Jack and the Beanstalk

1952 "Be happy go wacky!"
5.8| 1h18m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 07 April 1952 Released
Producted By: Exclusive Productions Inc.
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A young boy trades the family cow for magic beans. Ascending the beanstalk with the butcher who sold him the beans, he faces the giant terrorizing his village.

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Reviews

Redwarmin This movie is the proof that the world is becoming a sick and dumb place
Exoticalot People are voting emotionally.
Pluskylang Great Film overall
TaryBiggBall It was OK. I don't see why everyone loves it so much. It wasn't very smart or deep or well-directed.
Prismark10 The moral of Jack and the Beanstalk is: If your son is an idiot, do not send him out on his own to conduct important commercial transactions!As a young child I liked Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. Still only a child but now a few years older I concluded they were really not that funny.The version of the film I saw was of a poor picture quality, it certainly needs to be restored. Lou is babysitting a kid, reads him a bedtime story and falls asleep. He dreams of the Jack and the Beanstalk story where he plays Jack, the gruff policeman is the giant and Bud is the butcher.The adventure transforms from monochrome into Technicolour but the thin story is padded out by wretched song and dance numbers. Lou does his knockabout comedy, Bud is not in it a lot. There are few good jokes but it is infernal stuff.
weezeralfalfa Clearly this adaptation of the classic fairytale has a number of basic similarities to the prior 1939 "The Wizard of Oz" The dream portion takes place high up in the sky, where there is a scary person or 2 that rules the land. Sepia or B&W film is used for the non-dream portions at the beginning and end.(I much prefer the B&W choice over sepia for the present film. Both are available at YouTube). A number of musical numbers are included, some with dance, some individual, others group sings. Certainly, those from "The Wizard" are more memorable.In this version, a number of people besides jack either climb the beanstalk, or are captured by the giant. This includes Abbott, as Mr. Dinklepuss, who climbs the beanstalk with Lou, as Jack. Princess Eloise (Shaye Cogan) and Prince Arthur(James Alexander)who were captured. Also, Polly(Dorothy Ford), who serves as the giant's maid, and presumably was captured as well. As in "The Wizard of Oz", all these characters are based on people Jack(or Dorothy) knew.In this version (there have been many versions in the details), the nameless giant(played by Buddy Baer) stole Jack's chicken who lays golden eggs, as well as the cow Jack exchanged for 5 magic beans from Dinkel. Just how the giant managed to descend to earth without a magic beanstalk and transport the cow plus the people up to his sky kingdom is not considered. Later, he needed the beanstalk to descend. Abbott and Costello begin as supposed babysitters for a Denice-the-Menace-type boy(Donald) and his infant sister. Lou is supposed to read "Jack and the Beanstalk" to Donald, but he stumbles in his reading, so they decide to reverse roles. Lou falls asleep and has this dream. At the end of the film, when Lou is awakening, he says "crown me", meaning the king put a crown on his head. Well, Donald 'crowns' him with a porcelain pitcher! A funny sequence is when Jack mixes some gunpowder in with the chicken feed. When he cooks their eggs, they explode like firecrackers. A&C are standing next to each other, and Lou notices that his shadow is notable longer than Abbott's, despite Abbott's greater height. Turns out the giant is standing behind Lou.After Prince Arthur sings the romantic ballad "Darlene" to Darlene(also known as Princess Eloise), he later sings another romantic ballad to her: "Dreamer's Cloth", and she responds in kind. Costello and Polly also dance to this tune. At 6'2" in bare feet, Polly looked ridiculous dancing with 5'5" Lou. In one segment, she kept bopping his head with her rotating elbows and otherwise jarring his head. Funny. Remember, she was serving as the giant's maid. Thus, before the others showed up, the household consisted of 2 giants, as ex-boxer Buddy Baer, who played the giant, was 6'7".The giant gives Abbott the job of putting his magic hen and jewels away. Bad idea. Abbott and Prince Arthur conspire to steal these, which they eventually succeed at. But Abbott loses them on the way down the beanstalk, the villagers below gathering them. The title song: "Jack and the Beanstalk" is sung during the credits, when Jack and Dinkelpuss begin climbing the magic stalk, and in the finale, when the people arrive from the beanstalk. In the finale, the villagers also sing "He Never Looked Better in his Life", in reference to the now deceased giant.On the whole, this is one of the more interesting A&C films I've seen, especially suitable for children. The musical scenes fit in well with the rest of the screenplay, and there is a good amount of A&C-style humor. Lou's brother,Pat, wrote the screenplay and served as executive producer of this independently produced film.
John T. Ryan WE CAN WELL remember having seen this picture as part of the local businessmen's neighborhood Christmas show for the kids. It was at the old Ogden Theatre; which was located at 53rd & Marshfield in Chicago. This would be circa 1960; so it was obviously not a new release.HAVING BEEN WELL acquainted with the style and routines that made up Abbott & Costello's repertoire, we were somewhat disappointed with this movie. There seemed to be an emptiness about the whole storyline. And besides, we were used to the likes of HPLD THAT GHOST, RIO RITA and ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN; not to mention the ABBOTT & COSTELLO TV Show. Where were landlord Mr. Fields (Sidney Fields), Mike the Cop (Gordon Jones) and Roberta (Hillary Brooke)? THIS METHOD OF introducing a two leveled story, with one foot in the real world and the other firmly planted in the nursery rhyme domain, was just too much to ask a kid to assimilate in the space of an hour and a half. After all, we wanted more of the likes pf 'Who's On First' and the old horse 'Mudder & Fodder' type of routines.WELL, YEARS LATER and after having once again viewed this movie, we find that it is a much better A & C vehicle than our memories had classified it. Perhaps we could chalk it all up to our reluctant maturation process as being at the central cause of this turn about; but none the less, this is neither a cheapie, nor an attempt to ca$h in on the A & C name. Nor is it a sad sort of feature, which at once exploits a great team's waning fame; while aiding in accelerating the decline of a fading star quality act. (In much the same manner as those pictures that Laurel & Hardy did at 20th Century-Fox).THE TRUTH BE told, JACK IN THE BEANSTALK (Exclusive Productions/Warner Brothers, 1952) was an excellent sojourn for this funny twosome into the genre of the Movie Musical. Oh, sure, many of their most successful comedies were also musicals, like RIO RITA or BUCK PRIVATES; but this is the first musical that really starred them in the primary roles; without other, more musically inclined performers.IN SHORT, THIS A & C movie was a fine mixture of A & C comedy and top notch original music and songs. WE CAN ONLY surmise that this was better as a musical comedy for an older crowd; not those snotty nosed little urchins at that free Christmas Show!
wes-connors In need of work, straight man Bud Abbott (as Jack) and comic partner Lou Costello (as Dinkel) get the latter a job babysitting self-described "problem child" David Stollery (as Donald). Young Stollery winds up reading Mr. Costello's favorite novel (see if you can guess the title), which puts Costello to sleep, dreaming he and Mr. Abbott are reliving the story of "Jack and the Beanstalk" (you guessed it).The sepia-tone switches to color for the bulk of the production. Apparently, this was an attempt at something different for the duo, a colorful children's fantasy. It fails, but this is where you get to see Abbott & Costello in color, silent film superstar William Farnum (as the King) make his last performance a bit part, boxer Max Baer's brother Buddy, and Stollery before Disney's "Spin and Marty".** Jack and the Beanstalk (4/4/52) Jean Yarbrough ~ Lou Costello, Bud Abbott, Buddy Baer, William Farnum