An African American and a Briton, who own a nightclub in Soho, London, get mixed up in an intriguing plot when an intelligence agent is murdered in the club. Soon, they find themselves the t... Read allAn African American and a Briton, who own a nightclub in Soho, London, get mixed up in an intriguing plot when an intelligence agent is murdered in the club. Soon, they find themselves the target of a dangerous organization.An African American and a Briton, who own a nightclub in Soho, London, get mixed up in an intriguing plot when an intelligence agent is murdered in the club. Soon, they find themselves the target of a dangerous organization.
- Tsai Chan
- (as Francisca Tu)
- Director
- Writer
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Featured reviews
Salt And Pepper casts Davis and Lawford as a pair of club owners in the swinging Soho section of London in the Sixties. As cool a pair of hip dudes you'd ever want to meet. A working girl is killed in their club which brings the wrath of constipated police inspector Michael Bates down on them. Bates doesn't like them on general principles, I wouldn't with all the nasty cracks made about him being so uptight. But Bates is the least of their problems because the girl was an enemy agent and that gets Davis and Lawford involved in a plot to bring down the British government the details of which I won't reveal because they are truly to bizarre.
The Sixties made London the hip capital of the world and at the same time Ian Fleming and his James Bond novels brought to the screen by Sean Connery put a new twist on the spy novel. Salt And Pepper combines both trends with Davis and Lawford constantly rolling witty dialog off their tongues. The film is fast paced and breezy with nary a bow to any reality.
I did mention Michael Bates before who looks through the entire film like he needs a stiff shot of prune juice. His performance is a tribute to James Finlayson, the perpetually uptight foe of Laurel and Hardy in dozens of films. Bates gets quite a few laughs of his own.
Salt And Pepper holds up well and was popular enough for a sequel One More Time to be made. You'll probably want to check that one out as well.
This is yet another, where Sammy Davis, Jr and Peter Lawford pilot this shameless, dopey vehicle at missile speed right through the middle of my IQ. Gosh, please make this stop, or at least, make Peter Lawford stop smoking cigarettes for one second and stop ashing his butt on the nightclub floor.
There's one funny scene where Sammy performs a song and dance number with some go-go girls. He pretends not very well to play the guitar.
I couldn't get through the entire movie. Its on a low par with the dreadful Ocean's 11.
Did you know
- TriviaThe title song played over the end credits concludes with Sammy singing: "Next time I'm gonna get the girl, that's definite," a Bond-like hint of a sequel, which did occur with One More Time (1970).
- GoofsCharles Salt drives a Secret Agent car that has a control panel on the dashboard with the letters B-N-O-J-S-X. These letters stand for the various secret agent things the car can do -- for example, pressing "N" makes the car fire tire-puncturing NAILS at a pursuing car, and pressing the "O" button sends OIL at a pursuing vehicle. However, the audience never finds out what the buttons "J" or "X" stand for, or do. This could be a plot hole error.
- Quotes
Christopher Pepper: [the Inspector had just called him "Mr. Salt"] I'm Pepper, he's Salt.
Inspector Crabbe: Odd.
Charles Salt: Isn't it?
- ConnectionsFollowed by One More Time (1970)
- How long is Salt and Pepper?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1