Home :: DVD :: Comedy :: General  

African American Comedy
Animation
Black Comedy
British
Classic Comedies
Comic Criminals
Cult Classics
Documentaries, Real & Fake
Farce
Frighteningly Funny
Gay & Lesbian
General

Kids & Family
Military & War
Musicals
Parody & Spoof
Romantic Comedies
Satire
School Days
Screwball Comedy
Series & Sequels
Slapstick
Sports
Stand-Up
Teen
Television
Urban
The Love God?

The Love God?

List Price: $14.98
Your Price: $13.48
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Gem
Review: This might be my favorite Don Knotts film. It is funny as all get out. My favorite scenes have to be the "bird calling" scenes. Done twice and different each time it has to be one of the best parts in the film. Also the clothes that he wears are great. They may look funny how but at the time they were cool(still are). I'm waiting for them to come back in.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funny except for one thing
Review: A very funny movie, except that the credits start rolling on the screen before the movie ends. On the DVD At the very end of the movie when Peacock (Knotts) tells the minister that he can get up, the movie ends and starts the rolling credits. When the movie was played on television and showed in theatres, after Peacock tells the minister that he can get up, the next scene shows his wife playing the piano in the church and the choir is singing, and he then starts the bird calls, as he is doing the bird calls the rolling credits start and he continues doing the bird calls until he finishes. This is then the end of the movie. This is left off the DVD edition!! One of the funniest parts of the movie and it's left off. He does the bird calls twice in the movie, not just once as shown on the DVD!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Period Comedy
Review: Easily Don Knotts' greatest vehicle (not saying much, unfortunately) - a rich script, colorfully tacky sets and cinematography, "timely" subject matter, and a hilarious performance from Knotts that will surprise anyone uncertain of his ability to pick films worthy of his talent. This was Don Knotts' only foray into "adult" comedy, and it is rather racy, all things considered, and compares favorably to the 1950s Tashlin and Jerry Lewis films.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A COMEDY CLASSIC THAT WAS AHEAD OF ITS TIME!
Review: I discovered this fine film as a result of a friend and I was so grateful to her. Don Knotts is one of the most underrated comic actors of our time and this is perhaps his finest film with the notable excetion of "Mr.Limpet."

Aside from the excellent comedy of Knotts and great performances from classic character actors, the film can boast that it was one of the first comedy satires dealing with sex, censorship and media perception.

Abner Peacock (Knotts) is a nerdy but decent guy who tries to save his failing bird magazine and is tricked into publishing a racy magazine with scantily clad women. When he's brought to trial on charges he wins and becomes the symbol for the sexual freedom of a generation. Even though he's not movie star handsome like his obvious real-life counterpart, Hugh Hefner, Abner is seen as sexy to women and is envied by men because society needs an outlet for its frustrations. The media makes Abner the Love God.

This film would be PG by our standards today. In the end, it extols many of the values that we've sadly lost. It is funny, smart and has a theme song that will have you tapping your foot days after you've watched it. "The Love God" is a little masterpiece.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Horrible Film. What A Piece Of ImMorrla Garbage
Review: I rented this at our local video store thinking it would be good because it had Don Knotts in it. But it wasn't good at all.
The Movie was pure garbage vulgar, Immoral, not a family film. Not even an Adult Film. This was an immoral piece of garbage. I mean who wants to see such a vulgar film that is full on ideas about evil things.

Pile Of Garbage.

Save your money and buy one of the other 4 Don Knotts comedy Classics Instead!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An underrated film from an underrated performer
Review: Sooner or later someone is going to rediscover Don Knotts, a comic genius who made four really funny films in the sixties: The Reluctant Astronaut, The Ghost and Mr. Chicken, The Shakiest Gun in the West, and The Love God. Honestly, Laurel and Hardy have nothing on Don Knotts in terms of comic timing and delivery, and he could teach Jim Carrey a thing or two about discipline and creating a character. This one has a great cast. Edmund O'Brien is great as a seedy girlie magazine publisher, and Anne Francis is so lovely that after it was over I sent her my very first fan letter. This is the most satirical of Knotts' films, and satire isn't always laugh-out loud funny, but even when the material falters a little, watching what Knotts does with it is pure pleasure. Abner Peacock is a great comic creation, a true innocent in a world of hustlers and exploiters, an American Candide caught in the culture war that continues to this day.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ONE OF THE BEST COMEDIES!!!!
Review: Take an outstanding comedy writer, Nat Hiken, add an outstanding comedy acter, Don Knotts, and you have one of the top comedy movies of all time. The courtroom scene was so funny that I not only laughed out loud, but there were tears in my eyes. They don't make films this good anymore!! Get this one!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don Knotts gets swept up in the sexual revolution
Review: The Love God is not only hilarious, it's a bit of an eye-opener, as well. I was perplexed when I saw the PG-13 rating attached to the film just before it began. For one thing, you don't expect a classic Don Knotts movie to be PG-13 material; for another thing, I don't remember ever seeing an old movie retroactively being given a PG-13 rating. Don't get me wrong here. The Love God is quite tame by today's standards, but it deals with sexuality and censorship in a surprisingly upfront way. I was amazed just to hear the word sex repeated multiple times throughout the film - obviously, the sexual revolution of the 60s was in full swing by 1969, but it's almost surreal to see a Don Knotts film that is ostensibly about that very subject. I should make it clear that this film, while taking some amazing detours through the free and sexually conscious streets of town, does find its way back home to small-town America and its traditional values. Virtue and honor are put to the test here, but they prove equal to the task in the end.

Poor Abner Peacock (Don Knotts) is the fourth-generation publisher of the Peacock, a magazine devoted to birds. We see Peacock show off his personal bird-calling skills at the beginning of the movie, but he can't whistle up the tens of thousands of dollars he needs to save his magazine. Enter one Osborn Tremaine (Edmond O'Brien), notorious peddler of smutty magazines; his investment saves the magazine, and in a matter of hours Peacock is happily on his way to the jungles of Brazil to try to get the first photograph ever of the world's most elusive bird. Tremaine, in Abner's convenient absence, quickly changes the Peacock into a girlie magazine; when the authorities come calling with an indictment for peddling smut, it is poor, ignorant Abner who finds himself on trial. His arrest sparks waves of protest all over the world, and the trial is transformed into a fight over freedom of speech. The end result of it all is to make Abner Peacock the most famous swinger of his day; he's got more mojo working than Austin Powers, despite the fact that poor Abner is still the same old shy, regular little guy with a sweet and innocent girl waiting for him back in Peacock City. Knowing the next issue of the Peacock is going to sell like hotcakes thanks to all the publicity, Tremaine is forced to bring in an outside investor by the name of J. Charles Twilight (better known as "Icepick" Charlie). He also hires publicity-craving Lisa LaMonica (Anne Francis) to be the new editor. So many powerful forces working in tandem compel Peacock to hang around a while, and he settles into the life of a famous playboy. It is hilarious to watch the progression of shy Abner into the world's most famous swinger - and those outfits!

Dear, sweet Rosa Ellen still waits for him back at home, but Peacock seems unable to leave his lavish new lifestyle; indeed, his business partners are pretty darn determined that he not leave because it would mean the end of the fortune they are making off his image. I think the movie ends wonderfully; you pretty much know how things are going to turn out in the end, but The Love God has a pretty effective way of taking you to your expected destination.

This has to be one of the first movies to satirize the hot-button issues of morality and censorship. The very premise of the film speaks directly to the audiences of today. You won't find the sort of behavior, nudity, and language of today's films here, but The Love God really was ahead of its time in terms of the issues it addressed. I assume the nature of the discussion accounts for the PG-13 rating attached to it now, but rest assured you or your kids won't see a single thing here that they haven't seen long, long ago - probably on network television. This isn't Don Knotts' best film, but it gives you Don Knotts as you've probably never seen him before - and the film is very, very funny.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Absolutely Hilarious!!!
Review: This film is absolutely hilarious for reasons too numerous to list. I can't remember a time when I laughed so hard! Don Knotts rocks!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Absolutely Hilarious!!!
Review: This film is absolutely hilarious for reasons too numerous to list. I can't remember a time when I laughed so hard! Don Knotts rocks!!!


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates