Change Your Image
RobinJoker
Reviews
Andy's Gang (1955)
I remember this show
Andy's Gang was wild, something like a Saturday-morning Tonight Show for kids, with a rowdy audience howling with laughter or excitement -- although the kids weren't really there. The audience seen at the beginning was stock footage that was constantly reused.
I remember the audience singing a Buster Brown theme song to start the show.
I think it ended, "There's only one kind of gang for me, good old Andy's Gang!"
Andy Devine hollered "Hey kids!" and the crowd roared back. Froggy the Gremlin, a rubber toy, always said, "Hiya, kids, hiya hiya hiya!" He also brought on the film or cartoon when everyone yelled, "Plunk your magic twanger, Froggy!" There was usually a film episode of adventure with Gunga Ram, the mahout (Indian elephant wrangler) or the same actor as a Native American.
There was a black cat named Midnight who purred "Niiiiice" (voiced by June Foray) and a mouse named Squeaky who was played by a hamster. There were also comedy or variety sketches. Vito Scotti often appeared as some kind of "expert" who would do a demonstration for the audience. As Scotti narrated what he was doing Froggy would suggest wildly wrong things, which Scotti would repeat and do and then get upset about.
It was very low-budget, but hey, I was five or so and I loved it.
Gosford Park (2001)
A genuine whodunit
If you like mysteries, period pieces, or British productions, you'll love Gosford Park.
Entanglements, deception, romance, intrigue, humor, and murder color the normal doings above and below stairs on a hunting weekend at an English country house in 1932. The slow opening pace allows viewers to develop understanding for the less common accents. A story worthy of a master mystery writer, the film pays loving attention to every detail from the pecking-order distinctions of social class among a huge cast of diverse characters to gorgeous sets and scenery. Not a thriller or gore-fest, this is a genuine whodunit that keeps the audience guessing.