Knock on Wood (1954)



Hollywood.com Says
User Ratings Average
MRQE Metric



Rate this Movie
Bullet Arrow Showtimes & Tickets
Bullet Arrow Trailers & Clips
Bullet Arrow Photos
Bullet Arrow Review
Bullet Arrow Cast Interviews
Bullet Arrow Premiere Video
Bullet Arrow Official Site
Bullet Arrow Fan Sites
Bullet Arrow Forums
Bullet Arrow
AllPosters.com


Advertisement



Synopsis:
With the exception of the brilliant The Court Jester, Knock on Wood must rank as the best of Danny Kaye's movie vehicles. Capitalizing on the star's recent successful engagement in London, the film casts Kaye as a neurotic American ventriloquist performing in England and Europe. In a parody of the 1946 thriller Dead of Night, Kaye is unable to control the words coming out of his dummy, resulting in a near-nervous breakdown. On the advice of his manager (David Burns), Kaye seeks out the help of a psychiatrist, who turns out to be beautiful Mai Zetterling. But first, he heads to a local repair shop to pick up one of his dummies. What Kaye doesn't know is that a set of stolen blueprints for a top-secret weapon have been secreted into his dummy's head. Before he knows what's happening, our hero is up to his ears in spies, counterspies, and corpses. Falsely accused of murder, Kaye spends the rest of the film adopting one disguise after another to elude both the authorities and the various enemy agents roaming about. Filled to overflowing with musical and comedy highlights, Knock on Wood includes the famous "under the table" bit wherein Kaye finds himself literally between two warring spy factions, and a climactic ballet sequence reminiscent of (and superior to) the comic-opera finale of Kaye's Wonder Man (1945). And of course, the audience is treated to the tongue-twisting patter songs written for Kaye by his wife Sylvia Fine.

~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Comments


*Indicates Mandatory

Full Cast & Crew

Theatrical Release
4/1/1954
Director Credit
Melvin Frank Director
Norman Panama Director
Cast Credit
Philip Van Zandt Brutchik
Donald Lawton French Stage Manager
Kenneth Hunter Old Man
Phil Tully Irishman
Winifred Harris English Woman
Alphonse Martell Policeman
John Alderson Bobby
Christopher Olsen Danny Jr
Helen Chapman Zelda
Carl Milletaire 1st Trenchcoat Man
Noel Drayton Little Man
Rex Evans Customer
Helen Dickson Woman in Shower
Eric Wilton Doorman
Genevieve Aumont Airline Stewardess
Danny Kaye Jerry Morgan / Papa Morgan
Mai Zetterling Ilse Nordstrom
Torin Thatcher Langston
David Burns Marty Brown
Leon Askin Gromeck
Abner Biberman Papinek
Gavin Gordon Car Salesman
Otto Waldis Brodnik
Stefan Gyergay Dr. Kreuger
Diana Adams Princess
Patricia Denise Mama Morgan
Virginia Huston Audrey
Paul England Chief Inspector Wilton
Johnstone White Langston's Secretary
Henry Kleinbach 2nd Trenchcoat Man
Lewis Martin Inspector Cranford
Production Credits Credit
Norman Panama Producer
Melvin Frank Producer
Art Department Credit
Sam Comer Set Designer
Hal Pereira Art Director
Lloyd Henry Bumstead Art Director
Ray Moyer Set Designer
Choreography Credit
Milton Greenwald Choreography
Film Camera Credit
Daniel L. Fapp Cinematographer
Production Management Credit
Francisco Day first Assistant Director
Visual Effects Credit
John P. Fulton Special Effects
Wardrobe Hair Makeup Credit
Edith Head Costume Designer

Rovi Data Solutions, Inc.
- Portions of Content Provided by Rovi Data Solutions © 2009 Rovi Data Solutions, Inc.



Advertisement