अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंWhen the owner of a wax museum attempts to frame Herman and Grandpa Munster for pulling a jewelry heist, they must both prove their innocence and find out who the true thieves are.When the owner of a wax museum attempts to frame Herman and Grandpa Munster for pulling a jewelry heist, they must both prove their innocence and find out who the true thieves are.When the owner of a wax museum attempts to frame Herman and Grandpa Munster for pulling a jewelry heist, they must both prove their innocence and find out who the true thieves are.
- Lily Munster
- (as Yvonne DeCarlo)
- Police Chief Harry Boyle
- (as Herbert Voland)
- Patrolman Pete
- (as Sandy-Alexander Champion)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Director Don Weis offers a cheap, cheerful unintentionally creepy NBC TV movie, mainly due to the Phantom of the Opera (Bob Hastings) and blank the wax museum Munsters. The Addams Family composer Vic Mizzy offers a fitting throwback score. It's feels like a Munsters extended episode mixed with a hint of The West World TV pilot. While the series was disappointingly filmed in black and white, The Munsters (1964) pilot episode and Munster, Go Home! (1966) was filmed in colour. This thankfully was also filmed in standard colour in 1981.
Veteran Weis' staging is clunky at times, possibly due to budget restraints. The Munsters' Revenge writers Arthur Alsberg and Don Nelson's jokes, setups and gags are hit an miss, some are on the money and offer a few chuckles mainly from Lewis and Gwynne. It's fitting that they've included some additional classic horror characters including the likes of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Igor, The Phantom of the Opera, The Wolf Man and Creature from the Black Lagoon.
Thanks to the original actors, namely the lovable Fred Gwynne as Herman Munster, Yvonne De Carlo (Lily Munster) and Al Lewis as Grandpa Dracula, it's a joy. Jo McDonnell is likeable enough as Marilyn Munster and K. C. Martel emulates Eddie Munster. American comic and actor Sid Caesar does his best with the script.
Despite The Munsters' Revenge short comings it's more enjoyable than the Munsters Today (1988) and heartwarming to see some of the cast reprise their roles.
For starters, the script is downright awful: A mad doctor (Sid Caesar - I'll deal with him later) has an army of monster robots, two of which resemble Herman and Grandpa (Al Lewis, also reprising his part). Sending these automatons out on random crime sprees, it isn't very long before they're mistaken for the real Herman and Grandpa Munster -- and our arrested heroes have to spend the rest of the movie convincing everyone that they're innocent, while trying to foil the doctor's plans.
Fred Gwynne and Al Lewis get the most screen time, which is a small solace, as their old jams together are the only thing worth staying tuned for. What very little satisfaction is squeezed from this revival is due to them. Just the same, they're visibly older and slower, and just don't seem to be as vital as they were on the show. This is certainly understandable, but what's not acceptable is that the jokes are terrible, and the glaring silence where a laugh track ought to be only alerts us to that fact. This brings me back to Sid Caesar, who is more annoying than funny, and adds absolutely nothing to the proceedings as "Dr. Diablo".
Yvonne De Carlo returns as Lily, but she's very under-used and that's probably all for the best. Since this was now the 1980's, the next mistake was in casting some new, "hip" modern-sounding actors to portray little Eddie and a new Marilyn. It would have been much more conceivable to cast the original Butch Patrick and Pat Priest as the now-older versions of their sixties characters. The modern music is also not very nostalgic for fans of the old show, and gets in the way. The feeling one gets from this lost opportunity is that those involved just missed the whole point of what made the original series so delightful to those of us who grew up loving it. Darn, Darn, Darn! ** out of ****
Our heroes are misidentified by some Munsters's robots lookalike of their own at Los Angeles Wax Museum on robberies, aftermaths the clumsy Herman & Grandpa are arrested by the police, due the Marilyn's unusual beauty draw attention and sudden love interest of the police officer Peter Fox a son of the Chief of Police Herb Voland, such love affair brings many troubles for the rookie detective due the duo-comics partners Herman-Grandpa are causing many endless hassles in the police department at the extent to Peter be thrown out of the force.
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First watch: 2025 / How many: 1 / Source: Youtube / Rating: 6.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाFred Gwynne insisted that original make-up artists Karl Silvera and Abe Haberman, who were both still working in the business, be brought aboard to make sure the vintage Munsters look was retained.
- गूफ़When detective Glen Boyle and Marilyn first drive off chasing after Herman and Grandpa, Boyle sideswipes an oncoming car but doesn't stop. The camera switches to show Boyle and Marilyn inside the car and it's obvious that the car isn't moving. Seconds later the view switches back outside the car and it's still driving forward.
- भाव
Grandpa Munster: [adressing the Cave Girl Robot] Excuse me, my dear, could I interest you in a little bite?
Herman Munster: Grandpa, she's only a robot. That woman can not talk.
Grandpa Munster: I know... those are the best kind.
- कनेक्शनEdited from Munster, Go Home! (1966)
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- La Venganza de los Monsters
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें