Sail a Crooked Ship (1961) Poster

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7/10
Crooks At Sea
bkoganbing18 May 2006
Burglar Ernie Kovacs is robbing an employment place that hires men for construction or in this case destruction jobs and he answers a phone call from Robert Wagner. Wagner has a job for these guys to start demolishing a fleet of beat up old freighters from the World War II era merchant marine. Kovacs however hears the idea and comes up with a plan to steal one of these old tubs and he assembles a group of his peers to help. In the process they kidnap Wagner and his sweetheart Dolores Hart.

Along for the ride with Kovacs and the gang are his long suffering girl friend Carolyn Jones and his nephew Frankie Avalon. Avalon was at the height of his popularity and his presence guaranteed a profit for the film from the teenage trade alone. He sings a nice song in the film Opposites Attract more in Bobby Darin's style than his own.

Assembled for the caper are such scene stealing characters as Jesse White, Sid Tomack, Harvey Lembeck, and Frank Gorshin. Mix this group together with Kovacs and Jones and you got a pretty funny film.

Before her days as Morticia Adams when a French syllable would drive Gomez into heat, Carolyn Jones was a pretty funny woman, kookie and funny in a Shirley MacLaine way. Her and Kovacs have what's best described as a Nathan Detroit-Adelaide long suffering romance as she can't quite get him to the altar.

Sail A Crooked Ship was the last film for both Ernie Kovacs and Sid Tomack, both would leave us all too soon shortly after this film was finished. Especially Kovacs, his comic genius influenced a whole generation of comedians, the long running Laugh-in Show of Rowan and Martin should have been dedicated to him.

Dolores Hart two years after this film left Hollywood for a different reason. Her work on the film right before Sail A Crooked Ship, Francis of Assisi started her thinking about religion and she became a nun. As of this writing she's prioress of a convent in Connecticut.

It's a pretty funny film, the idea is that the gang sail the ship to Boston Harbor from the Hudson where it is docked and rob a bank there and make the getaway by sea. How many bank robbers make a sea getaway? Of course much happens along the way and things work out a bit differently than as planned.

Funniest moment, the ship steering Frankie Avalon during the hurricane as he yells for Robert Wagner, the only real seaman aboard. Worth seeing it for that alone.
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maybe the second funniest movie ever made
dbeckowitz11 August 2002
. This is a side splitting laugh fest. Probably the best thing Kovaks ever did. And it was smart too. Even subtle in places. And Delores Hart ( a cross between Sue Lyon and Grace Kelly) sent me rocketing into puberty. And then, she went and became a catholic nun. What a bring down.

But HEY ! Robert Wagner was in this little gem. And I understand he currently has a gig with the IMDb. Maybe he can bear some influence, . . . and GET THIS THING ON TAPE SO WE CAN ALL SEE IT AGAIN.

Oh yeah. The first funniest film: . . . His Girl Friday. .
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3/10
How could this cast actually manage to make me yawn?
Lucky_Eddie23 September 2008
I couldn't believe Maltin gave this film only 2 1/2 stars. With this cast? Then I saw the movie (on TCM). Maltin was being generous. Two stars, tops. Robert Wagner showed why comedy was not his forte. The character of his girlfriend (played by Dolores Hart) was perhaps the most annoying ever in a comedy. Frankie Avalon showed why he belonged in the Beach Blanket movies, not here. His steering bit during the hurricane was funny at first, but they beat it to death. While I'm a big fan of Ernie Kovacs, he was flat here. And the fabulous Frank Gorshin was wasted. At least Carolyn Jones was as sexy as always. Ignore who's in the cast and lower your expectations and you may manage to be mildly amused.
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4/10
Water Under the Bridge
wes-connors28 September 2008
Seafaring young Robert Wagner (as Gilbert Barrows) wants to impress pretty blonde Dolores Hart (as Elinor Harrison); so, he innocently takes her on a cruise with a gang of bank robbers, led by disearnest Ernie Kovacs (as Bugsy "The Captain" Foglemeyer). Mr. Wagner thinks Mr. Kovacs and crew are experienced sailors; but, they prove to be the gang that couldn't sail straight. Ms. Hart and curvy bad-girl Carolyn Jones (as Virginia) get tipsy. Frankie Avalon (as Rodney) swings, sings, and twirls. Frank Gorshin, Jesse White, Harvey Lembeck, and Sid Tomack are all aboard.

