fbpx
Wikipedia

After the Fox

After the Fox (Italian: Caccia alla volpe) is a 1966 heist comedy film directed by Vittorio De Sica and starring Peter Sellers, Victor Mature and Britt Ekland. The English-language screenplay was written by Neil Simon and De Sica's longtime collaborator Cesare Zavattini.

After the Fox
Theatrical release poster by Frank Frazetta
Directed byVittorio De Sica
Screenplay byNeil Simon (screenplay)
Cesare Zavattini
Produced byJohn Bryan
StarringPeter Sellers
Britt Ekland
Lydia Brazzi
Paolo Stoppa
Victor Mature
Tino Buazzelli
Vittorio De Sica
CinematographyLeonida Barboni
Edited byRussell Lloyd
Music byBurt Bacharach
Piero Piccioni
Production
company
Delegate / Nancy Enterprises
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
15 December 1966 (1966-12-15)
Running time
103 minutes
CountriesItaly
United Kingdom
United States[1]
LanguagesEnglish
Italian
Budget$3 million[citation needed]
Box office$2,296,970 (rentals)[2]

Despite its notable credits, the film was poorly received when it was released but has since gained a cult following for its numerous in-jokes skewering movie stars, starstruck audiences, pretentious film critics and pompous directors, including Cecil B. DeMille, Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni and De Sica.[3] The film was remade in 2010 in Hindi as Tees Maar Khan.[4]

Plot edit

Outside of Cairo, Okra uses a bikini-clad accomplice as a distraction and hijacks $3 million in gold bullion. The thieves need a way to smuggle the two tons of gold bars into Europe. Aldo Vanucci, a master of disguise known as The Fox, is one of the few men who can handle the assignment, but he is in prison.

Vanucci is reluctant to accept the job for fear of disgracing his mother and young sister Gina. When his three sidekicks inform him that Gina has grown up and does not always come home after school, an enraged, overprotective Vanucci vows to escape. He impersonates the prison doctor and flees with the aid of his gang. At home, his mother tells him that Gina is working on the street, which he takes to mean that Gina is a prostitute. But he discovers that Gina is merely acting in a low-budget film shooting on the street. Vanucci realizes that the smuggling job will improve his family's life. He makes contact with Okra and his female accomplice and agrees to smuggle the gold into Italy for half of the take. Two policemen are constantly on Vanucci's trail, and he uses disguises and tricks to throw them off.

After watching a crowd mob the over-the-hill American matinée idol Tony Powell, it strikes Vanucci that movie stars and film crews are idolized and have free rein in society. This insight forms the basis of his plan. Posing as an Italian neo-realist director named Federico Fabrizi, he intends to bring the gold ashore in broad daylight as a scene in an avant-garde film. To give the picture an air of legitimacy, he cons Powell to star in the film, which is blatantly titled The Gold of Cairo (a play on The Gold of Naples, a film that De Sica directed in 1954). Powell's agent, Harry, is suspicious of Fabrizi, but his vain client wants to do the film. Fabrizi enlists the starstruck population of Sevalio, a tiny fishing village, to unload the shipment, but when the boat carrying the gold is delayed, Fabrizi must actually shoot scenes for his phony film to maintain the ruse.

The ship finally arrives, and the townspeople unload the gold, but Okra double-crosses Vanucci and drives off with the gold. A slapstick car chase ensues and Okra, Vanucci and the police crash into each other. Vanucci, Tony Powell, Gina, Okra and the villagers are accused of being co-conspirators. Vanucci's "film" is shown as evidence in court, where a film critic proclaims the disjointed footage to be a masterpiece. Vanucci confesses his guilt, thereby exonerating the villagers, but vows to escape from prison once again. He escapes by impersonating the prison doctor again, this time tying the doctor up in his cell and walking out of the prison in his place. But when he attempts to remove his fake beard, Vanucci discovers that the beard is real and exclaims, "The wrong man has escaped!"

