Bachelor Flat (1961) Poster

(1961)

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6/10
Terry-Thomas - Babe Magnet
bensonmum29 May 2009
Warning: Spoilers
There's something about the innocence of these early-to-mid 60s comedies that I find enjoyable. These movies aren't as jaded as today's so called comedies, relying on comedy, writing, and the talent of the actors. I'm sure that there are situations in Bachelor Flat that someone in 1962 might have found scandalous, but today I can't imagine anyone batting an eye at the film. Maybe I'm getting old, but in a way I really miss these movies.

The plot of Bachelor Flat finds the very British Terry-Thomas playing an anthropologist named Professor Patterson at a California university. For whatever reason, the women in his life are drawn to him like flies to sugar. He's a babe magnet! This set-up creates quit a few comedic moments as young and old women alike throw themselves at the good professor. Things really get complicated when the 17 year-old daughter of his fiancé (of whom he's unaware – the daughter, not the fiancé) suddenly shows up at the doorstep of the house he rents from his bride to be.

At its worst, Bachelor Flat is a harmless enough diversion. It might not be the best or funniest movie I've ever seen, but I was entertained throughout most of the 91 minute runtime. At its best, watching the stiff, very British Terry-Thomas deal with the multitude of women he finds mysteriously attracted to him is often quite funny. But this is also the film's biggest weakness. Terry-Thomas is best at playing the scheming, conniving villainous role. Being the object of desire to a string of attractive women just doesn't seem right. He's okay in the role, just not a very good casting decision in my opinion. Then again, maybe that's what the people behind Bachelor Flat were going for – playing Terry-Thomas against stereotype. If that's the case, they succeeded beyond their wildest dreams.
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7/10
Forget serious, just enjoy this lightweight comedy of a bygone era
bcherney10 April 2009
Bachelor Flat is one of those well done early 60's lightweight comedies that is not a great standout, but a movie one cannot help but like. Terry Thomas is superb as the steadfast British professor trying to keep his stiff upper lip heritage intact in a youthful environment of early southern California culture. Thomas is very well supported by the rest of cast who play off against the professor's stiff British bearing. The true delight to this movie is when Thomas shows his ability to play off against this British bearing with comedy antics that predate anything comedy group Monte Python would do so well later. Tuesday Weld is also quite good as the "wayward teenager" along with Richard Beymer who does a very competent job of playing the professor's young neighbor and friend. I found this movie quite charming in it's own way, and everyone ends up doing the right thing. I would recommend it for anyone who needs a nice diversion from the often heavy handed and simplistic comedies of today.
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7/10
Enjoyed. Good 60s film
cwolf109 April 2019
Prf. Patterson goes through 'trouble' of dealing with the beautiful women that throw themselves at him & his surprise step daughter who returns home to pretend to be a juvenile.
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Makes you wish you were English Californian in the 60s!
evenbetter5 April 2002
I recently saw this film on AMC. Personally, I think this is one of the best movies i've seen in a while! Here's a plot summary:

Terry Thomas is an english-born college professor with women-problems: he can't get away from them! To complicate things, his fiances' long-lost daughter appears and poses as an escape school-girl. Thomas' young roommate Richard Beymer is 'nutty' for her. What follows is a series of misadventures that include women doing anything possible for Thomas, the acquisition of a dinosaur bone, and a crazy Mr. Hyde-like change!

It's basically one of those 60's feel good movies in which all the strange little plot details come together in the end. BACHELOR FLAT is a fun and entertaining way to pass the time on a lazy Saturday afternoon.
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6/10
That Shy English Charm Always Gets Them
bkoganbing21 October 2011
The very British talents of Terry-Thomas and the American comic genius of director Frank Tashlin produced a rather indifferent comedy in Bachelor Flat. Only in the last 10 minutes of the film do we see Terry-Thomas in his usual rakish, devilish character.

As his neighbor Richard Beymer says he's got a problem that every American male would like to have, he has to beat women off with a stick. Even though he's engaged to Celeste Holm who is in Paris and has rented him, her beach house the women just keep coming on to him. Especially the coeds at the college where he teaches paleontology.

One thing that Holm forgot to tell him is that she has a teenage daughter of her own from a previous marriage. And when Tuesday Weld drops in to the beach house for an unexpected visit that sets in motion a whole chain of events.

Bachelor Flat scored well at the box office due to current teen favorites Weld and Beymer. But Tashlin and Terry-Thomas have both done far better work. Even the good sight gag of a large dinosaur bone that Beymer's dachshund keeps trying to steal and bury worked a whole lot better in Bringing Up Baby. The film is all right, but everybody in the cast has done better work.
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6/10
it's Tuesday, everyday of the week
SnoopyStyle8 May 2024
Mike Pulaski (Richard Beymer) narrates in the beginning that the British have been stealing American chicks ever since the War of Independence. He is both jealous and an admirer. He's a carefree hound-dog living in a trailer on the beach. His neighbor Prof. Bruce Patterson (Terry-Thomas) is both his friend and his mentor. Patterson's upcoming marriage to Helen Bushmill (Celeste Holm) is breaking the hearts of all his female students and many female acquaintances. He is surprised by Libby Bushmill (Tuesday Weld) who shows up out of nowhere. Helen had failed to tell him about her daughter.

I am of two minds about Terry-Thomas. On the one hand, he is far from Indiana Jones and I don't get all the female attention. On the other hand, it prevents him from developing any chemistry with his female pursuers especially Libby. Ultimately, Tuesday Weld steals the movie. The teenage performer has a great surprising voice. Quite frankly, her character should be the lead although this is strictly a male fantasy comedy with plenty of slinky babes. It has some moments of fun which elevates its light weight quality.
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3/10
Updated "Susan Slept Here", from the same director
moonspinner5519 August 2017
British archaeology professor at a Southern California university, living at the home of his fiancée--a world traveler who is currently away--finds himself saddled with a young chippie who claims to be an escapee from reform school; turns out she's the 17-year-old daughter of his future wife, who somehow failed to mention she was the mother of a teenager. Budd Grossman adapted his play along with the film's director, Frank Tashlin, yet neither seems able to tell the difference between shrill one-liners and clever repartee. The cast is manic and cartoonish, dashing in and out of the professor's pad on the beach as if this were a "Carry On" farce from the 1950s. Terry-Thomas isn't as offensive as the younger players, but working strenuously at a piece of fluff is ultimately disastrous for the picture and the star. Farce doesn't seem to be Tuesday Weld's strong suit (she's metallic and grating instead of charming), while Richard Beymer as a smitten law student is merely a hole in the screen. Not much headway from 1954's "Susan Slept Here", which Tashlin also directed, although this one at least has a cute dachshund with a fetish for dinosaur bones. *1/2 from ****
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1/10
Dismal attempt at farce
malcolmgsw19 February 2020
I am a great fan of Terry-Thomas.In the fifties he made many funny films in the UK.Hollywood decided to adopt him as their typical Englishman.The fee must have been that good that he didn't bother to look at the script.There was not one funny moment.Worse still Tuesday Weld and Richard Bruner shouted their lines.I have never seen more people walk out of these classic showings
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4/10
'Flat' is the word for it.
F Gwynplaine MacIntyre9 September 2006
Critics tend to ignore director Frank Tashlin's films, except for the two starring Jayne Mansfield. When they do review Tashlin's work, they invariably mention that he began as an animator (Warner Brothers' Looney Toons), and that Tashlin's live-action movies tend to feature cartoonish characters and impossible sight gags. 'Bachelor Flat' is unusual for Tashlin, in that the main characters are all plausible human beings. Even more interestingly, 'Bachelor Flat' appears to be Hollywood's attempt to turn Terry-Thomas into a light-comedy romantic lead, rather than a comic villain.

Terry-Thomas here plays a veddy British professor at one of those California colleges where all the students are young, tanned, and impossibly good-looking. Terry-Thomas's character is named Bruce Patterson, which sounds to me more like an Australian name! The dialogue identifies Patterson as an 'archaeologist', but he's clearly a palaeontologist: did they think we wouldn't know what this word means? The movie's premise maintains that Patterson is irresistible to women, due to his English accent and his charming manner.

The young romantic leads are Tuesday Weld (as a flighty teen runaway) and Richard Beymer (as a swot). Weld is supposed to be all cute 'n' adorable, and we're supposed to want to hug her, but I just wanted to slap her and call her an idiot. For one thing, she runs away from boarding school wearing high heels!

What on Earth can explain the brief success of Richard Beymer? This tall handsome non-entity displays no acting talent whatever. In 'The Diary of Anne Frank' he utterly failed to convince me that he was European. In all his romantic roles (including 'Bachelor Flat') he quite fails to convince me that he has any interest in women. Beymer's best-known role is the male lead in 'West Side Story' (however did he get THAT part?), yet his utter blandness was the biggest flaw in that great film.

