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7/10
The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters (1954) ***
JoeKarlosi17 August 2004
If you don't enjoy this Bowery Boys flick, forget the others! THE BOWERY BOYS MEET THE MONSTERS is one of their best, and quite possibly THE best. Slip and Sach leave Manhattan for Long Island to ask the owners of a barren lot in their neighborhood if they might help turn it into a baseball field where Bowery kids can play. What the boys discover when they meet the eccentric owners at their eerie manor is that they're a couple of looney bird mad scientists, who quickly plan to use Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall as brain donors for their latest experiments.

This is not exactly ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN, but it was doubtless influenced by that team's "meet the monsters" series of movies. The Bowery Boys wind up confronting a creepy butler who transforms into a Jekyll/Hyde monster, a quirky robot, a savage gorilla, a sexy vampiress and a creaky old lady with a man-eating plant for a pet. Fans of The Three Stooges may recognize actual sequences "borrowed" from some of their shorts, as this was scripted by Stooge writers Edward Bernds and Elwood Ullman (and Bernds directed). As a result, the pacing is quick and the jokes are quite good. Highly recommended as one of your first Bowery Boys experiences, or if you're a fan of monster movies of the period.

*** out of ****
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7/10
Sach's Cranial Capacity
bkoganbing30 October 2010
The title The Bowery Boys Meet The Monsters is somewhat a misnomer since there are no real monsters in the film, just a weird family who'd like to make one. A 'temporary' one does appear, but you'll have to see the film to find out just exactly what I mean.

Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall ran into a few unworldly types in their various films. In this case what brings them to the house of the Gravesend family is they're representing the kids in the neighborhood who would like to use a vacant lot that the family owns for a baseball field.

What an interesting crew the Gravesends are, a kind of Vanderhof family from You Can't Take It With You on steroids. Three siblings, John Dehner, Ellen Corby, and Lloyd Corrigan all pursue their various scientific interests and their butler Grisson aka Gruesome played by Paul Wexler. Dehner and Corrigan have made tests on Huntz Hall and discover he's got the proper cranial capacity for a brain transplant. But they're fighting over whether it will be Dehner's gorilla or Corrigan's robot. Corby has a Venus Man-Trap plant that needs feeding and the black sheep of the family is Laura Mason who is a vampire who also needs feeding. With this family she gets leftovers.

The boys have their hands full with this crew and in one of their better films, the audience will have its laughs full.
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7/10
hilarious hijinks
vampi19606 September 2006
Growing up in new jersey i remember them showing the Bowery boys movies every Sunday,and being a monster fan this was my favorite Bowery boys movie,huntz hall and Leo gorcey want to turn a vacant lot into a baseball field for the Bowery kids so they will have a safer place to play baseball,actually called stick-ball in new jersey and new york. they find it is owned by some kooky Addams family types.there's a gorilla in a cage,a man eating plant,and a big clunky robot.its all slapstick hijinks when the Bowery boys show up,some people called this the poor mans Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein.though not as good its funny,especially Leo gorceys vocabulary.as a Bowery boys movie i would say its the best one.made by allied artists(earlier known as monogram pictures)the Bowery boys went through many name changes, the Clancy street boys,dead end kids,eastside kids,and later the Bowery boys.i give this vintage gem 7 out of 10.
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Bowery Boys #34
Michael_Elliott1 December 2010
Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters, The (1954)