Cast edit

Production edit

This was Neil Simon's first screenplay; at that time, he had three hit shows running on Broadway — Little Me, Barefoot in the Park and The Odd Couple. Simon originally wanted to write a spoof of art-house films such as Last Year at Marienbad and the Michelangelo Antonioni films, but the story evolved into the idea of a film-within-a-film. In his 1996 memoir Rewrites, Simon recalled that an agent suggested Peter Sellers for the lead, while Simon preferred casting "an authentic Italian" such as Marcello Mastroianni or Vittorio Gassman. Sellers loved the script and asked Vittorio De Sica to direct.[5]

De Sica's interest in the project surprised Simon, who at first dismissed it as a way for the director to support his gambling habit. But De Sica saw an opportunity to make a social statement about how the pursuit of money corrupts even the arts. Simon believed that De Sica also relished the opportunity to take potshots at the Italian film industry. De Sica insisted that Simon collaborate with Cesare Zavattini. Since neither spoke the other's language, the two writers worked through interpreters. Simon wrote, "He had very clear, concise, and intelligent comments that I could readily understand and agree with." Still, Simon worried that inserting social statements into what he considered a broad farce would not do justice to either. Yet, After The Fox does touch on themes found in De Sica's earlier work, namely those of disillusion and dignity.[5]

Sellers said that his main reason for making the film was the chance to work with De Sica. After the Fox was the first film produced by Sellers' new Brookfield production company, which he had formed in partnership with John Bryan, a former production designer. It was also their last production, as Sellers and Bryan had a rift over De Sica. Sellers complained that the director "thinks in Italian; I think in English" and wanted De Sica replaced, but Bryan resisted for financial and artistic reasons. De Sica grew impatient with Sellers and did not like Sellers' performance or Simon's screenplay.[6]

Victor Mature, who had retired from films five years earlier, was lured back to the screen by the prospect of parodying himself as Tony Powell.[6] A clip from Mature's 1949 film Easy Living (in which he plays an aging football star) appears in the film. He agreed to make After The Fox after a receiving a call from Sellers.[7] Mature also revealed that he based Tony Powell partially on De Sica "... plus a lot of egotism, and DeMille, too — that bit with the fellow following him around with the chair all the time." Mature told the Chicago Tribune: "I not only enjoyed doing the film, but it gave me the urge to get back into pictures. They were an exciting group of people to work with."[8]

According to Simon, Sellers demanded that his wife Britt Ekland be cast as Gina, the Fox's sister. Ekland's Nordic looks and accent were wrong for the role, but to keep Sellers happy, De Sica acquiesced. Simon recalled that Ekland worked hard on the film.[5] Sellers and Ekland made one other film together, The Bobo (1967).

Akim Tamiroff appears as Okra, the mastermind of the heist in Cairo. Tamiroff had been working on and off for Orson Welles playing Sancho Panza in Don Quixote, a film that Welles never finished. Martin Balsam plays Tony's dyspeptic agent Harry. Maria Grazia Buccella appears as Okra's voluptuous accomplice. Buccella was a former Miss Italy (1959) and placed third in the Miss Europe pageant. She had been considered for the role of Domino in Thunderball.[9] Lydia Brazzi, the wife of actor Rossano Brazzi, was hand-picked by De Sica for the role of the Fox's mother, despite her protests that she was not an actress.[5] Lando Buzzanca appears as the chief of police in Sevalio. Simon recalled that the Italian supporting cast learned their English lines phonetically.[5]

The film's budget was $3 million, which included the construction of a replica of Rome's most famous street, the Via Veneto, on the Cinecittà lot, and location filming in the village of Sant'Angelo on Ischia in the Bay of Naples. The Sevalio sequences were shot during the height of the tourist season. Reportedly, the villagers of Sant'Angelo were so busy accommodating tourists that they had no time to appear in the film; extras were brought in from a neighboring village.[5]