Kovacs is good (unexpectedly and unfortunately, this was his last screen appearance). Some of the others in the cast are curiously ordinary. A hurricane gets the cast wet. Mr. Avalon is fairly successful, focusing on light comedy; he was, at time, successfully transitioning to a movie career. On the other hand, Avalon's singing of "Opposites Attract" reveals his less successful foray into the swingin' Sinatra arena. The song, and a version of the "Sail a Crooked Ship" title were non-hit tracks on an Avalon LP. The film's comic highlight may be Wagner's use of Hart's bra as a slingshot. It's that funny.

**** Sail a Crooked Ship (1961) Irving Brecher ~ Robert Wagner, Ernie Kovacs, Frankie Avalon
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10/10
Memorable when I was 8.
lindy-2314 September 1999
I saw this film once 36 years ago when I was 8 years old. I remember watching it and seemingly laughing all the way through it at the antics of these crazy guys who steal a ship and sail it to America to rob a bank. They have a plan to distract the bank staff by one of them collapsing with a make believe heart attack, leaving the other members of the gang to make good with the cash. Unfortunately the day they arrive in America is a bank holiday (and apparently the only day they can pull off the robbery. The rest of the details are bit hazy, but the thing is this film made such an impression on me that 36 years later I can still recall watching it and laughing until I was nearly sick. I would dearly love to see it again, even at the risk of bitter dissapointment.
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10/10
Robert Wagner, Dolores Hart, Frankie Avalon & Ernie Kovacs in a really funny and all around entertaining film
RogerMooreTheBestBond5 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this movie probably 20 years ago. I remember liking it and I remember Frankie Avalon spinning around on the ship wheel! I just purchased it on DVD and was so happy I did. It was as good or even better than I remember. The story basically follows Robert Wagner who wants to fix up a ship, to show his father in law to be, that they are worth salvaging instead of scrapping. Dolores Hart plays his wife to be who is always telling him to wait until they are married! He ends up hiring Ernie Kovacs and crew to fix it up for him. He is not aware that Kovacs is a crook, a bad one at that. His crew includes his innnocent nephew played by Frankie Avalon, Frank Gorshin, the brains, Jesse White, the man with the gun & Harvey Lembeck. Carolyn Jones play Kovacs girlfriend. Kovacs has the idea to fix the ship, take it to Boston, rob a bank, and then make their get away on the ship. The majority of the film takes place on the ship and there are so many good scenes. Robert Wagner and the crew take a lot of abuse from the storm they run into on the trip. Wagner takes a lot of abuse from the water from the storm. That water truly looked like ocean water! Anyway, give this movie a chance, it's really worth buying.
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8/10
This was heading towards an iceberg, and then the hurricane happened....
mark.waltz14 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad River!" takes an interesting turn after a rather auspicious opening that takes too long to get the plot going and let you know who all the characters are. Right off the bat, I knew I'd love Carolyn Jones, even if all you see of her in her first seen is her shapely legs. Then there's Robert Wagner as the nephew of a steel magnet who wants to get rid of a bunch of abandoned ships rotting on the Hudson rather than fix them up and let them set sail again. Wagner wants to prove that with a little bit of work, they are still sea worthy and decides to prove it to his uncle even if the man he gets on the phone to help him repair the ships is actually robbing the joint! That man is Ernie Kovacs (with Jones as his tough talking girlfriend), and this leads to a journey out to sea that the large cast of character comics will never forget.

In addition to Wagner, Kovacs and Hart, there's also Delores Hart as Wagner's girlfriend, brought along for the ride, and ending up in a delicious cat fight with Jones whose lipstick is found smeared on Wagner. Cool and blonde, she's got as much cat in her as Jones does, yet cats fight one minute then party and play together the next. Frankie Avalon not only gets to sing but sail the ship as well in the most hysterical way. Jesse White also finds himself in an awkward position during the hurricane as he keeps being pulled up and down a steel beam.

The best dialog is the interaction between Kovacs and the bespeckled Frank Gorshin, witty and intelligent, yet with verbal swings taken at each other that are more damaging than the physical swings between Jones and Hart. This is a lot better than I thought it would be, well written with interesting characters and fun performances, especially by Jones and Kovacs. Avalon gets to sing too which is also a big plus. Eye rolls at the beginning turned into big goofy grins for me as the film went on, and if it takes a crooked ship to get laughs, then let's zig-zag away!
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