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If one can stand Abbott and Costellos lowbrow escapades personally, I cant Abbott and Costello Meet Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is a fair entry. Some of the jokey slapstick skulkings-about, particularly the scenes at the wax museum, are even engaging once in awhile. However, the plot seems to consist of nothing more than comic running arounds, which get dragged out far longer than they should. There are some bad puns playing on the confusion between Jekyll/Hyde and Hyde Park. The film even manages to wind the suffragette cause into the storyline, although being an Abbott and Costello film it naturally has the women dancing. Abbott and Costello Meet Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is interesting to see for the revisions it makes to Robert Louis Stevensons The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886). The film adds a mildly indecent touch of incest with Jekylls reason for becoming Hyde partially being about defending his niece from sexual advances a theme that uncannily prefigures Forbidden Planet (1956). The Jekyll/Hyde story was always a modern reworking of the werewolf myth, with the mad scientists laboratory standing in lieu of the full moon and silver bullets. This version takes Jekyll/Hyde far closer to his werewolf ancestor than most other versions in the prehensile design of the makeup and, in particular, the last scene that has the Hyde monster being passed on to a line of bobbies via a series of bites. Abbott and Costellos other films of genre note are: Hold That Ghost (1941), The Time of Their Lives (1946), Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948), Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951), Jack and the Beanstalk (1952), Abbott and Costello Go to Mars (1953) and Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy (1955).
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