Simon lamented that De Sica insisted on using his own film editors, who did not speak English and did not understand the jokes.[5] The film was later recut in Rome by one of John Huston's favorite film editors, Russell Lloyd, but Simon believed that more funny bits "are lying in a cutting room in Italy," possibly including a deleted scene in which Vanucci impersonates one of the Beatles.[10] The voices and accents of the Italian comic actors were dubbed in London, mainly by Robert Rieti, and edited in Rome by Malcolm Cooke, who had been a post-sync dialogue editor on Lawrence of Arabia.[citation needed]

Simon summed up his opinion of the film: "[T]o give the picture its due, it was funny in spots, innovative in its plot, and was well-intentioned. But a hit picture? Uh-uh ... Still today, After the Fox remains a cult favorite."[5]

Burt Bacharach composed the score and cowrote the title song with lyricist Hal David. For the Italian release, the score was composed by Piero Piccioni.[11] The title song "After the Fox" was recorded by the Hollies with Sellers in August 1966 and released by United Artists as a single (b/w "The Fox-Trot").[12][13]

Release edit

After the Fox was released in Great Britain, Italy and the United States in December 1966.[14] As part of a publicity barrage, United Artists announced that it had signed Federico Fabrizi to direct three films. The story was to be planted in the trade papers and then appear in general newspapers, with Sellers available for telephone interviews in character as Fabrizi. The editors of Daily Variety recognized the fictional name immediately and spoiled the gag.[15]

Influence edit

The scene in which Okra speaks to Aldo through the beautiful Maria Grazia Buccella inspired a similar scene in Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002), in which Austin Powers talks to Foxxy Cleopatra through the Nathan Lane character.[citation needed]

The 2010 Bollywood film Tees Maar Khan is an authorized remake.[4]

Reception and legacy edit

The film was poorly received when it was released and earned mixed reviews. New York Times critic Bosley Crowther wrote: "It's pretty much of a mess, this picture. Yes, you'd think it was done by amateurs."[16]

The Variety reviewer thought that "Peter Sellers is in nimble, lively form in this wacky comedy which, though sometimes strained, has a good comic idea and gives the star plenty of scope for his usual range of impersonations."[17]

The Boston Globe called the film "funny, fast and wholly ridiculous" and thought Sellers' portrayal of Fabrizi "hilarious."[18]

Billboard called the film "a series of fun-filled satires ... guaranteed for laughs" and thought that Sellers was "at his droll best" and Mature "hilarious."[19]

Monthly Film Bulletin wrote, "Continuing the De Sica's decline of recent years, this witless comedy of incompetent crooks and excitable Italians never even begins to get off the ground" and called Seller's performance "self-indulgent," but singled out Mature as "amusing and touching."[20]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 78% approval rating with an average rating of 5.9 out of 10, based on reviews from 9 critics.[21]

The film has some kinship with What's New Pussycat?, which was released the previous year and also starred Sellers. That film was the first written by Woody Allen, who, like Neil Simon, had been a staff writer for Sid Caesar. Even the advertising tagline on the posters and trailer for After The Fox proclaimed, "You Caught The Pussycat ... Now Chase The Fox!".[6] The poster art for both films was illustrated by Frank Frazetta.[22]

It has since gained a cult following for its numerous in-jokes skewering movie stars, starstruck audiences, pretentious film critics and pompous directors, including Cecil B. DeMille, Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni and De Sica.[3]

