fox, (more)
1965  
 
During a magazine interview, Rob (Dick Van Dyke) recalls his first job interview with Alan Brady (Carl Reiner) -- which, quite frankly, he can barely remember at all. It seems that, just before the all-important interview, Rob, then a radio DJ, had participated in a stunt wherein he was obliged to broadcast nonstop for 100 hours. Naturally, this required him to go without sleep -- and by the time he presented himself to Alan Brady, Rob was, to put it mildly, a gibbering shell of his former self! This episode was originally slated to air on April 7, 1965. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerFred Clark, (more)
1965  
 
In the first episode of a two-part story, Dick Van Dyke's real-life brother Jerry Van Dyke returns as Rob Petrie's kid brother Stacey Petrie. Once again showing up at Rob and Laura's doorstep, Stacey startles the couple with the announcement that he's about to be married. There are only two problems: he's never gone out on a real date, and he hasn't even met his fiancée! Sally (Rose Marie) is enlisted to help Stacey in matters of the heart...with surprising results. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1965  
 
In the conclusion of a two-part story, Rob Petrie's younger brother Stacey (played by Dick Van Dyke's real-life brother Jerry Van Dyke) is facing two major crises. First, he hopes to make a go of the dingy coffee house that he's bought to promote his singing career. And second, he must gear up for his first meeting with his "fiancée" Julie Kinkaid (Jane Wald), with whom he has been corresponding for months -- signing his letters "James Garner!" ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1965  
 
Two bohemians come up with a get-rich-quick scheme that goes awray in this comedy scripted by Carl Reiner. Paul (Dick Van Dyke and Casey (James Garner) are two American expatriates living in Paris; Paul is an artist and Casey a writer. Both have been trying to make a career, but with little success; Paul's girlfriend Nikki (Angie Dickinson), who is still in America, believes in his work and pays his rent. But Paul has reached the end of his tether and wants to go back home; Casey is horrified at the prospect of losing a rent-free home, so he comes up with an idea to help Paul's career and make some money. Since works by dead artists tend to fetch higher price tags and command more interest than work by living painters, Paul will fake his death with Casey's help and they'll both clean up. The plan works at first, until Casey finds he's been accused of murdering Paul. Ethel Merman has a supporting role as a madam with a habit of bursting into song. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
James GarnerDick Van Dyke, (more)
1964  
 
Lee Philips guest stars as Drew Patton, the suave, swinging bachelor publisher of the classy girlie magazine "Emperor." Impressed by Rob's writing talents, Patton offers Rob (Dick Van Dyke) a permanent gig with his magazine. Rob, of course, is delighted at the prospect, which is more than can be said for his wife Laura (Mary Tyler Moore)! Listen for a neat inside joke involving a sexy female secretary named Sam (the role Mary Tyler Moore once played on the old TV series Richard Diamond, Private Detective). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Lee PhilipsTracy Butler, (more)
1964  
 
Hitherto seen from the back only, series creator Carl Reiner makes his first full-face (and credited) appearance as Alan Brady, the boss of comedy writer Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke). Hoping to persuade Alan to appear on a cultural TV show, Rob applies a bit of reverse psychology -- and seriously jeopardizes his job in the process. Coming to the rescue (or so she thinks) is Rob's neighbor Millie (Ann Morgan Guilbert), who inaugurates a one-woman letter writing campaign to keep Alan happy. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1964  
 
Rob (Dick Van Dyke) and Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) have always been proud of the fact that their respective parents have never been "intrusive" in-laws. All this changes when the elder Petries and the elder Meehans each buy a separate family cemetery plot -- and both Rob's and Laura's folks expect the couple to "share" their respective plots when the time comes. A huge family squabble erupts, whereupon Rob comes up with a brilliant solution (after first vetoing the notion of inventing a "longevity serum"). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
J. Pat O'MalleyIsabel Randolph, (more)
1964  
 
In a flashback to his Army days, Rob (Dick Van Dyke) recalls the problems encountered by Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) and himself when they attempted to go on their honeymoon. No sooner has the couple rented a "cozy" hideaway than the commanding officer of Camp Crowder, anxious to locate a possible thief, cancels all leaves! Will Rob be forced to go A.W.O.L. to spend time with Laura -- and will snoopy landlady Mrs. Campbell (the great Kathleen Freeman) end up tossing both Mr. and Mrs. Petrie out of her seedy motel? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kathleen FreemanPeter Hobbs, (more)
1964  
 
