Walk Don't Run
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- This article is about the film. For the hit surf music single, see The Ventures.
Walk Don't Run | |
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Directed by | Charles Walters |
Produced by | Sol C. Siegel |
Written by | Robert Russell, Frank Ross |
Starring | Cary Grant, Samantha Eggar, Jim Hutton |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date(s) | 29 June 1966 (USA) |
Running time | 114 min. |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Walk Don't Run (sometimes titled as Walk, Don't Run in U.S. promotional materials), was a 1966 film comedy set in Tokyo during the Olympic Games in 1964. It marked the last appearance by Cary Grant in a feature film. It is a remake of the 1943 film The More the Merrier.
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[edit] Plot
Sir William Rutland (Grant) is an important English businessman who arrives in the city two days early and is greeted by the housing shortage caused by the Games. While at the British Embassy seeking help, he notices an apartment available card on the bulletin board and decides to check the place out. He finds himself at the residence of Christine Easton, (Samantha Eggar), who insists that it would be improper to take him in as a housemate—for while she forgot to advertise so, she naturally preferred a woman. Half Easton’s conceding it her “patriotic duty” to take him in and half Rutland’s own self-assured pushiness, they become temporary housemates.
Rutland then sublets half of his half of the cramped space to American Olympian Steve Davis (Jim Hutton), in whom Rutland sees a younger version of himself. While Easton is less than thrilled with the arrangement, she permits it grudgingly. Rutland sets about playing match-maker for the two young people, in spite of their disparate personalities and Easton’s engagement to boringly dependable British diplomat Julius P. Haversack (John Standing).
Davis repeatedly refuses to reveal what sport he is competing in. Rutland meddles in the young couple's romantic troubles, and the movie culminates in his suddenly appearing in his underwear race walking along with Davis, trying to heal the breach between the young lovers.
In several comic scenes of Rutland making coffee, he shows he is a well-to-do person who has obviously never had to make his own coffee, filling the basket to the brim, then leveling it off with his hand.
[edit] Trivia
In the movie, Cary Grant makes references to other movies he has appeared in. While making coffee, he whistles the tune of the theme from Charade with Audrey Hepburn, and while showering, he sings the theme to An Affair to Remember with Deborah Kerr.