The film was remade in 2010 in Hindi as Tees Maar Khan.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ AFI
  2. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1967", Variety, 3 January 1968, p. 25.
  3. ^ a b Erickson, Hal. "After the Fox: Overview". AllMovie. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  4. ^ a b c "It's official: Tees Maar Khan is a remake". rediff.com. 22 December 2010. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Simon, Neil (1996). "La Dolce Vita". Rewrites: A Memoir. ISBN 0-684-82672-0.
  6. ^ a b c McKay, James (2012). The Films of Victor Mature. McFarland. pp. 20, 165–166. ISBN 978-0-7864-4970-5.
  7. ^ Thomas, Kevin (7 December 1966). "Victor Mature Hits Stride". Los Angeles Times. p. D15.
  8. ^ Chicago Tribune, Jan. 15, 1967.
  9. ^ "Production Notes – Thunderball". MI6. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  10. ^ "The Faces Of Sellers", The Baltimore Sun, 1 Aug. 1965
  11. ^ Spencer, Kristopher (2008). Film and Television Scores, 1950–1979: A Critical Survey by Genre. McFarland. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-7864-5228-6.
  12. ^ Strong, Martin Charles (2002). The Great Rock Discography. Canongate. p. 495. ISBN 978-1-84195-312-0.
  13. ^ Neely, Tim; Popoff, Martin (2009). Goldmine Price Guide to 45 RPM Records. Krause. p. 316. ISBN 978-0-89689-958-2.
  14. ^ Munden, Kenneth White (1997). The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States. University of California Press. pp. 11–12. ISBN 978-0-520-20970-1.
  15. ^ "Hocus Pocus Vs. Pokus-Hoaxers on UA's Fabrizi", Variety, 23 Nov. 1966
  16. ^ Crowther, Bosley (24 December 1966). "After the Fox (1966). Screen: 'After the Fox': First Neil Simon Film Has Local Premiere". The New York Times. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  17. ^ Variety staff (31 December 1965). "Review: After the Fox". Variety. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  18. ^ Boston Globe; Dec. 16, 1966; p. 38
  19. ^ Boxoffice, Dec. 12, 1966.
  20. ^ Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 33, no. 384. London. 1 January 1966. p. 168. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  21. ^ "After the Fox (1966)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  22. ^ Booker, M. Keith (2014). Comics through Time: A History of Icons, Idols, and Ideas. ABC-CLIO. p. 587. ISBN 978-0-313-39751-6.

