The Pink Panther Strikes Again Dvd the Return of the Pink Panther 1975 Poster

1975 detective comedy film past Blake Edwards

The Return of the Pink Panther
The Return of the Pink Panther poster.jpg

Theatrical release affiche

Directed by Blake Edwards
Written by Blake Edwards
Frank Waldman
Produced by Blake Edwards
Animation:
Richard Williams
Ken Harris
Starring Peter Sellers
Christopher Plummer
Catherine Schell
Herbert Lom
Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth
Edited by Tom Priestly
Music by Henry Mancini

Production
companies

ITC Entertainment
Jewel Productions
Pimlico Films
Mirisch-Geoffrey

Distributed past United Artists

Release date

  • 21 May 1975 (1975-05-21)

Running fourth dimension

114 minutes
Countries U.k.
U.s.a.
Language English
Upkeep $5 million
Box role $75 million[1]

The Return of the Pink Panther is a 1975 comedy motion picture and the 4th pic in The Pink Panther series. The picture show stars Peter Sellers, returning to the function of Inspector Clouseau, for the kickoff time since A Shot in the Dark (1964), afterwards having declined to reprise the role in Inspector Clouseau (1968). The film was a commercial hitting and revived the previously dormant series and with it Peter Sellers' career.

Herbert Lom reprises his role as Principal Inspector Charles Dreyfus from A Shot in the Dark; he remained a regular thereafter. The character of Sir Charles Litton, the notorious Phantom, is now played past Christopher Plummer rather than David Niven, who played the office in The Pinkish Panther (1963) and was unavailable. The Pink Panther diamond once again plays a central role in the plot.

Plot [edit]

In the fictional state of Lugash, a mysterious thief seizes the Pinkish Panther diamond and leaves a white glove embroidered with a gold "P". With its national treasure again missing, the Shah of Lugash requests the assist of Inspector Clouseau (Peter Sellers) of the Sûreté, as Clouseau had recovered the diamond the last time it was stolen (in The Pink Panther). Clouseau has been temporarily demoted to beat out cop by his dominate, Primary Inspector Charles Dreyfus (Herbert Lom), who despises him to the point of obsession, but the French government forces Dreyfus to reinstate him. Clouseau joyously receives the news and duly departs for Lugash, but not earlier fending off a surprise attack from his servant Cato (Burt Kwouk), who had been ordered to do so to go on the Inspector on his toes.

Upon examining the crime scene in the national museum — in which, due to his habitual clumsiness, he wrecks several priceless antiques — Clouseau concludes that the glove implicates Sir Charles Litton (Christopher Plummer), alias "the notorious Phantom," as the thief. After several catastrophic failures to pale out Litton Manor in Nice, Clouseau believes a mysterious assassinator is attempting to kill him. He follows Sir Charles' wife, Lady Claudine Litton (Catherine Schell), to the Gstaad Palace hotel in Switzerland in search of clues to her husband'southward whereabouts, and repeatedly bungles the investigation.

Meanwhile, Sir Charles is teased about the theft by his married woman, and realizes he has been framed. Arriving in Lugash to clear his name, Sir Charles barely avoids being murdered and sent to the Lugash secret law by his acquaintance known as the "Fat Man" (Eric Pohlmann), who explains that with the leading suspect dead, the hush-hush law volition no longer have an excuse to continue purging their political enemies. Escaping to his suite, Litton finds hush-hush police Colonel Sharki (Peter Arne) waiting for him, who implies the Fat Human being'south agreement is correct, but reminds him the diamond must be recovered eventually. Sir Charles pretends to cooperate, but is unable to hibernate his reaction when he recognizes a face on the museum's security footage. He avoids another plot by the Fat Man and his duplicitous underling Pepi (Graham Stark) and escapes from Lugash, secretly pursued by Sharki, who believes Sir Charles will lead him to the diamond.

In Gstaad, Clouseau, still tailing Lady Claudine, is suddenly ordered past Dreyfus over the telephone to arrest her in her hotel room. However, when Clouseau calls back to clarify the order, he is told that Dreyfus is on vacation. Sir Charles, who in the meantime has chartered a individual flight out of Lugash, arrives at the hotel and is starting time to confront his wife. Lady Claudine admits she stole the jewel to spark excitement in their lives. Colonel Sharki shows up, just but equally he prepares to impale them both, Inspector Clouseau barges in. Sir Charles explains things to Clouseau, and Sharki is about to kill the 3 of them. However, Dreyfus has followed Clouseau and is outside the hotel room with a rifle — Dreyfus is in fact the "mysterious assassin" who has been trying to impale Clouseau all this time — and merely as Dreyfus shoots at Clouseau, the Inspector ducks to check if his fly is undone, and the shot kills Sharki instead. The other iii take comprehend, while Dreyfus, insanely enraged past his latest failure to kill Clouseau, goes berserk until he is arrested.