*** (out of 4)

Fast-paced and fun entry in the series has Slip (Leo Gorcey) and Sach (Huntz Hall) traveling to a creepy mansion so that they can ask the owners if the Bowery kids can use their lot to play ball. Soon the duo are being held captive by the mad scientists who want to use their brains in some crazy experiments. After several so-so entries, it's good to see the series back with a winner as this one perfectly mixes the laughs with the various horror elements. This is clearly influenced by the Abbott and Costello flicks but that's not a bad thing especially when you get such a winning film. I really loved the fact that Bernds was back behind the camera as he kept the action coming very fast and helped keep everything moving. The laughs are plenty as we get countless good jokes including one that must have been seen by Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder as it would later be used in YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN. At one point the creepy butler tells Sach and Slip to "walk this way" which they do by mocking the way he's walking. Other funny jokes include the various horror elements including a sexy vampire, a living tree who eats humans, a killer gorilla and a robot who keeps losing its head. All of these elements are perfectly blended into the story and we also get a kind old lady who wants to feed the fat Slip to her tree. Both Gorcey and Hall are on the top of their game and deliver fine performances. The comedy here is pretty wide ranged as we get a lot of physical stuff but also a lot of one liners and both of them deliver just fine. Bernard Gorcey has a couple funny bits including a very good incident with the gorilla. Some might be disappointed that the "monsters" aren't Dracula, Frankenstein or the Mummy but it really doesn't matter because of how well everything works here. A lot of the jokes fall on their face but that's only because so many are flying around that your bound not to have them all work. Fans of the series will certainly find this to be a winner but I think even those who can't stand them will find this one entertaining.
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6/10
The Bowery Boys Meet the Addams Family
wes-connors30 October 2010
After a baseball breaks the window of "Louie's Sweet Shop", problem-solving leader Leo Gorcey (as Terrence "Slip" Mahoney) decides he his fellow "Bowery Boys" - accomplice Huntz Hall (as Horace "Sach" Jones), brother David "Condon" Gorcey (as Chuck), and Benny "Bennie" Bartlett (as Butch) - should get the kids playing in the Bowery off the streets and onto a safe vacant lot. Telephoning the lot-owning "Gravesend Family" at home, Mr. Gorcey wrangles an invitation to their mansion.

Mad scientist John Dehner (as Derek Gravesend) tells brother Lloyd Corrigan (as Anton) that Gorcey must be dim-witted, due to his mangling of the English language. The pair decide "Bowery Boys" would be perfect for head and brain transplanting experiments involving both a robot and a gorilla. Family matriarch Ellen Corby (as Amelia) would rather feed them to her man-eating tree. And, sexy vampire Laura Mason (as Francine) is looking forward to the arrival of new blood at the old house.

As a film series, "The Bowery Boys" looked like it was (generally) in an insurmountable rut, after a string of unsatisfactory films (see especially those from 1952). The quality was never all that dependable, but the movies did successfully entertain a targeted audience. While seeming to be finished, the series became sporadically good again, before the crashing in 1956.

"The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters" was one of the a high points; it was followed by the bad "Jungle Gents" (1954), then the good "Bowery to Bagdad" (1955). The title "The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters" suggests some inspiration from "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein" (1948), but this situation is more clearly swiped from Charles Addams' witty "The Addams Family" (begun as a comic strip in 1938), which spawned the memorable 1960s television series and imitations like this film.

****** The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters (6/6/54) Edward Bernds ~ Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Bernard Gorcey, Paul Wexler
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7/10
I always turn green his time of night,It matches my pajamas
sol121831 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** The "Bowery Boys" headed by Slip & Sach go out of their way to get the local kids a place to play stick-ball where they can't cause any damage to the community. In the breaking windows of local store owner especially those of Louie Dumbrowsky's Sweet Shop on the Bowery.

Finding a sandlot that belongs to the Gravesend Family Slip & Sach, after making an appointment, drives out to the Gravesend Mansion in far off Long Island to get the families approval in letting the kids play in their lot. What the boys find instead is a bunch of mixed nuts who become obsessed in using them for their crazed brain transplant experiments as well as being used as food for their pet a man eating Venus Fly-trap plant. There's also the lovely Francine Gravesend an honest to goodness vampire who hasn't had a good meal or bite in years and finds both Slip & Sach's blood supply just what she needs to keep her from drying out.

Better then you would expect "Bowery Boys" flick with the boys being targeted from a number of crazed medical experiments by the both man of the house Dr.Derek Gravesend and his crazy brother Anton for their own separat and insane operations. Sach to have his peanut brain transplanted into Derek's pride and joy Cosmo a 400 pound lowland gorilla who had recently appeared in a movie with Bela Lugoi and a pair of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis wannabes. As for slip his brain is to be used by Anton as the thinking machine for his robot Gorog who by walking into things keeps losing his head in the movie. It's Aunte Ameila Gravesend who got even better and more useful plans fro the boys in having them fed to her flesh eating plant since she's run out of stray cats and dogs in the neighborhood that she keeps it alive with! And last but not least there's the Gravesend family butler Grissom, or as the boys pronounced it "Gruesome", who himself ends up as one of the Gravesend bothers experiments that went wrong. That happens when Grissom or Gruesome mistakingly gulps down what looked like a harmless glass of coke and turned into a modern version of the Neanderthal Man.