External links edit

after, italian, caccia, alla, volpe, 1966, heist, comedy, film, directed, vittorio, sica, starring, peter, sellers, victor, mature, britt, ekland, english, language, screenplay, written, neil, simon, sica, longtime, collaborator, cesare, zavattini, theatrical,. After the Fox Italian Caccia alla volpe is a 1966 heist comedy film directed by Vittorio De Sica and starring Peter Sellers Victor Mature and Britt Ekland The English language screenplay was written by Neil Simon and De Sica s longtime collaborator Cesare Zavattini After the FoxTheatrical release poster by Frank FrazettaDirected byVittorio De SicaScreenplay byNeil Simon screenplay Cesare ZavattiniProduced byJohn BryanStarringPeter SellersBritt EklandLydia BrazziPaolo StoppaVictor MatureTino BuazzelliVittorio De SicaCinematographyLeonida BarboniEdited byRussell LloydMusic byBurt BacharachPiero PiccioniProductioncompanyDelegate Nancy EnterprisesDistributed byUnited ArtistsRelease date15 December 1966 1966 12 15 Running time103 minutesCountriesItaly United Kingdom United States 1 LanguagesEnglish ItalianBudget 3 million citation needed Box office 2 296 970 rentals 2 Despite its notable credits the film was poorly received when it was released but has since gained a cult following for its numerous in jokes skewering movie stars starstruck audiences pretentious film critics and pompous directors including Cecil B DeMille Federico Fellini Michelangelo Antonioni and De Sica 3 The film was remade in 2010 in Hindi as Tees Maar Khan 4 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 5 Influence 6 Reception and legacy 7 References 8 External linksPlot editOutside of Cairo Okra uses a bikini clad accomplice as a distraction and hijacks 3 million in gold bullion The thieves need a way to smuggle the two tons of gold bars into Europe Aldo Vanucci a master of disguise known as The Fox is one of the few men who can handle the assignment but he is in prison Vanucci is reluctant to accept the job for fear of disgracing his mother and young sister Gina When his three sidekicks inform him that Gina has grown up and does not always come home after school an enraged overprotective Vanucci vows to escape He impersonates the prison doctor and flees with the aid of his gang At home his mother tells him that Gina is working on the street which he takes to mean that Gina is a prostitute But he discovers that Gina is merely acting in a low budget film shooting on the street Vanucci realizes that the smuggling job will improve his family s life He makes contact with Okra and his female accomplice and agrees to smuggle the gold into Italy for half of the take Two policemen are constantly on Vanucci s trail and he uses disguises and tricks to throw them off After watching a crowd mob the over the hill American matinee idol Tony Powell it strikes Vanucci that movie stars and film crews are idolized and have free rein in society This insight forms the basis of his plan Posing as an Italian neo realist director named Federico Fabrizi he intends to bring the gold ashore in broad daylight as a scene in an avant garde film To give the picture an air of legitimacy he cons Powell to star in the film which is blatantly titled The Gold of Cairo a play on The Gold of Naples a film that De Sica directed in 1954 Powell s agent Harry is suspicious of Fabrizi but his vain client wants to do the film Fabrizi enlists the starstruck population of Sevalio a tiny fishing village to unload the shipment but when the boat carrying the gold is delayed Fabrizi must actually shoot scenes for his phony film to maintain the ruse The ship finally arrives and the townspeople unload the gold but Okra double crosses Vanucci and drives off with the gold A slapstick car chase ensues and Okra Vanucci and the police crash into each other Vanucci Tony Powell Gina Okra and the villagers are accused of being co conspirators Vanucci s film is shown as evidence in court where a film critic proclaims the disjointed footage to be a masterpiece Vanucci confesses his guilt thereby exonerating the villagers but vows to escape from prison once again He escapes by impersonating the prison doctor again this time tying the doctor up in his cell and walking out of the prison in his place But when he attempts to remove his fake beard Vanucci discovers that the beard is real and exclaims The wrong man has escaped Cast editPeter Sellers as Aldo Vanucci Federico Fabrizi Victor Mature as Tony Powell Britt Ekland as Gina Vanucci Gina Romantica Martin Balsam as Harry Granoff Akim Tamiroff as Okra Maria Grazia Buccella as Okra s sister Maurice Denham as The Chief of Interpol Paolo Stoppa as Polio Tino Buazzelli as Siepi Mac Ronay it as Carlo Lydia Brazzi as Mamma Vanucci Lando Buzzanca as The Police Chief Rizzuto Tiberio Murgia as 1st Detective Francesco De Leone as 2nd Detective Pier Luigi Pizzi as Prison Doctor Enzo Fiermonte as Raymond Carlo Croccolo as Salvatore Nino Vingelli as a judge Vittorio De Sica as himselfProduction editThis was Neil Simon