Doctor Dolittle

1967

Action / Adventure / Comedy / Family / Fantasy / Musical / Romance

17
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 29% · 21 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 57% · 50K ratings
IMDb Rating 6.1/10 10 10329 10.3K

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Plot summary

A veterinarian who can communicate with animals travels abroad to search for a giant sea snail.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
October 05, 2019 at 12:52 AM

Top cast

Geoffrey Holder as William Shakespeare X
Richard Attenborough as Albert Blossom
Samantha Eggar as Emma Fairfax
Anthony Newley as Matthew Mugg
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1.32 GB
1280*576
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
2 hr 32 min
Seeds 8
2.38 GB
1920*864
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
2 hr 32 min
Seeds 18

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by hitchcockthelegend 5 / 10

Flits between maudlin and joy at regular intervals.

Revisiting this one for the first time in what must be over 25 years, I was sort of surprised to find a double fold of emotions of it being both good and bad. I think the first thing that came to mind was that it's a wasted opportunity to make a truly classic fantasy musical. There is much going for it production wise, the sets, the colour, the cinematography, and the leading man ensure the film keeps its head above the murky water of averageville. Yet the good points are done down by a quite boring plot structure, the meandering pacing, and quite simply awful execution of very average songs by the supporting cast. Clocking in at over two and half hours long, it's not hard to see why critics of the time dubbed it Doctor Does Little.

Rex Harrison plays Dolittle with a sense of grace and charm, and allowing for the fact that he hadn't wanted to do the project in the first place, it's with much credit that he carries the film on his shoulders and makes it certainly worth a viewing at least once. Emma Fairfax (Samantha Eggar) is a pointless character that the film really didn't need, and Eggar's screech like timing with the tunes is almost unwatchable, yet even she isn't the worst thing in the film, that accolade falls to Anthony Newley who is unwatchable as Matthew Mugg. The film was nominated for 9 awards, wining just the one for best song (the chipper Talk To The Animals), which just goes to show the divisive nature of the piece, and in reality the film's appeal to children is understandable. Because it's cute enough with the various scenarios that the good doctor finds himself in, and of course the animals (both real and not). It's just such a shame that a film that nearly bankrupted its studio doesn't realise the potential it obviously had on the page. A frustrating 5/10.

Reviewed by JamesHitchcock 6 / 10

Has Not Kept Its Magic

In the year 1845 Doctor John Dolittle is an eccentric physician in the English village of Puddleby. (The picturesque village of Castle Combe, Wiltshire was the prime location, although through some special effects magic this inland village in a landlocked county has somehow acquired a seaport and coastline). He finds that he has a much greater rapport with animals than he does with his human patients, so he switches to veterinary medicine instead, a field in which he enjoys great success because of his unique ability to talk to animals. The story follows his adventures in the company of his friends Matthew Mugg (an Irish cats'-meat salesman) and Tommy Stubbins (a young schoolboy) as they go in search of the Great Pink Sea Snail.

Hugh Lofting's "Doctor Dolittle" books were a great favourite of mine during my childhood, so I absolutely loved this film when my parents took the family to see it. Of course, I was then blissfully unaware that the film had been savaged by most of the critics, that it had been a box-office flop and that difficulties in production had meant that the costs massively overran the original budget. (The cost of the finished film was $17 million; only four years earlier that would have made it the most expensive film ever made). My sisters and I were not, however, alone in our love of the film; the Academy nominated it for a "Best Picture" Oscar, a nomination which at the time seemed incomprehensible to most people in the film world.

So how has "Doctor Dolittle" held up over the fifty-odd years since it was made? Well, I can now see its flaws in a way which I could not as a child, although it certainly has its good points. Rex Harrison makes an attractively charismatic hero, even though he bears little resemblance to the short, plump Dolittle of the books. As he had shown in "My Fair Lady" he was not the world's greatest singer, but as in that film he manages to stroll his way through his songs, reciting rather than singing them. The first half of the film, set against some attractively photographed Wiltshire countryside and concentrating on Dolittle's dealings with his animal friends, is still enchanting.

Bricusse's songs are something of a mixed bag. Seeing the film again recently some of them, especially "My Friend the Doctor", "I've Never Seen Anything Like It" and, of course, "Talk to the Animals", took me instantly back to the world of my childhood. Others, however, are instantly forgettable and I have difficulty recalling them even though I only saw the film a few days ago.

Even as a child I couldn't see the point of Emma Fairfax, a character created for the film and not found in Lofting's books, and I'm none the wiser now. The producers presumably invented her because they wanted a female character and thought that Polynesia the parrot, Sophie the seal and Sheila the fox didn't count, but they never really found a proper role for Emma, who veers between love-interest for Matthew and love-interest for the Doctor himself without ever coming down on one side or the other. The concentration on Emma means that Tommy, the character I really identified with as he was a boy of my own age, plays a less important role here then he does in the books.

From my adult perspective, the film really goes downhill in the second half when the main characters leave England. I have to admit that, although Lofting, an ardent pacifist and animal-rights advocate, was in other respects a man of progressive views, he was also a racist, and some of this is carried across into the Sea Star scenes. When the Doctor and his friends find the Giant Pink Sea Snail the creature seems rather disappointing, making you wonder why they went all that way just to find it. Possibly this was a figment of Lofting's imagination that works better on the printed page than it does on screen.

The film still seems to have a following today, and turns up regularly on television, but for me it is a part of my childhood that (unlike, say Disney's "Jungle Book") has not retained its magic for me as an adult. 6/10

Reviewed by guswhovian 6 / 10

Not as bad as its reputation.

Cheery, fun musical from Fox. Dr. Dolittle has the ability to talk to animals, and takes Emma (Samantha Eggar) and Matthew (Anthony Newley) with him to find the mythical giant pink sea snail.

The songs are forgettable, but the cinematography, costumes and set design are good, and Rex Harrison is much less hammier than he was in My Fair Lady. The main problem with the film is Anthony Newley, who has one of the worst Irish accents afflicted upon the movie going public. Richard Attenborough has a nice cameo as a circus owner, and gets to sing the film's catchiest song. 3/5

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