For once once more recovering the Pink Panther, Clouseau is promoted to Principal Inspector, while Sir Charles resumes his career as a jewel thief. At a Japanese restaurant in the epilogue, Cato unexpectedly attacks Clouseau again and triggers a massive brawl, destroying the premises. Dreyfus is committed to a lunatic aviary for his actions, where he is straitjacketed inside a padded cell and vows revenge on Clouseau. The film ends when the Pink Panther (in drawing form) enters Dreyfus' prison cell and films him writing "The Finish" on the wall.

Bandage [edit]

  • Peter Sellers as Inspector Jacques Clouseau
  • Christopher Plummer as Sir Charles Litton
  • Catherine Schell as Lady Claudine Litton
  • Herbert Lom as Primary Inspector Charles Dreyfus
  • Burt Kwouk equally Cato Fong
  • Peter Arne equally Colonel Sharki
  • Peter Jeffrey every bit General Wadafi
  • Grégoire Aslan as Main of Lugash Constabulary
  • David Lodge as Mac
  • Graham Stark every bit Pepi
  • Eric Pohlmann as The Fat Human being
  • André Maranne every bit François
  • Victor Spinetti as Hotel Concierge
  • John Bluthal as Bullheaded Ragamuffin
  • Mike Grady as Bong Boy
  • Peter Jones equally Psychiatrist

Production [edit]

In the early on 1970s, Blake Edwards wrote a 15-20 folio outline for some other Pink Panther picture show and presented it to serial producer Walter Mirisch. The producer loved the thought, but the franchise's distributor and main capitalist, United Artists, rejected the film every bit they had no interest in working with Edwards nor Peter Sellers, whose careers had declined.[2]

British producer Lew Form agreed to finance two films for Blake Edwards every bit role of a bargain to get Edwards' wife, Julie Andrews, to appear in a Tv special for him. The kickoff motion-picture show was The Tamarind Seed. Edwards wanted to brand a projection set in Canada called Rachel and the Stranger, but Class disliked the idea and offered to buy Edwards out of the 2nd commitment. Edwards wanted to make a second movie, however; in order to help restore his tainted reputation in Hollywood. Course said he then suggested making a new Pinkish Panther moving picture and Edwards agreed, if Sellers would also concur to do it. Grade managed to talk Sellers into it and the project was on.[3] UA agreed to give The Render of the Pinkish Panther to Form in exchange for globe distribution and a share of the profits;[ii] thereafter, Form'southward visitor would permanently own worldwide rights to the film.[four] Grade said that Eric Pleskow of United Artists was offered the chance to come into the pic as a partner only declined, thinking the moving-picture show would be a financial failure; he only wanted UA to distribute.[three]

Richard Williams, afterwards the animation director on Who Framed Roger Rabbit, did the animated open and endmost titles for this moving picture and The Pink Panther Strikes Once again, due to DePatie–Freleng'south work on the Pink Panther shorts and other drawing projects for TV and film. Williams got help animative this from ii noted animators, Ken Harris and Art Babbitt.

Carol Cleveland, best known for her regular appearances on Monty Python's Flying Circus, has a small-scale function as a swimming puddle diver.

A soundtrack album, featuring Henry Mancini'due south score for the motion picture, was released by RCA Records.[5] A novelization, written by the pic's co-writer, Frank Waldman, was tardily published past Ballantine Books in March 1977 (ISBN 0345251237).[ citation needed ]

Reception [edit]

Critical reception [edit]

In The New York Times, Vincent Canby gave the pic a positive review, writing, "Clouseau is the very special slapstick triumph of Mr. Sellers and Mr. Edwards."[vi] Variety called it "another very funny picture about the eternal gumshoe bungler, Inspector Clouseau. 'The Return of the Pink Panther' is in many ways a time capsule film, full of vivid sight gags and comedic innocence."[7] Factor Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the motion-picture show 2 stars out of 4, finding Sellers' first scene funny just for the remainder of the movie, "we not only know when each and every joke is coming; nosotros know exactly what that joke volition be."[eight] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the film was "I recollect, not upwards to what went before. Its calculations show and the inspector is somehow besides entirely the buffoon, defective a redeeming pathos I seem to remember from the earlier outings. Just in its vigorous and bulls-center way 'The Return of the Pink Panther' is a cheerful escape from all the things that ail us."[9] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post chosen it "a frequently hilarious and by and large satisfying return to comic form on the part of Peter Sellers, recreating the role of the hapless but dogged French sleuth."[10] Penelope Gilliatt of The New Yorker wrote that Sellers was "working here at his best."[11]

