The Pink Panther Strikes Again Dvd the Revenge of the Pink Panther (1978) Dvd

1978 comedy film directed past Blake Edwards

Revenge of the Pink Panther
Revenge of the pink panther ver3.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Blake Edwards
Screenplay by Frank Waldman
Ron Clark
Blake Edwards
Story by Blake Edwards
Produced past Blake Edwards
Animation:
David H. DePatie
Friz Freleng
Starring Peter Sellers
Herbert Lom
Robert Webber
Dyan Cannon
Cinematography Ernest Solar day
Edited by Alan Jones
Music past Henry Mancini
Leslie Bricusse (songwriter)

Production
companies

United Artists Corporation
Sellers-Edwards Productions
Jewel Productions
Pimlico Films

Distributed by United Artists

Release dates

  • July 13, 1978 (1978-07-13) (London premiere)
  • July fourteen, 1978 (1978-07-14) (London)
  • July xx, 1978 (1978-07-twenty) (Usa)
[ane]

Running time

98 minutes
Countries Uk
United states of america
Language English language
Budget $12,000,000
Box role $49.v million (United states of america)[2]

Revenge of the Pink Panther is a 1978 British comedy film. It is the sixth movie in The Pink Panther comedy moving picture series. Released in 1978, it is the final on-set performance of "Inspector Jacques Clouseau" past Peter Sellers, who died in 1980. It was also the last instalment in the series that was distributed solely by United Artists.

Plot [edit]

Philippe Douvier (Robert Webber), a major businessman and secretly the head of the French Connectedness, is suspected past his New York Mafia drug trading partners of weak leadership and improperly conducting his criminal diplomacy. To demonstrate otherwise, Douvier's aide Guy Algo (Tony Beckley) suggests a show of force with the murder of the famous Chief Inspector Jacques Clouseau (Peter Sellers).

Unfortunately for Douvier, his first attempt at bombing Clouseau fails, and the subsequent attempt by Chinese martial artist 'Mr. Chong' (an uncredited advent by the founder of American Kenpo, Ed Parker) is thwarted when Clouseau successfully fights him off (assertive him to be Clouseau's valet Cato (Burt Kwouk), who has orders to keep his employer warning with random attacks). Douvier tries again by posing every bit an informant to lure Clouseau into a trap, but the Chief Inspector's motorcar and clothes are stolen by transvestite criminal Claude Russo (Sue Lloyd), who is unknowingly killed by Douvier'due south men instead. After, Douvier and the French public believe Clouseau is dead; as a result of this assumption, Clouseau's ex-boss, sometime Principal Inspector Charles Dreyfus (Herbert Lom), is restored to sanity and is released from the lunatic asylum to perform the investigation (despite having committed several major crimes and and so seemingly disintegrated in the previous film).

In Russo's dress and insisting on his true identity, Clouseau is taken to the asylum himself but escapes into Dreyfus' room, who faints from the shock of seeing Clouseau alive. Clouseau manages to disguise himself as Dreyfus and is driven abode by François (André Maranne). At home, Clouseau finds Cato, who, despite having turned Clouseau's apartment into a Chinese-themed brothel, is relieved to see that he survived and the ii plan revenge on the sponsor of Clouseau'south assassination. Meanwhile, Dreyfus is assigned to read a eulogy at Clouseau's funeral by the police chief'due south wife, on pain of his own belch. During the eulogy, Dreyfus efforts of trying not to laugh hysterically at the untrue words that praise Clouseau's brilliance causing anybody including the primary's wife to recall he actually devastated about Clouseau's demise. At the cemetery, Clouseau attends the burial disguised as a priest and then surreptitiously reveals himself to Dreyfus, who recognizes him, faints, and falls into the grave. Clouseau escapes.