The usual slap sticks with Slip & Sach that keep the laughs flowing in the movie but by then you can see the "Bowery Boys", after 34 films, were starting to run out of ideas and that their antics on screen were starting to get a bit stale. It was in fact Cosmo the gorilla and Gorog the tin man as well as Amelia's cute and lovable flesh eating plant together with the Gravesend, for-runners of the Adams, Family who really made the movie "The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters" well worth watching.
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6/10
Slapstick farce is strictly for Bowery Boys fans...
Doylenf30 October 2010
The slapstick is so overdone in this Bowery Boys tribute to fright flicks that there's something happening at slam bang speed in almost every frame of THE BOWERY BOYS MEET THE MONSTERS.

The non-stop shenanigans gets the usual boost from LEO GORCEY and HUNTZ HALL, busy slapping each other around in the tradition of The Three Stooges as they encounter some spirited spooks in the care of Dr. Gravesend (JOHN DEHNER).

ELLEN CORBY (the grandma from The Daltons) is on hand as a feather-brained Mrs. Gravesend devoted to her man-eating plant with designs on getting its tree-like limbs around Huntz Hall or Leo Gorcey.

It's a broad farce, played for laughs by the entire cast, including JOHN DEHNER and LLOYD CORRIGAN as his fellow scientist, but all of the gags are recycled from either Abbot and Costello movies or The Three Stooges. The only new twist is that the monsters aren't the creatures you might expect them to be--and for that, you have to see the film.

Recommended mainly for those Bowery Boys fans who can't get enough of their silly hijinks.
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6/10
A&C wannabe
SnoopyStyle27 June 2020
A baseball smashes the front window at Louie's Sweet Shop. It's the neighborhood kids. The adults decide to call up the Gravesend residence for permission to let the kids play baseball in their lot. Slip and Sach travel up to the mansion but they don't realize that the family is disturbed and the house is full of monsters.

This is trying to be Abbott and Costello. I don't hate it but I prefer to have Abbott and Costello. Costello is a comedic genius. These guys are a step below. This is still good clean fun if not necessarily original.
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2/10
Borderline unwatchable.
hemisphere65-125 April 2021
I felt sorry for myself after sitting through this horrendous pile of garbage, but not as sorry as I do for anyone who watches it more than once.

Gorcey and Hall doing their schtick wears thin after about 30 seconds, and it goes on for well over an hour!

The only interest to me was the obvious nod to the work of Charles Addams, very popular at the time. I've watched a few other Bowery Boys movies, but it won't happen again.
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7/10
great fun for Halloween and seems setup for later Adamms Family
gtkurdy30 October 2010
I gave it a 7 because I like the Bowery Boys. This is good, clean fun for the whole family. Just like Bugs Bunny, there are plenty of jokes for kids and adults.

The "Hall Tree" is moving. The robot is a drag. The skulls and skeletons are grave. The dialogue is classic "Sach." The Boys are the Keystone Cops as always.

The "bad guys" in this seem to have been the inspiration for the later TV series, The Adamms Family. If you like campy misdirection and "The Boys", you'll like this. If you've never seen The Bowery Boys in action, this is a great movie to start.
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3/10
So...the Bowery Boys go to a haunted house...just like they did about a half dozen OTHER times!
planktonrules10 November 2016
The Bowery Boys films simply went on way, way too long. After all, they made 48...not counting the ones made before this by many members of the group in such incarnations as the East Side Kids, the Dead End Kids and the Little Tough Guys! Talk about over-saturation!! And, to make it worse, after Bernard Gorcey died, his son, Leo, quit the series...and yet they still made more films!!! To make things worse, they often tended to reuse plot ideas--and the Boys ended up battling baddies in haunted houses many, many times...too many! This is why I really was not impressed with "The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters".

So despite all this, is this later Bowery Boys film worth your time? Well, for some (those who hate the films), no...and for devoted fans, yes. But for the average person...it's probably NOT a good place to start. Instead, find one of their earlier films--the ones they made just after WWII.

