Video&Audio Camera&Photo DVD Movies
Road to Singapore dvd movie.
Home » DVD Movies » Actors/Actresses » J » Orher A » Jerry Colonna

Orher A • Joan Sims
Orher A • John Drew Barrymore
Orher A • James Wong
Orher A • John Mackay
Orher A • Jan Sterling
Orher A • John Diehl
Orher A • James Dunn
Orher A • John Allen Nelson
Orher A • Jean Yanne
Orher A • James Ellison
Orher A • John Ratzenberger
Orher A • Jackie Guerra

Road to Singapore
buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
Road to Singapore List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $12.99
You Save: $1.99

Features
 Black & White
 Closed-captioned
 DVD-Video
 Full Screen
 NTSC

In Theaters : 22 March, 1940
DVD Release : 05 March, 2002
[ + Zoom ]   [ Buy Now ] DVD : Usually ships in 24 hours
Road to Singapore description
Here's the first trip in what would become one of Paramount Pictures' most profitable film series of the '40s. When this comedy was released in 1940, Bing Crosby and Bob Hope had separately achieved stardom, though Crosby was an established power and Hope still a hot comedian new to movies. In fact, Hope is billed third in Road to Singapore, below Der Bingle and Dorothy Lamour. The script establishes what would be a constant in the Road series: a ramshackle plot, a handful of songs, and plenty of irreverent banter between the two boys. Crosby plays Josh Mallon, scion of a wealthy family, who prefers the vagabond life to his stuffy family; his pal Ace Lannigan (Hope) is only too happy to escape. They end up sharing a waterfront shack in Singapore and vying for the affections of a sarong-clad local (Lamour), amidst stabs at conning the natives with a dubious elixir variously known as "Spot-O" (stain remover) and "Scram-O" (cockroach killer). Singapore isn't as loose as some of the wacky subsequent entries in the series, but it already shows Crosby and Hope grooving to each other's perfectly timed burlesque rhythms in scenes that clearly depart from the script. They specialized in muttered asides, show-biz in-jokes, and gratuitous insults--and this one's got a song and dance number with an ocarina. No wonder it became a franchise. --Robert Horton
Road to Singapore Customer Reviews
  1     2     3  
♥♥♥♥ singapore???
I'm typing this as I'm watching the movie. The songs and dance were really good but the settings were very peculiar. I can't very well tell if they were in some mexican village or Singapore. Mexican cantina or spanish-sounding store owners were far from being realistic in Singapore in the 40s!

However, the movie itself is very entertaining if one can overlook the strange settings!
  1     2     3