Is Jerry Helper (Jerry Paris) -- dentist, neighbor, best friend, loyal husband, and devoted father -- having an affair? That's the conclusion arrived at by Rob (Dick Van Dyke) and Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) when they spot Jerry at a restaurant, sitting at a table with a beautiful blonde who is decidedly not his wife Millie (Ann Morgan Guilbert). Once the comic byplay wherein Rob and Laura try to avoid being spotted themselves by Jerry is over, two problems remain: how can they learn the truth about the situation, and what can they possibly say to Millie? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jerry ParisAnn Morgan Guilbert, (more)
1964  
 
Rob (Dick Van Dyke) plans to devote an episode of "The Alan Brady Show" to a showcase of famous old radio comedians. The staff has no trouble lining up such venerable talent as Bert Gordon (the "Mad Russian" of The Eddie Cantor Show fame) and Arlene Harris (whose "Chatterbox" routines were a highlight of Al Pierce and His Gang). But when Rob approaches Edwin Carp (Richard Haydn), the tweedy "Fish Man" of many a classic radio variety series, Carp refuses to emerge from retirement -- and for a very strange reason. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Richard HaydnArlene Harris, (more)
1964  
 
Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) is mortified when a portrait of herself, painted many years earlier as a present to Rob (Dick Van Dyke), shows up at a local art gallery. In flashback, she recalls how she posed for the painting fully clothed -- but when the masterpiece was finished, there she was on canvas, standing with arms outstretched, naked as a jaybird! Series creator Carl Reiner appears as the perpetrator of "October Eve," eccentric Russian artist Serge Carpetna. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Carl ReinerAnn Morgan Guilbert, (more)
1964  
 
Add The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 04 to QueueAdd The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 04 to top of Queue
Having reached its peak popularity during its third season on the air, The Dick Van Dyke Show faltered a bit in the ratings during season four, dropping to seventh place in the overall ratings. This, however, had absolutely no effect on the excellent quality of the series' writing, nor the stellar performances of leading players Dick Van Dyke (as TV comedy writer Rob Petrie), Mary Tyler Moore (as Rob's wife, Laura), Larry Mathews (as the Petries' son, Ritchie), Rose Marie and Morey Amsterdam (as Rob's coworkers at "The Alan Brady Show," Sally Rogers and Buddy Sorrell). Among other highlights, this is the season in which series creator Carl Reiner finally appears full-face in the role of Rob Petrie's paranoid, dictatorial boss, comedian Alan Brady. This occurs in the episode "Baby Fat," which also features Strother Martin as a Tennessee Williams-like playwright.

The season gets off to its customary flying start with the episode "My Mother Can Beat Up My Father," in which petite Laura Petrie inadvertently humiliates her muscular husband Rob in public (twice) with her ju-jitsu skills. Other topnotch episodes include the wild and wooly horror spoof "The Ghost of A. Chantz;" "The Man From Emperor," in which Rob is offered a job by the publisher of a magazine that bears a very close resemblance to Playboy; "The Lady and the Babysitter," with Eddie Hodges as a moonstruck teenager who develops a crush on Laura; the two-part "4.5" and "The Alan Brady Show Goes to Jail," guest-starring Don Rickles as hilariously unrepentant petty crook Lyle Delp; another two-parter, "Stacey Petrie," with Dick Van Dyke's brother Jerry Van Dyke appropriately cast as Rob's brother Stacey; "Pink Pills and Purple Parents," a flashback episode in which Laura takes the wrong "nerve pills" just before meeting Rob's parents; "Brother, Can You Spare $2500," featuring Gene Baylos as a bum who holds a lost copy of "The Alan Brady Show"'s script for ransom; "The Redcoats are Coming," a lampoon of Beatlemania featuring rock stars Chad and Jeremy; and "Never Bathe on Saturday," the one in which Laura gets her toe stuck in the faucet of a hotel bathtub. (Initially, Mary Tyler Moore balked at appearing in this episode because she was off-screen for the most part, but was eventually convinced that the end result would be hilarious.) Season four of The Dick Van Dyke Show was capped by Dick Van Dyke's second Emmy Award win in a row. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Dick Van DykeMary Tyler Moore, (more)
1964  
 
It looks like the friendship between Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke) and Jerry Helper (Jerry Paris) has come to an end. In explaining the conflict to Laura (Mary Tyler Moore), Rob explains that he and Jerry nearly came to blows over a "fundamental difference in political ideologies." It certainly sounds a lot better than the truth, wherein the two neighbors had a set-to over the topic of crabgrass! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jerry ParisAnn Morgan Guilbert, (more)

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