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The Glass Bottom Boat (1966) is a fascinating cultural artifact that sits at the intersection of Golden Age Hollywood charm and the frantic, high-tech anxiety of the Space Age. While the specific file you're referencing—the —offers the highest possible fidelity for this 1966 classic, the film itself is much "deeper" than its slapstick surface suggests. 1. A Collision of Genres
Because of Tashlin’s animation background, the film feels like a live-action cartoon. You’ll notice:
Directed by Frank Tashlin, a former Looney Tunes animator, the film is a surreal blend of and Cold War spy spoof .
If you're looking for more info on or other Doris Day comedies from this era, let me know!
It features early-career performances from Dom DeLuise and Paul Lynde , whose chemistry as bumbling investigators provides some of the film's most enduring laughs.
Provides the "straight man" grounding as the research lead, Bruce Templeton.
The Glass Bottom Boat (1966) is a fascinating cultural artifact that sits at the intersection of Golden Age Hollywood charm and the frantic, high-tech anxiety of the Space Age. While the specific file you're referencing—the —offers the highest possible fidelity for this 1966 classic, the film itself is much "deeper" than its slapstick surface suggests. 1. A Collision of Genres
Because of Tashlin’s animation background, the film feels like a live-action cartoon. You’ll notice:
Directed by Frank Tashlin, a former Looney Tunes animator, the film is a surreal blend of and Cold War spy spoof .
If you're looking for more info on or other Doris Day comedies from this era, let me know!
It features early-career performances from Dom DeLuise and Paul Lynde , whose chemistry as bumbling investigators provides some of the film's most enduring laughs.
Provides the "straight man" grounding as the research lead, Bruce Templeton.
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