Meanwhile, due to his unfaithfulness, Douvier's wife threatens him with divorce. Needing her respectability, Douvier tells his secretarial assistant and paramour Simone LeGree (Dyan Cannon) that their relationship is over, to which Simone reacts angrily. Fearing that she will reveal his crimes, Douvier gives orders to have Simone killed at her nightclub, but having been told by an informant (Alfie Bass) of the possibility of trouble there, Clouseau and Cato inadvertently manage to salvage her. At Simone'due south flat, Clouseau reveals his identity, prompting her to reveal that Douvier ordered Clouseau'southward assassination. Finally, she tells him of Douvier's plan to meet the New York Mafia godfather Julio Scallini (Paul Stewart) in Hong Kong for the Gannet Transaction - a $50,000,000 heroin sale.

After evading their pursuers, Clouseau, Cato, and Simone follow Douvier to Hong Kong in disguise, unaware that the now suspicious Dreyfus has followed them. In that location, Clouseau impersonates Scallini while Simone distracts the real ane, but the programme goes awry when i of Scallini's men spots Douvier leaving their hotel with a stranger and Clouseau exposes his ain disguise during the Gannet Transaction. In the confusion, Dreyfus, intent on killing Clouseau chases him into a firework warehouse, accidentally activating all the fireworks inside.

After the events that occurred in Hong Kong, Douvier and Scallini are arrested. Clouseau is awarded for their abort by the President of France, and he and Simone spend an evening together.

Bandage [edit]

  • Peter Sellers as Chief Inspector Jacques Clouseau
  • Dyan Cannon as Simone Legree
  • Herbert Lom equally Principal Inspector Charles Dreyfus
  • Robert Webber as Philippe Douvier
  • Burt Kwouk equally Cato Fong
  • Tony Beckley as Guy Algo
  • Robert Loggia every bit Al Marchione
  • Paul Stewart as Julio Scallini
  • André Maranne as Sgt. François Chevalier
  • Graham Stark every bit Prof. Auguste Balls
  • Alfie Bass as Fernet
  • Sue Lloyd as Claude Russo
  • Douglas Wilmer as Police commissioner
  • Ferdy Mayne as Dr. Paul Laprone
  • Valerie Leon every bit Tanya
  • Ed Parker as Mr. Chong (uncredited)
  • Adrienne Corri as Therese Douvier
  • Henry McGee equally Officeholder Bardot
  • Andrew Sachs as Hercule Poirot
  • Julian Orchard as Infirmary clerk
  • John Bluthal as Guard at cemetery
  • Rita Webb as Woman at window
  • Ragbir Sraan as Arab sheikh

Production [edit]

When United Artists spent three months on previews and continuous editing of the previous Pink Panther movie The Pink Panther Strikes Once again (according to Daily Variety in 1976), Edwards decided he would try to salve any humorous material remaining. He suggested that Revenge of the Pink Panther should primarily be made upwardly of this footage and that he would write and shoot new footage around information technology with Sellers and visitor. Sellers balked at this and insisted that Revenge feature all new footage. Sellers' contract for Revenge gave him story approval, which is why that movie carries a story credit for Sellers that none of the previous films had.

The opening animated titles in the movie were designed by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, who had been involved with the series since the animated titles of the original 1963 film, The Pink Panther.[3] It was the start fourth dimension since Inspector Clouseau in 1968 that DePatie-Freleng animated the opening titles of a Pink Panther moving-picture show (Render and Strikes Again having been washed by Richard Williams' Studio).[4]

The flick was shot in France, England and in Hong Kong with some scenes filmed at The Excelsior hotel.[5]

This is Graham Stark's commencement advent equally Professor Auguste Balls. He portrays him once more than in Son of the Pink Panther (1993). Harvey Korman portrays Professor Assurance in footage seen in Trail of the Pink Panther (1982).[half dozen]

Release [edit]

The film had its world premiere at the Odeon Leicester Foursquare in London on July thirteen, 1978[ane] and opened to the public the following twenty-four hours.

