Spion in Spitzenhöschen (1966)
33KSpion in Spitzenhöschen: Directed by Frank Tashlin. With Doris Day, Rod Taylor, Arthur Godfrey, John McGiver. After a series of misunderstandings, the head of an aerospace research laboratory begins to suspect his new girlfriend is a Russian spy.
“What a warm, wonderful actress Doris Day is, what a knockout, what a screen presence. And just think, at the age of 42 (ancient by Hollywood standards in 1966) she was playing a desirable woman lusted after by several men. Glass Bottom Boat is a very u0026#39;60s comedy in look and subject matter – the space age and spies. Taylor has invented a gizmo and when thereu0026#39;s a leak from his project team, suspicion falls on Day, who works for the company and calls someone named Vladimir several times a day. Vladimir, however, is her dog, and sheu0026#39;s calling him so heu0026#39;ll run around while the phone is ringing and get some exercise.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe film is loaded with space-age gadgets. Tayloru0026#39;s computerized, motorized kitchen is great, complete with a floor-cleaning robot – wonder if the inventors of todayu0026#39;s robot vacuum saw this movie. He also pilots his boat via a remote – but as he points out during a scene where the boat runs amok with Day inside, that needs further work.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThereu0026#39;s lots of slapstick and comedy support from Dom Deluise, Dick Martin, and Paul Lynde. Lynde, by the way, looked great in drag, and has some great delivery in his scenes. Some of the scenes, especially those of Deluise, had an improv feel. The late Eric Fleming, Clint Eastwoodu0026#39;s boss on u0026quot;Rawhide,u0026quot; plays a CIA man. This was his last film; he drowned shortly afterwards. Rod Taylor, who, by the way, is younger than Doris Day, is effective as Dayu0026#39;s romantic interest. Of note, radio personality Arthur Godfrey plays Dayu0026#39;s father. Thereu0026#39;s also an appearance by Robert Vaughan as an homage to his u0026quot;Man from UNCLEu0026quot; character.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eFrothy fun, and Doris Day is always a delight.”