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| Time Of Their Lives | 
enlarge | Buy New: $34.99
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $13.79
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 25 reviews) Sales Rank: 9130 Category: Video
Actors: Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Marjorie Reynolds, Binnie Barnes, John Shelton Director: Charles Barton Publisher: Universal Studios Studio: Universal Studios Manufacturer: Universal Studios Label: Universal Studios Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Original Recording Reissued, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: VHS Tape Running Time: 82 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 0783240562 UPC: 096898559232 EAN: 9780783240565 ASIN: 0783240562
Release Date: March 7, 2000 Theatrical Release Date: August 16, 1946 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 20 more reviews...
  Time of their lives? Best of their films! June 13, 2008 In the early 1940's Bud Abbot and Lou Costello produced many many 'b' films for universal. The usual pattern was that bullying Abbot and Child like Costello somehow get involved with mad scientists, gangsters and adventurers concocting wild schemes. Prat falls and chases are their stock in trade. This film however was a break from that pattern and the effect is magic. It starts in Revolutionary New York where Lou is a struggling tinker and Bud the major Domo for a Tory land owner. This seems pretty much in their usual patter but in short order Lou is mistaken for a British spy and along with the lady of the mannor murdered and cursed.
Time passes and their ghosts, trapped by the curse, are doomed to linger on the grounds of the manor until they can prove their innocence.
In move the new owners including the decendand of major domo Abbot, now a man of learning. At first the ghosts don't want more people in 'their house' and try to figureo ut how to haunt it, but as the ghosts haunt the house, the truth comes out and the decendant of Budd's tormentor sets out to save him.
Usually these films are marked by the patter between the two comics but in Time of the lives, the ghosts cannot be seen or heard by the living which leadsto a very differnet pace and let the actors break out of their usual roles showing their range to better effect-oh, and it's a darn fun story too.
  A Question of Loyalty January 17, 2007 The Time of Their Lives
This film is set in 1780 Kings Point NY during the Revolutionary War. A servant is in love with Horatio the tinker, who has to pay her bond to free Nora from service. Tom Danbury expects to have a title if the war ends; he is working with Benedict Arnold to surrender West Point to the British. Maid Nora hears their plans and is abducted. When Horatio and Melody Allen try to escape, they are mistaken for traitors and shot. The General curses their burial spot. The abandoned Danbury mansion is burned to the ground. Then time passes to the current day.
The Danbury mansion has been rebuilt to be as it was some 160 years earlier. Horatio and Melody discover the magic of electricity as they haunt the house. Emily the maid hears the ghosts; she is psychic. The two ghosts search for the missing document to prove their loyalty as true patriots. The inhabitants of the house are awakened by the noise. Is the new house haunted by the past? The special effects are amusing. Something supernatural seems to be happening. Modern science says seances don't work. Yet they hear knocks on the table in response to their questions!
The voice of Tom Danbury comes from Emily and tells about a secret drawer with the missing letter. They figure out it was the library clock but there is a problem here. Dr. Greenway takes action to solve the problem, but there is a complication. There are comic scenes using the technology of those days. Then a happy ending as their curse is ended. Are the legends always true?
The political viewpoints underlaying this story may make it the least comic of all the Abbot & Costello films. Bud and Lou are opponents, they do not work as a team. Can any long-lost document ever cause history to be rewritten?
  ONE OF THE TEAM'S BEST FILMS October 19, 2005 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
THE TIME OF THIER LIVES Universal Pictures Release Date(s):August 16, 1946 Runtime: 82 minutes
Director: Charles Barton
Producer: Val Burton
Writing Credits: Val Burton Walter DeLeon John Grant Bradford Ropes
Cast: Bud Abbott......Cuthbert Greenway/Dr. Ralph Greenway Lou Costello....Horatio Prim Kirk Alyn.......Dandy Lynn Baggett....June Prescott Jess Barker.....Tom Danbury Binnie Barnes...Mildred Prescott Robert Barrat...Major Putnam Vernon Downing..Leigh Marjorie Eaton..Bessie Ann Gillis......Nora Leary Selmer Jackson..Curator Rex Lease.......Sergeant Makepeace Marjorie Reynolds....Melody Allen John Shelton....Sheldon Gage Gale Sondergaard...Emily
Music by: Arthur Lange William Lava Milton Rosen
Cinematography by: Charles Van Enger Film Editing by: Philip Cahn
Art Direction: Jack Otterson
Other Crew:
Plot Summary:
Horatio Prim and Melody Allen become two ghosts who were mistakenly branded as traitors during the Revolutionary War. Their spirits were cursed to never leave the property of the Danbury Estate unless cleared of being traitors. Now in 1940's New England, with the help of Dr. Ralph Greenway and some guests, they search to retrieve a letter from George Washington which would prove their innocence and free their spirits.
Routines & Hilarious Moments: Lou's problems with invisibility Ghost Lou toying with Bud
Trivia (...): (1)This would be the first Abbott and Costello feature directed by Charles Barton, who is generally regarded as their best director.(2)The cost of the special effects made this the most expensive Abbott and Costello feature up to that time.(3)This was the second, and last, feature in which Abbott and Costello did not play as a team.(4)Lou Costello's practice of taking home props proved to be a major promblem for the special effects crew. Some of the special effects shot required the sets and props to remain intact for shooting with, and without, the actors. Reportedly on one occasion when Lou removed a prop, it required two days of re-shooting for the special effects department.(5)When this film was scheduled to be shot, Bud Abbott and Lou Costello were in the midst of one of their feuds, and were not speaking to each other. Consequently, the two have very few scenes where they appear together. They were also feuding when they began to shoot "LITTLE GIANT" (1946), which is why they also have few scenes together in that picture.(6)Writing in the Saturday Evening Post in 1949, Bud Abbott said this was his favorite film role, because for a change he was the butt of all the punishment, instead of Costello.
  I loved this movie August 1, 2004 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
and I even cried at the end - happy tears.
This is for usre one and Abbott and Costello's best films.
Luckily it is available in DVD now on the Best of Volume 2 alone with 7 other gems.
Don't miss it!
  The Greatest Abbott & Costello movie ever June 20, 2004 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I just finsihed reading everyone's reviews and agree wholeheartly: this is the BEST Abbott & Costello movie ever! I remember watching their movies every Sunday morning at 11:30 when I was a kid. But this one is by far the best and is my all time favorite! The funny thing is, I haven't met too many peoole who know this movie!Bring on the DVD!!
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