s first screenplay at that time he had three hit shows running on Broadway Little Me Barefoot in the Park and The Odd Couple Simon originally wanted to write a spoof of art house films such as Last Year at Marienbad and the Michelangelo Antonioni films but the story evolved into the idea of a film within a film In his 1996 memoir Rewrites Simon recalled that an agent suggested Peter Sellers for the lead while Simon preferred casting an authentic Italian such as Marcello Mastroianni or Vittorio Gassman Sellers loved the script and asked Vittorio De Sica to direct 5 De Sica s interest in the project surprised Simon who at first dismissed it as a way for the director to support his gambling habit But De Sica saw an opportunity to make a social statement about how the pursuit of money corrupts even the arts Simon believed that De Sica also relished the opportunity to take potshots at the Italian film industry De Sica insisted that Simon collaborate with Cesare Zavattini Since neither spoke the other s language the two writers worked through interpreters Simon wrote He had very clear concise and intelligent comments that I could readily understand and agree with Still Simon worried that inserting social statements into what he considered a broad farce would not do justice to either Yet After The Fox does touch on themes found in De Sica s earlier work namely those of disillusion and dignity 5 Sellers said that his main reason for making the film was the chance to work with De Sica After the Fox was the first film produced by Sellers new Brookfield production company which he had formed in partnership with John Bryan a former production designer It was also their last production as Sellers and Bryan had a rift over De Sica Sellers complained that the director thinks in Italian I think in English and wanted De Sica replaced but Bryan resisted for financial and artistic reasons De Sica grew impatient with Sellers and did not like Sellers performance or Simon s screenplay 6 Victor Mature who had retired from films five years earlier was lured back to the screen by the prospect of parodying himself as Tony Powell 6 A clip from Mature s 1949 film Easy Living in which he plays an aging football star appears in the film He agreed to make After The Fox after a receiving a call from Sellers 7 Mature also revealed that he based Tony Powell partially on De Sica plus a lot of egotism and DeMille too that bit with the fellow following him around with the chair all the time Mature told the Chicago Tribune I not only enjoyed doing the film but it gave me the urge to get back into pictures They were an exciting group of people to work with 8 According to Simon Sellers demanded that his wife Britt Ekland be cast as Gina the Fox s sister Ekland s Nordic looks and accent were wrong for the role but to keep Sellers happy De Sica acquiesced Simon recalled that Ekland worked hard on the film 5 Sellers and Ekland made one other film together The Bobo 1967 Akim Tamiroff appears as Okra the mastermind of the heist in Cairo Tamiroff had been working on and off for Orson Welles playing Sancho Panza in Don Quixote a film that Welles never finished Martin Balsam plays Tony s dyspeptic agent Harry Maria Grazia Buccella appears as Okra s voluptuous accomplice Buccella was a former Miss Italy 1959 and placed third in the Miss Europe pageant She had been considered for the role of Domino in Thunderball 9 Lydia Brazzi the wife of actor Rossano Brazzi was hand picked by De Sica for the role of the Fox s mother despite her protests that she was not an actress 5 Lando Buzzanca appears as the chief of police in Sevalio Simon recalled that the Italian supporting cast learned their English lines phonetically 5 The film s budget was 3 million which included the construction of a replica of Rome s most famous street the Via Veneto on the Cinecitta lot and location filming in the village of Sant Angelo on Ischia in the Bay of Naples The Sevalio sequences were shot during the height of the tourist season Reportedly the villagers of Sant Angelo were so busy accommodating tourists that they had no time to appear in the film extras were brought in from a neighboring village 5 Simon lamented that De Sica insisted on using his own film editors who did not speak English and did not understand the jokes 5 The film was later recut in Rome by one of John Huston s favorite film editors Russell Lloyd but Simon believed that more funny bits are lying in a cutting room in Italy possibly including a deleted scene in which Vanucci impersonates one of the Beatles 10 The voices and accents of the Italian comic actors were dubbed in London mainly by Robert Rieti and edited in Rome by Malcolm Cooke who had been a post sync dialogue editor on Lawrence of Arabia citation needed Simon summed up his opinion of the film T o give the picture its due it was funny in spots innovative in its plot and was well intentioned But a hit picture Uh uh Still today After the Fox remains a cult favorite 5 Burt Bacharach composed