This film finds the gang going to Gravesend Manor--where the weirdos living there are anxiously awaiting the visit. At first, they are excited by how stupid Slip sounds when he phones them but upon meeting Sach they realize he's perfect for a brain transfer to a gorilla...something they actually did in several other previous films!! The lack of originality make this hard to distinguish! It's all essentially a retread...and the earlier haunted house/brain transfer with ape films were better. The only major difference? They've also got a giant silly robot in this one...ugh!
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9/10
The Greatest Bowery Boys movie of them all!
curly-177 December 2000
Neighborhood kids playing baseball in the street in front of Louie's sweetshop keep hitting baseballs through his storefront window. Sach suggests they get permission for the kids to use a big, vacant lot nearby. Slip telephones the lot owners, the Gravesend family-- Slip wants permission to use the lot because he is a "bene-fracturer" of humanity. They are invited to drive over, since mad scientists Dr. Derek Gravesend and Anton Gravesend want brains-- to put into their gorilla and robot! Derek needs a tiny brain; Anton notes: "A creature with a brain that small wouldn't have sense enough to come in out of the rain." Quick cut to Sach, standing in the rain. At the spooky house, Slip and Sach meet Grissom, the butler, whom they call "Gruesome" (kind of a prototype Lurch, 10 years before "The Addams Family"). The Boys also meet a sexy female vampire Francine Gravesend (a prototype Morticia); she wants them for their blood. Amelia Gravesend wants to feed the Boys to her Agopanthus Carnivorous, her man-eating tree (sort of like in "The Wizard of Oz"). There are old jokes, such as the butler saying: "Walk this way" (this joke would be 20 years older in "Young Frankenstein"). Some jokes are pure Bowery Boys-- the butler says, "This old manor house goes back to colonial times; take this chair for instance: 1775." To which Slip retorts, "17.75? Anybody that paid over 3 bucks for it got rooked!" Some skits are recycled: Slip and Sach are locked in a closet; they use a saw to cut a hole in the far wall, and crawl through-- it leads to a cage with a gorilla in it. If this scene looks familiar, it's because it had been used before with the Three Stooges short "Dizzy Detectives" (1943). There's lots more fun and scary thrills. Just watch this movie and enjoy!

Paul Wexler would appear in other horror movies, like "The Four Skulls of Jonathan Drake." Laura Mason would appear in other films, as a Harem Girl, and then a Venus Girl in "Queen of Outer Space." Lloyd Corrigan had been in a previous Bowery Boys movie "Ghost Chasers" (1951). John Dehner would play occult characters in "The Twilight Zone" in the episodes: "Mr. Garrity and the Graves" & "The Jungle." Steve Calvert (Cosmos the gorilla) had played an ape in "Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla"; his last movie was playing a gorilla in the Ed Wood 'classic': "The Bride and the Beast." Trivia: this is the only Bowery Boys movie with "Bowery Boys" in the title.
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6/10
"Oh boy, I feel just like a space ranger".
classicsoncall30 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Maybe if the Bowery Boys had crossed paths with Universal Pictures along the way, they might have put together a meaningful monster flick a la Abbott and Costello. The word 'Monster' in the title is a bit of a misnomer, as all you get here is a man in an ape suit and a tin man robot that's not all that scary. My two year old granddaughter was watching the flick with me and she couldn't take her eyes off Gorog, and she was smiling the whole time.

But as far as Bowery Boys flicks go, this is as entertaining as most, near the end of their run and down to only four members for this story, along with patron Louie (Bernard Gorcey). The story nominally involves the gang looking to pick up a ball field for the neighborhood kids, and wind up confounding the members of a pre-Addams Family assortment of mad scientists. In turn, Slip (Leo Gorcey) and Sach (Huntz Hall) become the target of Dr. Gravesend (John Dehner) and his brother Anton (Lyoyd Corrigan), who both need human brains for their respective scientific pursuits. I was a bit surprised to see Paul Wexler doing the 'Lurch' gimmick a full decade before Ted Cassidy gave it a whirl in the TV series a decade later.

For once, Slip's malapropisms are given their proper due by Dr. Gravesend, who figures that Slip is no mental giant the way he fractures the English language. For his part, Slip doesn't disappoint with any number of his stereo-optical delusions.