Tuesday Weld and Celeste Holm are meant to be playing daughter and mother, yet their characters have almost no footage together. I was impressed with one clever transition by Tashlin: a shot of Weld in bed with a photo of Holm, then cutting to a shot of Holm in bed with a photo of Weld.

Celeste Holm and her real-life husband (character actor Wesley Addy) have made generous donations to many charities, and they have been friendly to me personally: Holm has kindly granted me the time to interview her about her early days performing with George M Cohan. I really want to like her on screen ... yet Holm has never given a movie performance that impresses me. She's just dull here, playing an unsympathetic character. Allegedly, she's romantically involved with Terry-Thomas, but their characters have almost no screen time together.

Francesca Bellini (who?) gives one of the worst performances I've ever seen in a Hollywood sound film, and an unbilled American actress in the role of Miss Pilkington attempts an unconvincing English accent. Howard McNear is just as annoying here as he was in Mayberry. Rather a lot of this movie is implausible without being funny. If a tiny dachshund really did steal an immense dinosaur bone, dragging it slowly along inch by inch, would the dog really make TWO circuits round the same sand dune? Not likely.

I laughed heartily at one sight gag involving Terry-Thomas and a Cro-Magnon skull. The gag was reworked from a similar gag with Jules Munshin in 'On the Town', but it's funnier here and more imaginative. The film's prologue, featuring Terry-Thomas as a predatory redcoat in the days of Paul Revere, is amusing ... but it unfortunately sets the wrong tone for everything that follows. I liked the views of early 1960s California, although (based on this movie) there doesn't seem to be anyone in the entire state who isn't white. 'Bachelor Flat' features impressive production values, but there's really very little of interest here. I'll rate this movie just 4 out of 10.
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8/10
It's Raining In California!
theowinthrop5 August 2006
The line in the "Summary Line" is one of the last in this film - uttered by that consummate Englishman Terry-Thomas. Throughout the film he is usually carrying his brolly, but at this last moment it finally becomes useful.

This nice little film came out in 1962, but failed to do for Terry-Thomas what LOLITA or DR. STRANGELOVE or THE PINK PANTHER did for his fellow comic actor Peter Sellers: turn him into a super star. It really could not do so, for Sellers genius was to transform himself into dozens of different personalities, whereas Terry-Thomas usually played a bounder who got into comic difficulties because of his plotting, or character flaws, or circumstances he could not control. But in BACHELOR FLAT he was playing a decent sort, who finds himself (without intending it) to be attractive to females because of his pleasant English manners and erudition.

Terry - Thomas is Professor Bruce Patterson, a paleontologist who is teaching in Southern California. He doesn't plan to, but his crisp, clipped English manner has won many fans among the ladies in the university and in the neighborhood that he is residing in. He lives near his girlfriend Helen Bushmill (Celeste Holm), who is headed for Europe for a couple of weeks. Patterson, left on his own devices, soon finds that he is the center of a great deal unwanted attention from the ladies. One of them seems to be a young girl named Libby Smith (Tuesday Weld) who actually turns out to be Helen's daughter. He is assisted in trying to solve his problems with Weld and the others by his room-mate Mike Pulaski (Richard Beymer). Pulaski is soon attracted to Smith.

In the background, midst all the problems with the ladies, is Patterson's career goal. He has located a large dinosaur bone, and wants to return to the foreign country where he found it to do more digging for the rest of the fossil. This requires financing, and has brought up the attention of Dr. Dylan Bowman (Howard McNear), who is a "friendly" rival in the paleontology field.

Bowman starts sniffing about to find out what Patterson's discovery is (the latter has not shown the bone to anyone). But when the bone is accidentally buried, Patterson is seen by Bowman digging in the beaches near the bungalow he lives in, and retrieving the bone. As a result, of course, Bowman starts thinking the potential site for the dig is in the California beach that Patterson resides near.

As career and girls collide, and as Bushmill returns early, things get out of hand for our doctor. Among other things Bushmill thinks Patterson has become a ladies man. Patterson finds that his quiet lifestyle has been invaded by the ladies (they put a hole accidentally into his favorite derby hat, in one memorable slow burn). He asks Pulaski what to do to win back Bushmill, and in the process of being told what is expected from him as a male, he gets drunk - and proceeds to let his libido take over memorably.