the score and cowrote the title song with lyricist Hal David For the Italian release the score was composed by Piero Piccioni 11 The title song After the Fox was recorded by the Hollies with Sellers in August 1966 and released by United Artists as a single b w The Fox Trot 12 13 Release editAfter the Fox was released in Great Britain Italy and the United States in December 1966 14 As part of a publicity barrage United Artists announced that it had signed Federico Fabrizi to direct three films The story was to be planted in the trade papers and then appear in general newspapers with Sellers available for telephone interviews in character as Fabrizi The editors of Daily Variety recognized the fictional name immediately and spoiled the gag 15 Influence editThe scene in which Okra speaks to Aldo through the beautiful Maria Grazia Buccella inspired a similar scene in Austin Powers in Goldmember 2002 in which Austin Powers talks to Foxxy Cleopatra through the Nathan Lane character citation needed The 2010 Bollywood film Tees Maar Khan is an authorized remake 4 Reception and legacy editThe film was poorly received when it was released and earned mixed reviews New York Times critic Bosley Crowther wrote It s pretty much of a mess this picture Yes you d think it was done by amateurs 16 The Variety reviewer thought that Peter Sellers is in nimble lively form in this wacky comedy which though sometimes strained has a good comic idea and gives the star plenty of scope for his usual range of impersonations 17 The Boston Globe called the film funny fast and wholly ridiculous and thought Sellers portrayal of Fabrizi hilarious 18 Billboard called the film a series of fun filled satires guaranteed for laughs and thought that Sellers was at his droll best and Mature hilarious 19 Monthly Film Bulletin wrote Continuing the De Sica s decline of recent years this witless comedy of incompetent crooks and excitable Italians never even begins to get off the ground and called Seller s performance self indulgent but singled out Mature as amusing and touching 20 On Rotten Tomatoes the film has a 78 approval rating with an average rating of 5 9 out of 10 based on reviews from 9 critics 21 The film has some kinship with What s New Pussycat which was released the previous year and also starred Sellers That film was the first written by Woody Allen who like Neil Simon had been a staff writer for Sid Caesar Even the advertising tagline on the posters and trailer for After The Fox proclaimed You Caught The Pussycat Now Chase The Fox 6 The poster art for both films was illustrated by Frank Frazetta 22 It has since gained a cult following for its numerous in jokes skewering movie stars starstruck audiences pretentious film critics and pompous directors including Cecil B DeMille Federico Fellini Michelangelo Antonioni and De Sica 3 The film was remade in 2010 in Hindi as Tees Maar Khan 4 References edit AFI Big Rental Films of 1967 Variety 3 January 1968 p 25 a b Erickson Hal After the Fox Overview AllMovie Retrieved 16 February 2015 a b c It s official Tees Maar Khan is a remake rediff com 22 December 2010 Retrieved 4 January 2022 a b c d e f g h Simon Neil 1996 La Dolce Vita Rewrites A Memoir ISBN 0 684 82672 0 a b c McKay James 2012 The Films of Victor Mature McFarland pp 20 165 166 ISBN 978 0 7864 4970 5 Thomas Kevin 7 December 1966 Victor Mature Hits Stride Los Angeles Times p D15 Chicago Tribune Jan 15 1967 Production Notes Thunderball MI6 Retrieved 16 February 2015 The Faces Of Sellers The Baltimore Sun 1 Aug 1965 Spencer Kristopher 2008 Film and Television Scores 1950 1979 A Critical Survey by Genre McFarland p 48 ISBN 978 0 7864 5228 6 Strong Martin Charles 2002 The Great Rock Discography Canongate p 495 ISBN 978 1 84195 312 0 Neely Tim Popoff Martin 2009 Goldmine Price Guide to 45 RPM Records Krause p 316 ISBN 978 0 89689 958 2 Munden Kenneth White 1997 The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States University of California Press pp 11 12 ISBN 978 0 520 20970 1 Hocus Pocus Vs Pokus Hoaxers on UA s Fabrizi Variety 23 Nov 1966 Crowther Bosley 24 December 1966 After the Fox 1966 Screen After the Fox First Neil Simon Film Has Local Premiere The New York Times Retrieved 16 February 2015 Variety staff 31 December 1965 Review After the Fox Variety Retrieved 16 February 2015 Boston Globe Dec 16 1966 p 38 Boxoffice Dec 12 1966 Monthly Film Bulletin Vol 33 no 384 London 1 January 1966 p 168 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a Missing or empty title help After the Fox 1966 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 1 April 2022 Booker M Keith 2014 Comics through Time A History of Icons Idols and Ideas ABC CLIO p 587 ISBN 978 0 313 39751 6 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to After the Fox After the Fox at IMDb nbsp After the Fox at AllMovie After the Fox at the TCM Movie Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title After the Fox amp oldid 1218170530, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.