The entire escapade falls into a slap dash finale, not as well choreographed as say, the Marx Brothers, but still zany nonetheless. If you keep a sharp eye, you'll note it wasn't Sach under the goofy monster mask when he put the Gravesend's into those body slams and airplane spins. The stunt double they used was obviously broader in the chest and shoulders, even under the suit. In contrast, Sach did all of his own wrestling moves in the 1952 Bowery Boys film, "No Holds Barred".
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3/10
BA_Harrison meets The Bowery Boys.
BA_Harrison9 May 2017
This is the first Bowery Boys movie I've ever watched, and judging by what I've seen, I won't be in a hurry to check out their other movies, the 'boys' particular brand of slapstick and buffoonery leaving me straight-faced throughout.

Clearly modelled after Abbot and Costello's 'Meet' series of films (which I also find not very funny), '..Meet The Monsters' sees Bowery boys Slip and Sach (Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall) paying a visit to a creepy mansion inhabited by a family of kooks and oddballs, each of whom want the unwary guests for their own nefarious reasons.

With Hall's painfully unfunny dumb routine and Gorcey's excessive use of maladroits (that's fancy speak for using the wrong word), this film is already on shaky ground, but chuck in a moth eaten killer gorilla, a crap robot, and a rubber man eating tree, and what you have is a film that gives new meaning to the term 'lowbrow'.
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Not the Three Stooges, but still enjoyable...
Teenie-117 February 2001
In order to appreciate the slapstick comedy of the Bowery Boys, one must first be able to wholeheartedly laugh at the Three Stooges. Many of the comedy team films of the 40s and 50s centered around the same theme - haunted house, mad scientist, gorilla, brain transplant, etc. This one is like the rest. The most hilarious part of this film is how the Chief (Leo Gorcey) manages to mangle the English language, many times stumping Dr. Gravesend into trying to figure out what he's actually saying. Unlike The Three Stooges, the Bowery Boys are not really physical comedians. Huntz Hall's facial expressions are really not as funny as Curly's, Larry's or Moe's. Leo Gorcey tries to play it for laughs as best as he can by being bug-eyed, but it just doesn't come off. Perhaps his age was showing by this time and he just couldn't quite cut it anymore like in his earlier films. Still, the premise of the film is familiar, there are some good laughs from the entire cast, and it is worth a look, even if just for nostalgia's sake. Although I think the group's earlier films were much funnier, this is about the best one out of the series that were made in the 50s. Worth a peek.
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6/10
"A pasture is a place where they make pasteurized milk."
utgard142 November 2016
Slip and Sach become mixed up with a family of weirdos in an old dark house in this thirty-fourth entry in the series. The family is the highlight of this one, with John Dehner, Ellen Corby, Laura Mason, Paul Wexler, and Lloyd Corrigan all turning in enjoyable performances. Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall are fine as usual. Leo has some especially funny malapropisms in this one. David Gorcey and Bennie Bartlett get little to do. Bernard Gorcey is fun as Louie. It's a good B comedy with a lot of things for old horror and sci-fi fans, like a robot, a gorilla, a vampire, a man-eating plant, and a formula that turns a guy into a Mr. Hyde-type monster. Definitely one of the better later Bowery Boys films.
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6/10
all three gorceys in this one
ksf-231 January 2022
One of the last bowery boys films with all three gorceys; the next year, dad gorcey (bernard) would die in a car accident. And leo would take a break from acting. Brother david did make a couple more bowery films, with huntz hall taking the lead. Keep an eye out for ellen corby, probably best known for waltons, or sabrina. In the story, when the local kids need a place to play ball, slip and sach visit a creepy house to ask permission for using their empty lot. Robots, monsters, suspense. The usual clever word play as slip mixes his metaphors and tries to appear extra smart. Paul wexler is the tall, creepy, butler grissom; laura mason is francine. It's fun and silly and campy. The guest stars get more air time than usual in this one. Directed by ed bernds, who directed a bunch of the bowery films. Leo gorcey and paul wexler both died quite young.
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6/10
The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters
Scarecrow-8815 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Bowery boys, Slip and Sach (Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall) want to find a property so the kids can have a sandlot for their baseball, but the location for which they desire is owned by the dreaded oddball family, the Gravesends. Slapstick, plays on the English language (Gorcey's specialty is using words that have no business belonging in the sentences they find themselves), kooky characters, energetic cast (even if the humor might be dated, the cast give it their all), and busy plot (towards the end, all hell breaks loose as the Bowery Boys run around trying to keep from being killed as the family tries to either take their head or feed them to a hungry tree (don't ask)) keep this film moving like a locomotive. It doesn't stay still long enough to really contemplate just how preposterous it gets (and wants to get).

