Abbott and Costello in the Foreign Legion

1950

Adventure / Comedy

2
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 58% · 500 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.3/10 10 3068 3.1K

Plot summary

Jonesy and Lou are in Algeria looking for a wrestler they are promoting. Sergeant Axmann tricks them into joining the Foreign Legion, after which they discover Axmann's collaboration with the nasty Sheik Hamud El Khalid. Bits include Lou's mirage sightings, one a New York newsboy ("they gave me a bad corner").



December 09, 2023 at 07:45 AM

Director

Charles Lamont

Top cast

Bud Abbott as Bud Jones
Jeff Chandler as Narrator
Ann Robinson as Bathing Suit Girl in Mirage
Dan Seymour as Josef
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
731.31 MB
1280*944
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 19 min
Seeds ...
1.33 GB
1464*1080
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 19 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by classicsoncall 5 / 10

"Now gentlemen, if you just step through that door you'll be taken care of."

Abbott and Costello created havoc in most branches of the U.S. military, so now they take their brand of mayhem to foreign shores, Algiers in particular, as members of the French Foreign Legion. The film opens uncharacteristically with a wrestling match of all things; the boys happen to be the managers of Abdullah the Assassin, the North African champion. Unwilling to take a dive, Abdullah decides to head back home, followed by Bud and Lou, who stand to lose their five thousand dollar investment in the grappler.

When Lou accidentally wins a six girl harem, the boys find themselves in trouble, unable to pay, and earning the outrage of Sheik Hamud. Tricked into joining the Legion by Sgt. Axmann (Walter Slezak), the boys proceed to tear up the desert in their own inimitable style. With the desert backdrop, the stage is set for some clever mirages, along with a gag involving a fish with false teeth. Fans of the boys will know the fish routine was borrowed from a frog in earlier movies.

Doglas Dumbrille is on hand once again as the all purpose Arab villain, and the pretty female chores are handled by Patricia Medina as a French Intelligence officer working undercover. Wrestling fans will recognize Wee Willie Davis as Abdullah; his opponent is none other than Tor Johnson, not as recognizable here as he would become in his more stellar efforts - "Plan Nine From Outer Space" and "The Beast of Yucca Flats". As expected, Lou is usually at the bottom when it comes to the wrestling pile ups, and when in an upright position, tries to have fun kissing the harem girls. Hey, he's not so dumb!

Reviewed by moonspinner55 6 / 10

A&C comedy is a bit sloppy but still good fun...

Abbott and Costello get tricked into joining the Foreign Legion; all they want is to get a brawny wrestler out of Algeria. Some good, hearty laughs in this A&C feature--their 26th film--which has surprisingly good production values, but feels a little rushed and has sloppy overdubbing. The wrestlers (William 'Wee Willie' Davis and Ed Wood's favorite actor Tor Johnson) are an added treat, and Costello as usual steals all his scenes. True, by this time the comedy duo were just relying on their proved shtick, but the movie is fast-paced and is much funnier and more tolerable than the Lewis and Martin pictures from this era. **1/2 from ****

Reviewed by bkoganbing 5 / 10

Covered the ground before

Bud and Lou had previously visited the North African desert in Lost in a Harem, one of the loan out films they did for MGM in the middle 40s. I guess their home studio Universal wanted to get in the action also, so they got a second engagement in the Sahara.

The boys are wrestling managers in search of their wrestler Abdullah who's taken a powder and left them holding the bag to the tune of $5000.00 to the syndicate back in Brooklyn. Of course, true to form they get themselves involved in some of the local power struggles and find themselves enlisting in the Foreign Legion.

Helping them along are such performers as Walter Slezak as the Foreign Legion sergeant, Douglass Dumbrille as the villainous sheik and the lovely Patricia Medina as the spy from French Intelligence.

Douglass Dumbrille was in fact their nemesis in Lost in a Harem. Dumbrille, who could be a real villain as well as a comic one, got caught up in their comedy much more in Lost in a Harem. Here, he's just a bad guy.

Sharp-eared fans might recognize the voice of Universal Pictures stalwart Jeff Chandler as the narrator in the beginning.

The film also borrows from the Road to Morocco quite liberally. In fact it's ground that's been covered before.

I guess the creative minds at Universal were getting a bit stalled.

Read more IMDb reviews

2 Comments

NotThaCraw_ThaCRAW profile
1
NotThaCraw_ThaCRAW December 09, 2023 at 08:33 am

Excellent! Thanks heaps!

Bungleby_Joyce profile
2
Bungleby_Joyce December 09, 2023 at 06:30 am

Classic comedy! MANY thanks :)