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IMDbPro

The Caddy

  • 1953
  • U
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
Jerry Lewis, Dean Martin, Donna Reed, and Barbara Bates in The Caddy (1953)
Although gifted golfer Harvey Miller is too nervous to golf in public tournaments, he acts as coach and caddy for friend Joe Anthony.
Play trailer2:13
1 Video
54 Photos
SlapstickComedyMusicalSport

Although gifted golfer Harvey Miller is too nervous to golf in public tournaments, he acts as coach and caddy for friend Joe Anthony.Although gifted golfer Harvey Miller is too nervous to golf in public tournaments, he acts as coach and caddy for friend Joe Anthony.Although gifted golfer Harvey Miller is too nervous to golf in public tournaments, he acts as coach and caddy for friend Joe Anthony.

  • Director
    • Norman Taurog
  • Writers
    • Edmund L. Hartmann
    • Danny Arnold
    • Ken Englund
  • Stars
    • Dean Martin
    • Jerry Lewis
    • Donna Reed
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    2.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Norman Taurog
    • Writers
      • Edmund L. Hartmann
      • Danny Arnold
      • Ken Englund
    • Stars
      • Dean Martin
      • Jerry Lewis
      • Donna Reed
    • 25User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
    • 60Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:13
    Trailer

    Photos54

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    Top cast99+

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    Dean Martin
    Dean Martin
    • Joe Anthony
    Jerry Lewis
    Jerry Lewis
    • Harvey Miller, Jr
    Donna Reed
    Donna Reed
    • Kathy Taylor
    Barbara Bates
    Barbara Bates
    • Lisa Anthony
    Joseph Calleia
    Joseph Calleia
    • Papa Anthony
    Fred Clark
    Fred Clark
    • Mr. Baxter…
    Clinton Sundberg
    Clinton Sundberg
    • Charles - the Butler
    Howard Smith
    Howard Smith
    • Golf Official
    Marshall Thompson
    Marshall Thompson
    • Bruce Reeber
    Marjorie Gateson
    Marjorie Gateson
    • Mrs. Grace Taylor
    Frank Puglia
    Frank Puglia
    • Mr. Spezzato
    Lewis Martin
    Lewis Martin
    • Mr. Taylor
    Romo Vincent
    Romo Vincent
    • Eddie Lear - Agent
    Argentina Brunetti
    Argentina Brunetti
    • Mama Anthony
    Houseley Stevenson Jr.
    • Officer
    John Gallaudet
    John Gallaudet
    • Jonathan Bell
    William Edmunds
    • Caminello
    Charles Irwin
    Charles Irwin
    • Golf Starter
    • Director
      • Norman Taurog
    • Writers
      • Edmund L. Hartmann
      • Danny Arnold
      • Ken Englund
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    6.42.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7planktonrules

    Pretty good

    I have now re-watched all of the Martin & Lewis films and one thing I have noticed is how often Dean had to play characters who were complete louses. I can honestly see how this helped to break up the team as who would want to constantly play jerks in order to make their partner look more sympathetic?! This one finds Dean to be a bit of a jerk--though fortunately it's not nearly as bad in this one as in some of their other films and as a result it works a bit better.

    Jerry plays Harvey, the son of a pro golfer who is ALSO a heck of a player. However, Harvey cannot go pro because he chokes up horribly when folks watch him play. But when he meets his fiancée's brother, Joe (Dean), Harvey sees that Joe could be a pro himself--and with his help, Joe enters his first tournament. But there is a problem...Joe wins the tourney and his ego becomes a bit inflated. He soon is taking his new friend for granted. Can Joe pull it together or are the two destined to go their separate ways? What do you think?!?!

    One of the best things about this film is the music. Often I find the musical interludes distracting...but here Dean sings one of his greatest hits. "That's Amore" is the PERFECT tune for Dean's talents and you cannot help but love the song. Additionally, the humor is decent and Joe's not nearly so rotten as he could have been! Pleasant viewing.
    6tavm

    The Caddy was another enjoyable, though uneven, Martin & Lewis film

    Before I review The Caddy proper, let me just say that as a big fan of It's a Wonderful Life, I like to mention whenever players of that movie are in others I review. First, there's leading lady Donna Reed who of course was Mary Hatch there. Next, there's Argentina Brunetti-Mrs. Martini there-who's Dean Martin's mother here. Then, there's Bill Edmonds-Mr. Martini there-who's another of the Italian relatives (though I have to admit I didn't recognize him here). Finally, though I also didn't recognize her here, there's Mary Treen who even IMDb couldn't identify by role. Okay, with that out of the way, I'll just say that with Dean & Jerry playing entertainers who were once golfer and caddy, respectively, there's some hilarious scenes of Lewis wrecking havoc at a department store, of impersonating an Important Rich Man, and of disrupting some famous golfers' games. And Martin has an iconic moment when he sings a song that would be permanently identified with him: "That's Amore". And not just him but Jerry and the whole family sings along to one of the most entertaining numbers on film ever. What I didn't like was the way they have Dean treating Jerry like dirt in the middle of the movie and how dramatic that becomes at the expense of the mostly funny business that came before that. But it's worth it just to see how the whole thing ends especially when a couple of surprises happen there. Oh, and it was also hilarious whenever Jerry's boss Fred Clark-best known to me for his part in "The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show"-is on screen. And the leading lady Jerry has here is played by the stunning Barbara Bates. So appealing is she here that I was stunned when I read of how tragic her life turned out. So on that note, The Caddy, despite its unevenness, gets a recommendation from me.
    Petey-10

    When Jerry and Dean amused the world

    Harvey Miller Jr. (Jerry Lewis) and Joe Anthony (Dean Martin) are two golfers and later Harvey becomes the caddy of Joe. But after causing a chaos at the big tournament their career as golfers is over and soon they find themselves from the world of entertainment.The Caddy (1953) is a great comedy from Norman Taurog. It features the funny man and the king of comedy Jerry Lewis and the straight man Dean Martin. It also has Donna Reed as Kathy Taylor. You can remember this amazing actress from It's a Wonderful Life and other classics. Martin and Lewis were just amazing together. Dean charmed the ladies and took care of singing and Jerry's job was to be the clown and make people laugh. Those were the good times.In 1956 Lewis and Martin sadly broke up but they did just great on their own. Martin lived in the years 1917-1995. Lewis is 77 years old today. He hasn't been working so much lately but last month he did a voice for a character in The Simpsons. I've been a big fan of this comedian for five years, since they showed Lewis movies on TV in the summer of 1998. Thanks for the laughs, Jerry Lewis! But now back to this movie. The Caddy is a movie that offers you lots of laughs and also some great songs, like That's Amore. It's been 50 years since this movie was made but Jerry Lewis movies don't age. They only get better with time.
    7SimonJack

    Jerry may have set a breaking record in this film

    "The Caddy" is one of more than a dozen comedy films that Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis made together. Their pairing made them both famous in films. This has the usual mayhem that Jerry's Harvey Miller causes or gets into. In one scene in the department store in which he works, he trips, slides, rolls on a coaster table, and clumsily stumbles around and smashes numerous merchandise displays. This scenario includes toppling and breaking several shelves of chinaware and dishes (no doubt, this was not expensive stuff for props). This could very well have established some sort of record for breakage in a comedy film.

    Dean sings a few songs, including the debut of a song that would be a major hit and become his signature song for years, "That's Amore." Harry Warren wrote the music and Jack Brooks wrote the lyrics for the song specifically for this film. The song was nominated for a 1953 academy award. Although it didn't win, it was a smash hit with audiences and rose to No. 2 on the Billboard charts that year.

    As the title alludes, the film centers a lot around the sport of golf. Jerry gets in some of the best humor there. With legendary golfers Ben Hogan and Sam Snead, there's also some very good golf shots.