As far as the monsters: there's a giant robot that obeys the commands fed from a microphone, a gorilla (yep, the gorilla once again!), tree kept in a hall that is fed by Ellen Corby (yes, Grandma Walton!), a vampire (the sultry Laura Mason), mad scientists John Dehner and Lloyd Corrigan, and the tall, deep-voiced butler (Paul Wexler). Steering through all the hi-jinks are the Gorceys (eventually, Bernard and David, along with Benny Bartlett, come looking for their boys, encountering the crazed Gravesends themselves) and Hall, looking to survive and, still on mission, get permission for the sandlot. Dehner wants Hall's brain as a replacement for his gorilla while Corrigan wants to put Hall's head on his robot! That duel for Hall often leads to him nearly knocking at death's door (Wexler even has a hatchet, ready to cleaver the poor guy in two!), but fate always rescues him in the nick of time. The tree even eats Slip's sandwiches and drinks his milk after a nighttime visit to the kitchen! The robot is a star of the movie, often losing its head when walking erratic without proper command…reason why Corrigan wants to get him Hall's head! Dehner even has Hall on the operating table, interrupted by visits of the other Bowery boys right before surgery!

You get plenty of Leo and Huntz playing off each other (it is the Laurel and Hardy, Three Stooges comedy team dynamic), through insults and ribbing. Plenty of physical humor is at the fore, too, besides the nincompoop goof antics of Leo and Huntz. Everyone's in on the fun, with little subtlety in sight. Just try and figure out what Leo means by some of the words he uses incorrectly in his sentence vocabulary! Included in the cache of mocked horror clichés is the Jekyll/Hyde monster, transformed from an experimental fluid meant to give the drinker attractiveness, instead causing a manic, hairy-faced, toothy beast, for which both Wexler and Huntz become far too aware. Was it fun? I thought so, but it is all so chaotic and harried, the cast doesn't take a breath, so this kind of comedy is an acquired taste.
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6/10
Serving the nuts...and not the kind with shells around them.
mark.waltz8 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Any film that has a conversation about how to make prettier pickles is classic in my book, and this ends up being probably the best of the Bowery Boys films,an Abbott and Costello style horror film. There's a Lurch like Butler (Grisom, whom they keep referring to as Gruesome) who gets the predictable reaction when he orders Sach and Slip to "walk this way", a series of wacky relatives and an exotic Theda Bara like vamp, all gathered together in a spooky mansion where it's best to expect the unexpected. Some great character comics (among them Ellen Corby and Lloyd Corrigan) have a ball emoting dramatically for laughs. Corby has a tree monster who happens to like cats (as a snack, I'm sure), and Gruesome, err Grisom, takes a potion that makes him Mr. Hyde's long lost twin. A funny looking robot and a gorilla round out the ensemble of wacky creations/creatures.

There's more laughs in this single entry than all of the series up to that time. The script is filled with funny gags and dialog ("The living of today are the skeletons of tomorrow"), and it's an interesting set design as well. Corby, looking like granny without the Tweety Bird, will delight her fans from "The Waltons", looking the same but no match for her no- nonsense matriarch as she regrets the lack of living flesh for her funny looking tree. Minimal screen time of the gang for all but Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall doesn't matter, as the wacky characters of this madhouse are entertainment enough.
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5/10
Easily the best of the Bowery Boys flicks that I've seen
lemon_magic25 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I think what distinguishes this BB film from the 3 others I've come across is that the setting is more interesting, the support cast has better characters to play, and for some reason Huntz Hall's usual manic mugging and mannerisms seem more appropriate to the setting. I suppose that's because this is very similar in tone and structure to some of the Abbott and Costello films, and Hall's over-the-top double takes and freak outs work the same way that Costello's would in similar situations.