It opened in the U.s.a. at the Ziegfeld Theatre in New York City and at the Cinerama Dome in Los Angeles on July nineteen, 1978[ane] before expanding to 387 theatres across the The states.[7]

Critical reception [edit]

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approving rating of 84% based on 19 reviews, with an average score of 6.70/x.[8]

Variety wrote, "Revenge of the Pink Panther isn't the best of the standing film series, but Blake Edwards and Peter Sellers on a slow day are still well ahead of virtually other comedic filmmakers."[9] Vincent Canby wrote in The New York Times "If you lot have the Clouzot [sic] habit, as I take, at that place's very little that Mr. Edwards and Mr. Sellers could do that would make you find the moving-picture show disappointing."[10] One DVD & video guide gave the moving-picture show four and a half out of five stars, calling it "arguably the best of the slapstick series."[11] In 1979, the flick won the Evening Standard British Film Honour for best comedy.[12]

Box office [edit]

The film grossed $62,810 in its beginning 3 days at the Odeon Leicester Square.[thirteen] On its US release, information technology grossed $5,278,784 in its first 5 days of release from 387 theatres[7] and $11,004,124 in its first 12 days from 461 theatres in the Us and Canada.[fourteen]

Cancelled sequel [edit]

Romance of the Pink Panther was a Pink Panther film that Sellers had written—and willing to make without Edwards—before Sellers' expiry in July 1980.[15] UA considered recasting the role before convincing Blake Edwards to return to the series. Edwards chose to replace Clouseau with a new character rather than replace Sellers as Clouseau and to utilize outtakes from The Pink Panther Strikes Again to set upwardly a transitional film (Trail of the Pinkish Panther) with new linking footage shot on the prepare of the new motion picture (Curse of the Pink Panther).[xvi]

Soundtrack [edit]

Composed by Henry Mancini in his fifth Pinkish Panther movie, its theme music and much of the soundtrack draw heavily from the disco trends of the late 1970s. The "Pinkish Panther Theme" itself was reworked to include a more dancy bassline, electric piano and guitar solo.

A soundtrack album for the movie was released past United Artists Records.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c Revenge of the Pink Panther at the American Moving-picture show Institute Itemize
  2. ^ "Revenge of the Pinkish Panther, Box Office Data". Box Part Mojo. Retrieved June 25, 2012.
  3. ^ Rowan, Terry. Whodoneit! A Film Guide. Lulu.com. ISBN9781312308060 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Leszczak, Bob (22 August 2014). The Odd Couple on Phase and Screen: A History with Cast and Crew Profiles and an Episode Guide. McFarland. ISBN9781476615394 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Lee, Amanda; Li, Sandy (6 June 2017). "Standard mandarin Oriental mulls sale of iconic Excelsior hotel in Hong Kong". South China Morning Post.
  6. ^ Leonard Maltin's 2015 Movie Guide ISBN 9780451468499
  7. ^ a b "'Panther' In 387: Already $5,278,784". Diversity. July 26, 1978. p. 5.
  8. ^ Revenge of the Pink Panther, Rotten Tomatoes, retrieved 2022-03-19
  9. ^ Diversity Staff (1 Jan 1978). "Revenge of the Pink Panther".
  10. ^ Canby, Vincent (July 19, 1978). "Pink Panther Tries Revenge in fifth Motion-picture show:For the Pun of Information technology" – via NYTimes.com.
  11. ^ Martin, Mick, and Porter, Marsha (2006). DVD & Video Guide 2007, p. 542. Ballantine Books.
  12. ^ IMDb Awards (1979).
  13. ^ "Revenge Is Sweet (advertizement)". Variety. July 19, 1978. p. 21.
  14. ^ "Latest On Panther". Variety. August two, 1978. p. half dozen.
  15. ^ Ebert, Roger. "Peter Sellers Dies at 54 - Interviews - Roger Ebert". world wide web.rogerebert.com.
  16. ^ "Trail of the Pink Panther". Turner Archetype Movies.

External links [edit]

  • Revenge of the Pink Panther at the American Pic Plant Catalog
  • Revenge of the Pink Panther at AllMovie
  • Revenge of the Pink Panther at IMDb
  • Revenge of the Pinkish Panther at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Revenge of the Pink Panther at the TCM Movie Database

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revenge_of_the_Pink_Panther

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