The Absent-Minded Professor

The Absent-Minded Professor

:"For the stock character, see absent-minded professor."Infobox Film
name = The Absent-Minded Professor
director = Robert Stevenson
producer = Bill Walsh
writer = Samuel W. Taylor
Bill Walsh
starring = Fred MacMurray
Nancy Olson
music = George Bruns
cinematography = Edward Colman
editing = Cotton Warburton
distributor = Buena Vista Distribution Co. Inc.
released = March 16 1961
runtime = 97 mins
country = United States
language = English
imdb_id = 0054594

"The Absent-Minded Professor" is a 1961 Walt Disney Pictures film based on the short story A Situation of Gravity, by Samuel W. Taylor. The film was reissued to theaters in 1967 and 1975, and released to video in 1981, 1986, and 1992. It was a huge success at the box-office, and has been remade twice since - once as a version for television starring Harry Anderson of TV's "Night Court" as the Professor, and once more as a theatrical film entitled "Flubber", with Robin Williams as the Professor. Neither remake was as successful or is as highly regarded as the original, but the Robin Williams version was still a considerable success. Both remakes were made in color.

The original 1961 film, shot in black-and-white, was one of the first Disney films to be colorized, for the 1986 video release, and along with "The Shaggy Dog" (1959) and "Son of Flubber", is one of Disney's few black-and-white films made after the silent film era.

Plot

Professor Brainard is an absent-minded professor of physical chemistry at Medfield College who invents a substance that gains energy when it strikes a hard surface. This discovery follows some blackboard scribbling in which he reverses a sign in the equation for enthalpy to energy plus (rather than minus which is incorrect) pressure times volume. Brainard names his discovery "Flubber", for "flying rubber". In the excitement of his discovery, he misses his own wedding to Betsy Carlisle, not for the first time. Subplots include another professor's wooing the disappointed Miss Carlisle, Biff Hawk's ineligibility for basketball due to failing Brainard's class, Alonzo Hawk's schemes to gain wealth by means of Flubber, the school's financial difficulties and debt to Mr. Hawk, and Brainard's attempts to interest the government and military in uses for Flubber.

Looking for backers, he bounces his Flubber ball for an audience, but his investment pitch proves so long-winded that most of the crowd has left before they notice that the ball bounced higher on its second bounce than on its first. For a more successful demonstration, he makes his Model T fly by bombarding Flubber with radioactive particles. Other adventures and misadventures result as Flubber is used on the bottoms of basketball players' shoes (in a crucial game) giving them tremendous jumping ability; Brainard (at a school dance) making him an accomplished dancer, and the scheming businessman (who must be tackled by a full football team to bring him down after Brainard tricks him into testing Flubber on the bottom of his shoes). Eventually, Brainard shows his discovery to the government and also wins back Miss Carlisle, culminating in a successful wedding at last.

Cast

Production notes

* Medfield College was also the setting for three other Disney films from 1969-1975 starring Kurt Russell as Dexter Riley, Joe Flynn as Dean Higgins, Cesar Romero as A.J. Arno and Michael McGreevey as Shuyler ("The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes", "Now You See Him, Now You Don't" and "The Strongest Man in the World"). Another pair of films starring Tommy Kirk as Merlin Jones in 1964-65 ("The Misadventures of Merlin Jones" and " The Monkey's Uncle", both co-starring Annette Funicello) were set at the fictional Midvale College.
*Ed Wynn and son Keenan Wynn appear together in this film; Keenan's son Ned also appears uncredited in a bit part. The elder Wynn plays the Fire Chief. Keenan Wynn also played Alonzo Hawk in the sequel "Son of Flubber" and again in "Herbie Rides Again" (1974).
* Hubert Alyea (1903-1996), a former professor of Chemistry at Princeton University, has been cited as the inspiration for this character.

equel

This film was followed by a sequel "Son of Flubber", released in 1963 also featuring MacMurray, Olson, Reid, the three Wynns (Ed Wynn as a Hank Kimball-like county agent and Ned as the student manager of Rutland's football team), Hewitt (as District Attorney) and Kirk.

Remakes

The film was remade in 1988 as a TV movie with Harry Anderson and Mary Page Keller as the renamed characters Prof. Henry Crawford and Ellen Whitley; and in 1997 as the theatrical motion picture "Flubber", starring Robin Williams as the slightly renamed Prof. Philip Brainard and Marcia Gay Harden as his love interest, Dr. Sara Jean Reynolds. Nancy Olson had a cameo in the remake.

References

*
* Wingrove, David. Science Fiction Film Source Book (Longman Group Limited, 1985)
* [http://www.ultimatedisney.com/absentminded.html UltimateDisney.com DVD Review]
* [http://online.tvguide.com/Movies/database/ShowMovie.asp?MI=42 "TVGuide".com Movies page]


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