The comedy was actually quite sweet, as Terry-Thomas played an average man in over his head. The rest of the cast ably supported him, especially McNear as his sneaky, spying rival - who got the last laugh in the film. It may not have been in the same class as DR. STRANGELOVE, but it was a good showcase for it's star. He didn't always have to play comic cads and bounders.
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3/10
A familiar cast of characters walking through their paces.
mark.waltz17 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The 1954 Technicolor comedy "Susan Slept Here" is a major disappointment coming from the last years of RKO Radio. This remake is a major disappointment coming from 20th Century Fox during the time it was making "Cleopatra", the elephantine epic that nearly bankrupt that studio. This isn't a page by page remake of the Debbie Reynolds/Dick Powell film that did neither of them any good, but the similarities are obvious considering that they had the same director, Frank Tashlin.

The problem here is that the characters starting with Tuesday Weld as the screeching teenager and continuing down to her self centered mother Celeste Holm are not very likeable, and are only written with minimal dimensions. Terry-Thomas ("I say, good show!") as Holm's boyfriend, is subleasing her beach house while she's in Europe, and surprises when Weld turns up, hiding in a dinosaur bone crate. Richard Beymer is living in a trailer in the driveway with his dauchsund, and ends up being Weld's protector as she gets into all sorts of trouble. The dauchsund's obsession with the dinosaur bone is the highlight of the film, the one genuine laugh.

It's easy to be manipulated by the glossy Cinemascope and Technicolor, especially with the lavish sets and costumes. But to imagine Terry-Thomas as the subject of all sorts of affections from various women is laughable, and even the handsome Beymer is charisma free as the young hero. Why stories like this of troubled young women getting themselves infatuated with older men kept being done in Hollywood is a bigger mystery than any Sherlock Holmes mystery. Weld's self centered and demanding character is completely unappealing. I'll take a dozen Hayley Mills plotting parent traps over her any day.
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8/10
They just don't make'm like this any more.
champion-527 March 2000
This is such a wonderful little, "feelgood" film. Terry Thomas is just wonderful and so is Tuesday Weld. All the different characters work so well together. There are about 5 or 6 different storylines, all interwoven. This film is just the sort of film to relax with at the end of a hard workweek. Even the dog has a storyline!! If you are looking for a little film that will have you smiling at the end, I highly recommend this one.
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8/10
Silly and goofy absurdist comedy!
ronnybee211227 July 2021
After reading some previous reviews I was ready for almost anything. I tried to keep an open mind and just watch the film without any particular expectations. What did I get to see?

A fun,energetic, silly,absurdist masterpiece!

Much of it is ridiculous and silly. Much of it is indeed quite funny.

The cast all do their jobs very well,the movie flows along smoothly throughout.

The lovely Tuesday Weld is always a treat,she's always pretty funny and better still we get a chance to see her in all sorts of lovely outfits.

Lead actor Terry Thomas plays the perfect part as a suave, 'lady-magnet' professor-and he really is quite charming and funny!

Seeing Howard McNeir (aka Floyd the barber on Andy Griffith) playing a part here is pretty cool as well,I smile just seeing that guy!

The film has sight-gags/visual jokes throughout,and physical comedy too such as pratfalls,foot-chases,and the like.

Overall I think it is a good movie. 8/10.
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8/10
Frank Tashlin at his near-best!
JohnHowardReid10 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
There are some dull passages (particularly some overly long and somewhat boring scenes between Tuesday Weld and Richard Beymer – whatever happened to these stars of the future? They seemed to just disappear. Miss Weld was a real knockout too). It's also true that some of the jokes misfire but, all told, this is a very amusing farce, full of tangential sight gags and delightful incongruities. Budd Grossman's original frame-work for his stage play, "Libby", was obviously clichéd and trivial, but director/screenwriter Frank Tashlin has fleshed it out superlatively with a grab-bag of various types of humor. Terry-Thomas is in top form and, aside from Miss Weld and Mr. Beymer who make a rather lackluster pair of juveniles, the support cast play with just the right blend of lunacy and straight-face. Photography and other credits are first-rate, although the film editing could be sharper and some trimming would have been much appreciated.
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8/10
saw today
marktayloruk19 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Didn't realise had seen it some fifty years ago.Found it hilarious- although got the blondes mixed up. And Terry-Thomas a babe magnet? David Niven would have been a better choice.
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