The film holds a score of 84% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 19 reviews, with an average rating of 6.7 out of x.[12]

Box role [edit]

The film grossed $41.8 one thousand thousand in the United States and Canada and $75 1000000 worldwide.[13] [1]

Home media release [edit]

The moving-picture show had been released on VHS, Betamax, CED and Laserdisc in the 1980s past Magnetic Video, CBS/Fox Video, and J2 Communications respectively.

In 1993 and 1996, Alive Habitation Video under the Family unit Home Entertainment characterization re-released the film on VHS as part of the Family unit Habitation Entertainment Theater lineup and on a Widescreen Laserdisc. In 1999, Artisan Amusement (LIVE'southward successor) re-released the moving picture on VHS and debuting on DVD for the first time in the original widescreen format. The only bonus cloth seen on this release were bandage filmographies, production notes and the motion-picture show's original theatrical trailer.

In 2006, rights holder Granada (owners of the ITC catalog) sub licensed the film to Universal Studios Home Entertainment under Focus Features for distribution in the US and UK, with a new, bare-bones release featuring an anamorphic widescreen transfer being released in 2006 by Universal in both territories. In 2015, the 2006 Great britain DVD was reissued by Fabulous Films still nether licence from Universal and ITV Studios (who acquired Granada and the ITC library), followed by a UK Blu-ray release past Fabulous in 2016.

As Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has since acquired Us theatrical rights, along with worldwide television and digital distribution rights,[xiv] Universal/Focus and ITV all the same have all remaining worldwide rights for the film. Due to its licensing output deals with both MGM and Universal, Shout! Factory included this pic, forth with the other Peter Sellers Pinkish Panther films, as function of a 6-disc fix for the first time on Blu-ray under their Shout! Select label.[fifteen] The set was released on June 27, 2017, thus making it the kickoff Pink Panther film collection to include the flick.[xvi]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "The Pink Panther Strikes Again (advert)". Variety. 22 December 1976. p. ix.
  2. ^ a b Mirisch, Walter (2008). I Thought We Were Making Movies, Not History (pp. 170-171). University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, Wisconsin. ISBN 0-299-22640-9.
  3. ^ a b Lew Grade, All the same Dancing: My Story, William Collins & Sons 1987 p 227-228
  4. ^ Ltd, Not Panicking. "h2g2 - 'The Return of the Pink Panther' - the Motion picture - Edited Entry". www.h2g2.com.
  5. ^ "Henry Mancini – Blake Edwards' the Return of the Pink Panther (1975, Vinyl)". Discogs.
  6. ^ Canby, Vincent (22 May 1975). "Distraction Stalks Inspector Clouseau". The New York Times: 32.
  7. ^ "The Return of the Pink Panther". Variety: 26. 14 May 1975.
  8. ^ Siskel, Cistron (June 16, 1975). "That familiar, zany inspector overstays visit". Chicago Tribune. Section 3, p. 6.
  9. ^ Champlin, Charles (May 20, 1975). "Sellers Back in 'Panther'". Los Angeles Times. Part Four, p. 1.
  10. ^ Arnold, Gary (21 May 1975). "Welcome 'Return of The Pinkish Panther'". The Washington Mail service: B1.
  11. ^ Gilliatt, Penelope (2 June 1975). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. p. 92.
  12. ^ "The Return of the Pinkish Panther". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved xviii March 2022.
  13. ^ "The Return of the Pink Panther, Box Function Information". Box Function Mojo. Retrieved 22 January 2012.
  14. ^ "Official KINO Insider Announcements Thread: STRICTLY Chastened: READ GUIDELINES".
  15. ^ "Blake Edwards' 'The Pink Panther Picture Collection' Blu-ray Announced". highdefdigest.com. vi January 2017.
  16. ^ "The Pink Panther Film Drove Blu-ray".

External links [edit]

  • The Return of the Pinkish Panther at IMDb
  • The Return of the Pinkish Panther at the TCM Movie Database
  • The Return of the Pink Panther at AllMovie
  • The Render of the Pinkish Panther at the American Moving-picture show Institute Catalog

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Return_of_the_Pink_Panther

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