I have to say that it was very clever of the producers to make this "Bowery Boys Meet THE Monsters", instead of "...SOME Monsters", because the title makes you think you will see Dracula, the Mummy, Frankenstein's monster, etc...instead, we get some generic substitutes. But I wasn't really disappointed...rather than have the classic Hammer archetypes be cheapened by yet another comedy ripoff, the screenplay just has fun with the idea - for instance, one is "a" vampire, and makes no attempt to pretend that this is the "Prince Of Darkness", so it doesn't hurt to see the idea played for cheesecake value. So it is with the mad scientists, the robot, the man eating plant, the Jekyll/Hyde formula, etc. The "monsters" are different enough from the usual run to add an element of freshness to the film.

Also, the timing seems a little tighter and the director keeps things moving along. The "house full of monsters" set up allows for a nice rapid fire series of sight gags and word play and slapstick, and (as I said), the supporting cast get to be funny and interesting in their interaction with each other, as opposed to just being the straight men for the Boys.There's actually a bit of an Addams family dynamic that makes things go better than if the monsters just lunged out of the closet at our Boys.

This was my fourth Bowery Boys film (how I came to see four of them is a long story), and I can't say I'll be unhappy if I never see another one. But it was the most enjoyable of the four, and it raised my opinion of their abilities and their film career.
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6/10
Silly fun
pmtelefon29 March 2021
I don't know if I was laughing with "The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters" or if I was laughing at it. A little of bit of both I guess. Either way I did laugh quite a bit during this movie. Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall are in pretty good form, as is the rest of the cast. There is also a strangely attractive Laura Mason around to help things out. "...Meet the Monsters" isn't the best Bowery Boys movies but it's not the worst either. Overall, I enjoyed the hour I spent with the Boys.
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10/10
The Bowery Boys Rock
gooelf5021 February 2007
I'm one of the few people around who can still recall seeing first release Bowery Boy movies. I was eleven years old when this one hit the silver screen. I can recall laughing until I cried when the monsters began appearing. Any hard core Bowery boy enthusiast recalls the wonderful job done by Leo Gorcy, who played "Slip" Mahoney and Huntz Hall who played "Satch". They played off each other perfectly and their on screen characterization of a pair of gang members from the mid century Bowery made the comedy that much sweeter. I can't recall seeing a Bowery Boys movie that I didn't like. Some were better than others, but my buddies and I would have walked to the next town to see any of their movies. Oddly enough, Leo Gorcy died quite young without much money. He passed away in 1969 at about 52 years of age. Huntz Hall on the other hand lived to be about 80 years old and passed away in 1999. He apparently was quite well off, having owned a 10% interest in the Bowery Boys and having made some very profitable oil and gas investments. I owe a lot of happy hours to these two fine actors from the early years of movie comedy.
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6/10
Gets pretty crazy
gridoon202419 February 2024
"The Bowery Boys Meet The Monsters", according to IMDb the Boys' biggest box-office hit, as well as the longest title, is mostly typical low-brow slapstick, full of old-hat gags, but it is also a bit more imaginative than usual: it must be one of their most horror and sci-fi oriented entries. In addition to the standard escaped gorilla, we get a crude robot, a carnivorous plant, a creepy butler, a potion that briefly turns its recipient into a werewolf-like monster, and a family that makes the Addams clan look normal. Paul Wexler is a standout as the butler aptly named Grissom; Laura Mason shows potential as a female vampire but is underused. **1/2 out of 4.
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10/10
don't miss this movie
frivelli14 May 2006
This movie is a riot. I think that Sach is a very funny man, and that Leo Gorcey/Huntz Hall were as funny a team as any of them. Personally, I think the Bowery Boys are funnier than The Three Stooges, Though I enjoy them to. in this movie, there is a commotion in almost every scene. and I think that the Bowery Boys add their own flavor to things. Actually, I favor the Bowery Boys over Abbott and Costello as well. My two favorite teams are the Bowery Boys and Martin and Lewis. Too bad they never made a movie together. That would have been fun. Aside from this movie, I also loved the 'Navy' movie the Bowery Boys made. Just hilarious. A commotion in every scene. My kind of movie.
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10/10
The Bowery Boys at their best
scottsitton1 January 2020
This movie is a non stop laugh. Slip's butchery of the language is wonderful. Sach being scared by the sweater that had sleeves that were too short. The family has to be a lead into the Addams Family. So many of the jokes and bits are used over and over in shows after this it is too fun to hear. Also get a chance to see grandma Walton. A must see!!
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