A neurotic baker travels to Hollywood to attend a talent search for an actor to rival the great Valentino. Although not an actor, through blind luck he succeeds – to a certain degree! —IMDb
Gene Wilder caught his first big break playing a small role in the off-Broadway production of Arnold Wesker’s Roots and followed quickly with his Broadway debut as the comic valet in The Complaisant Lover (both 1961), for which he won the Clement Derwent Award. His other Broadway credits included One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1963, with Kirk Douglas), The White House (1964, with Helen Hayes) and Luv (1966), but it was a 1963 Broadway production of Mother Courage and Her Children that altered the course of his life forever. In its cast was Anne Bancroft, who was dating Mel Brooks at the time, and the relationship established between the two men eventually led to Wilder’s becoming part of Brooks’ “stock company”. Wilder’s Actor’s Studio connection may have helped him land his first feature, Bonnie and Clyde (1967), in which he drew much favourable attention in a small but memorable role as a frightened young undertaker… read more
Very entertaining slapstick farce from writer-director-star Gene Wilder is packed with over the top characters, goofy set-pieces, and imbued with an almost surreal comic energy (Wilder dedicated the film to Fellini, and there's even of touch of that kind of offbeat whimsy). Some might find it a bit much, but this one deserves a cult following. Great score by John Morris.