    This isn't the best of their pairings, but it will entertain folks who like this sort of comedy. I don't recall thinking Jerry was that funny when I watched his films as a kid and later on TV. His later solo movies, when he wasn't such a loud, complaining goofball, had more spontaneous humor, I thought.

    Anyway, fans of the two will enjoy this film, and maybe some in the younger audiences will still find it quite funny. Golfers will enjoy seeing the famous pros on the course with the Dean and Jerry.
    8bkoganbing

    "When the Moon Hit's Your Eye, Like a Big Pizza Pie, That's Amore."

    When Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis split up in 1956, the consensus was that Jerry's comic talents would sustain his career, but that Dino would have a rough going. Well the consensus only had that half right. Most critics did focus on Jerry's talents, Dean was the straight man who sang a nice song occasionally.

    But of all their joint films, The Caddy is best remembered for Dean's singing of That's Amore. The Harry Warren-Jack Brooks song sold a lot of records for Dean, putting him on something of an equal footing with his partner. It was nominated for an Oscar that year and until ten years or so later when Dino revived a song called Everybody Loves Somebody and made it his theme, That's Amore became the song most identified with the man from Steubenville, Ohio.

    Of course Jerry has his moments in The Caddy, clowning with the various golfers who made cameo appearances here, doing a comic obligato after Dean sings That's Amore and a number called The Gay Continental. But That's Amore made this of all their films, Dean's triumph.

    In fact Dino had another great reason to enjoy this film. Though not as publicized in fact he was as passionate about the game of golf as that other noted singer on the Paramount payroll, Bing Crosby. If he wasn't involved in any of the scenes on a given day, you would find Martin on the links invariably.

    The plot such as it is involves Jerry Lewis as the son of a noted golf pro who also has an extreme case of stage fright. Jerry is engaged to Barbara Bates who is Dean's sister. Both come from an Italian fishing family. Father Joseph Calleia is a commercial fisherman and mother Argentina Brunetti runs a restaurant, specializing in seafood and pasta.

    Jerry agrees to coach Dean and be his caddy. A lot of money can be made from professional golf although Calleia doesn't believe it. If this story sounds familiar that was the attitude of the patriarch of another San Francisco Italian fishing family named DiMaggio when three of their sons opted for careers in baseball. I guess Joe and his brothers Vince and Dom must have been flattered because they didn't sue Paramount.

    Donna Reed plays the socialite sponsor of golf tournaments who falls big time for Dean. And Jerry gets to have another straight man in this film in the person of Clinton Sundberg, Reed's snooty butler. In fact Jerry gets even another substitute straight man in Fred Clark who is his and Bates's boss at the job they have at a department store. Although to be fair, Lewis rehashed some material here the Marx Brothers originally used in The Big Store.

    The Caddy is one of the Martin-Lewis teams best and funniest comedies and if that don't get you, That's Amore will.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      "That's Amore", sung by Dean Martin, became a multi-million seller and one of his signature songs. The tune also appeared in the closing credits of "Rear Window (1954)" and is regarded as the theme song to "Moonstruck (1987)." An instrumental version can be heard in "Houseboat (1958)."
    • Goofs
      Joe is twice seen walking down Pacific Coast Highway "heading for San Francisco." However, from Monterey he would actually need to walk in the opposite direction.
    • Quotes

      Joe Anthony: Lisa, what is that?

      Lisa Anthony: Better get used to him, Joe. He's gonna be your brother-in-law.

      Joe Anthony: That's nice.

      [beat]

      Joe Anthony: My brother-in-law?

    • Connections
      Featured in Doogie Howser, M.D.: It's a Wonderful Laugh (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      The Gay Continental
      Music by Harry Warren

      Lyric by Jack Brooks

      Sung by Jerry Lewis

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 9, 1953 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • So Where's the Money?
    • Filming locations
      • Riviera Country Club - 1250 Capri Drive, Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, California, USA(golf scenes)
    • Production company
      • York Pictures Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,864,112 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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