The Monkey's Uncle is a 1965 American comedy film starring Tommy Kirk as genius college student Merlin Jones and Annette Funicello (former Mouseketeer from The Mickey Mouse Club) as his girlfriend, Jennifer. The title plays on the idiom "monkey's uncle" and refers to a chimpanzee named Stanley, Merlin's legal "nephew" (because of a legal arrangement resulting from an experiment to raise Stanley as a human) who otherwise has little relevance to the plot. Jones invents a man-powered airplane and a sleep-learning system.[3][4] The film is a sequel to 1964's The Misadventures of Merlin Jones.

The Monkey's Uncle
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRobert Stevenson
Written byTom August
Helen August
Produced byRon Miller
Walt Disney
StarringTommy Kirk
Annette Funicello
Leon Ames
Frank Faylen
Arthur O'Connell
CinematographyEdward Colman
Edited byCotton Warburton
Music byBuddy Baker
Production
company
Distributed byBuena Vista Distribution
Release date
  • August 18, 1965 (1965-08-18) (Los Angeles)[1]
Running time
87 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$4,000,000 (US/Canada rentals)[2]

Plot

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The film starts in court, where Merlin Jones legally adopts his monkey, Stanley.

Midvale College is told that a wealthy man, Mr. Astorbilt, will give a large donation, but he has a strange request—he challenges the school to build a man-powered flying machine. If they succeed by a certain date, they get the donation, otherwise it will go to a rival school.

Jones designs a lightweight airplane, powered by a propeller driven by bicycle pedals. Recognizing that even his football-jock friends won't be strong enough for such a feat, he develops a strength elixir (based on adrenaline), which should give the power that a man would need to get off the ground.

To get the jocks' support, he creates "an honest way to cheat", adapting the recently discovered sleep-learning method to help them pass a particularly hard history course. Once the jocks are asleep, a timer starts a phonograph player, with the sound of Merlin's girlfriend, Jennifer, reading their lessons to them. However, this backfires in class—asked to give an oral report, the jocks speak, but Jennifer's voice comes out. It eventually works out in the students' favor.

Jones gets the jocks' help, and the great day comes. The pilot drinks the elixir, then pedals off into the sky, winning the contest, but the "wealthy donor" is last seen fleeing from men in white coats, who want to take him back to the local mental hospital.

Cast

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Production notes

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The Misadventures of Merlin Jones had been a surprise hit, earning over $4 million in rentals for Disney and prompting a sequel.[5] The film was announced in March 1964.[6]

This production marks both Tommy Kirk's and Annette Funicello's last film for the studio. Mark Goddard, who plays Haywood (and is best known as Major Don West on television's Lost in Space), made his feature film debut in this film.

Kirk had been fired from Disney due to his homosexuality and by this stage had a drug problem. "Speed, uppers, diet pills— and I got thin as a rake, and I was high all the time," he recalled. "It was a terrible period in my life. So I can understand the: studio letting me go." The studio recalled him to male The Monkey's Uncle. He said "On both of the Merlin Jones things, I was very high on pills. One time I blacked out and fainted doing a scene. I was still hung over from the night before; I was doing a scene and I had to do some kind of a take where I held my breath, and I simply blacked out and fell to the floor."[7]

The screen credit for writing reads, "Screenplay by Tom and Helen August", which were pseudonyms used by Alfred Lewis Levitt and Helen Levitt, two writers who were blacklisted.[8] The home-video release of the film restored the Levitts' credits.[9]

Funicello (billed as "Annette") performs the title track with The Beach Boys over the opening credits. The song was written by the Disney song writing duo, Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman. Funicello recalled: "They were just beginning. They were wonderful guys and I feel fortunate that I was kind of in on the ground floor. We even worked together performing at Disneyland. Little did any of us know how successful they would become!"[10] She did not know whose idea it had been to bring in the Beach Boys but felt it was "a stroke of brilliance. As silly as the song is in places, it really does rock and with the Beach Boys' amazing four-part harmonies, I could sing it without echo."[11] She regarded singing with the group as the highlight of her film career at Disney.[11]

Shortly after making the film, Funicello married her agent. This would be the last film she made for Disney until Lots of Luck in 1985.[12]

Music

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The title song, written by the Sherman Brothers, is performed by Funicello, with the Beach Boys providing background vocals.[13] This song was covered in 2006 by Devo 2.0 on the album Disneymania, Volume 4.

Reception

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Critical

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Richard F. Shepard of The New York Times described The Monkey's Uncle as "an amusing film made with artless artfulness... It all falls into bright, colorful and innocuous non sequitur and, in an hour and a half, you are through, mildly diverted and unburdened by message."[3] Variety noted that the film, "like its predecessor, depends on gimmicks and some nutty situations, which provide mild amusement."[14] Margaret Harford of the Los Angeles Times said that the film "disappoints as a lineal descendant of Disney's Absent Minded Professor but it can hardly miss with the young set."[15] The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote that the film was "perhaps slightly funnier for being less extravagant than its predecessor".[16]

Box office

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The film was a box-office success, and earned $4,000,000.[17] Filmink argued this proved "the public didn't care" about Kirk's arrest for drug possession in late 1964.[18]

Citations

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  1. ^ "The Monkey's Uncle - Details". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  2. ^ This figure consists of anticipated rentals accruing distributors in North America. See "Big Rental Pictures of 1965". Variety. 5 January 1966. p. 6.
  3. ^ a b Shepard, Richard F. (August 19, 1965). "Monkey's Uncle". The New York Times. 35.
  4. ^ Turner Classic Movies http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title.jsp?stid=83871
  5. ^ Disney Announces Diverse Schedule: Doris Day Winner (Again); Ill Wind a Boon to Actors, Scheuer, Philip K. Los Angeles Times, 4 Jan 1965: B7.
  6. ^ "Rex Harrison Will Do Film Dr. Dolittle: Stella Stevens in 'Stormfire'; How to Keep Oscar in Family". Scheuer, Philip K. Los Angeles Times, 23 Mar 1964: C19.
  7. ^ Valley, Richard (1993). "Just an Average Joe (Hardy): An Interview with Tommy Kirk". Scarlet Street (10): 60–69 at p 66. Retrieved October 12, 2021.
  8. ^ Johnson, Ted (April 3, 1997). "WGA Corrects Blacklist Credits". Variety. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  9. ^ "The Monkey's Uncle". Disney. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  10. ^ Santoli, Lorraine (Spring 1993). "Annette - As Ears Go By". Disney News Magazine. p. 18.
  11. ^ a b Funicello, Annette; Bashe, Patricia Romanowski (1994). A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes: My Story. Hyperion. p. 134. ISBN 9780786860203.
  12. ^ Funicello, Annette; Bashe, Patricia Romanowski (1994). A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes: My Story. Hyperion. p. 146. ISBN 9780786860203.
  13. ^ Funicello, Annette. "At Bikini Beach". AllMusic. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
  14. ^ "Film Reviews: The Monkey's Uncle". Variety. May 26, 1965. p. 14.
  15. ^ Harford, Margaret (July 17, 1965). "'Monkey's Uncle': Teens Will Go Ape". Los Angeles Times. Part III, p. 8.
  16. ^ "The Monkey's Uncle". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 32 (379): 125. August 1965.
  17. ^ Vagg, Stephen (9 September 2019). "The Cinema of Tommy Kirk". Diabolique Magazine.
  18. ^ Vagg, Stephen (13 December 2024). "Beach Party Movies Part Three: Over exposure". Filmink. Retrieved 13 December 2024.

Cited works

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