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Artists and Models
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Directed by Frank Tashlin.
Bearing very little relation to the 1937 Paramount musical of the same name, Artists and Models is a lavish, girl-filled vehicle for the popular team of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. Martin plays Rick Todd, a comic-book artist who is under fire from his publisher (Eddie Mayehoff), who complains that Rick's work isn't gory enough. Lewis plays Eugene Fullstack, Rick's roommate, who while asleep dreams up elaborate comic-book plots and garishly costumed superheroes. Eugene's nightmares help Rick become a success; meanwhile, our two heroes romance their luscious neighbors, artist Dorothy Malone and rambunctious model Shirley MacLaine (who during one song wrestles Eugene to the floor and sits on his chest!) Eugene's overworked imagination somehow attracts the attention of a group of Russian spies, who attempt to abduct Eugene during the annual Artists and Models Ball. Director Frank Tashlin uses Artists and Models as an excuse for some of the wildest sight-gags seen in a mid-1950s film. At one point, the director contrives to stuff a gag in Shirley MacLaine's mouth. Tashlin also exhibits his ongoing fascination with female breasts and legs by giving ample screen time to the natural attributes of co-stars Anita Ekberg and Zsa Zsa Gabor. One of the best of the Martin/Lewis efforts, Artists and Models suffers only from being about 20 minutes too long. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Though he arrived at the tail end of their collaboration, with the two films he directed, Frank Tashlin helped end Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis' string of film vehicles on a pair of high notes. He did so while finding his own directorial voice -- one, as it turns out, not terribly far removed from the one found in his work as an animator. In addition to its wildly imaginative sight gags, Artists and Models sports a freewheeling, take-all-comers approach to comedy that allowed Tashlin to jump from one then-hot topic to another, from the Cold War to the controversy over comic books. It's this unpredictability that proves both Artists and Models' greatest strength and its greatest weakness, devolving by its end into unfocused chaos, albeit pretty funny chaos nonetheless. Lewis and Martin make for ideal living-cartoon protagonists, finding the perfect foils in Dorothy Malone and especially Shirley MacLaine, who matches Lewis in outrageous gesture for outrageous gesture. If the satirical targets have aged a bit, Tashlin's approach prevents that from hurting the film too much. He's as interested in the broad themes behind the targets -- barely sublimated sexuality, the hypocrisy of authority -- as the targets themselves. Even if the ready availability of too many ideas ultimately gets the better of the director, the film remains a delight from start to quite near the finish. ~ Keith Phipps, All Movie Guide
 

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