The Time of Their Lives (The Ghost Steps Out) (1946)
-
81% of users liked it
(618 ratings)
While perhaps not Abbott & Costello's best film, The Time of Their Lives is certainly their most unusual. Lou Costello plays a Revolutionary War-era tinker, whose prized possession is a letter from George Washington, commending Costello as a loyal patriot. Costello's lady love is Anne… More While perhaps not Abbott & Costello's best film, The Time of Their Lives is certainly their most unusual. Lou Costello plays a Revolutionary War-era tinker, whose prized possession is a letter from George Washington, commending Costello as a loyal patriot. Costello's lady love is Anne Gillis, maidservant to aristocratic Jess Barker. Costello's rival in romance is Barker's butler Bud Abbott, who locks the tubby tinker in a trunk to keep him away from Gillis. Meanwhile, Gillis stumbles onto a plot to betray the Colonial Armies, masterminded by Barker. The girl is kidnaped and spirited away, but not before Barker has appropriated Costello's letter from Washington and hidden it in a mantelpiece clock. All this is witnessed by Barker's fiancee Marjorie Reynolds, who disguises herself as a man, the better to make her way through the lines to warn the Colonial troops of Barker's plot. She frees Costello from his trunk and enlists his aid in locating Washington. Mistaken for traitors, Costello and Reynolds are shot dead. Their bodies are thrown in a well as a colonial officer curses their souls to remain on the grounds of Barker's estate "until the crack of doom," unless some evidence should prove them innocent of treason. A few moments later, Costello and Reynolds materialize as ghosts. They try to escape the grounds, but a supernatural force holds them back. Flash-forward nearly two centuries to 1946: Costello and Reynolds, still confined to the estate, resent the intrusion by Barker's descendants, who plan to renovate the mansion and open it to tourists. The two ghosts decide to haunt the estate, resulting in a series of amusing and well-conceived invisibility gags. Much to their surprise, Costello and Reynolds find none other than Costello's old nemesis Bud Abbott as one of the house guests. No, Abbott isn't a ghost: he's a famed psychiatrist, a descendant of the butler who double-crossed Costello back in 1780. Costello has a high old time playing tricks on the nervous Abbott (a fascinating reversal of the usual Abbott-Costello relationship) before the rest of the house's occupants decide to hold a seance to find out what's annoying the two ghosts. In a genuinely spooky sequence, sinister house servant Gale Sondergaard, possessed by the spirit of Jess Barker, reveals that the ghosts have been falsely accused of treason, and that their salvation lies in locating that letter from Washington. Driven by a feeling of remorse over the sins of his ancestor, Abbott does his best to help the ghosts. Before the plot is resolved, there is time for a standard Abbott-and-Costello chase scene, with the invisible Costello driving a car wildly around the estate, with a terrified Abbott cringing in the back seat. More than a little inspired by The Canterville Ghost, The Time of Their Lives was the second of two Universal films that attempted to recast Abbott and Costello as individual characters rather than smart guy-dumb guy team members. While the film is an unmitigated delight when seen today, it failed at the box office in 1946, compelling Bud and Lou to return to their standard formula in their next film, Buck Privates Come Home. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- Directed By
- Charles Barton
- Written By
- Val Burton, Walter DeLeon, John Grant, Bradford Ropes
- Genres
- Mystery & Suspense, Classics, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Comedy
- In Theaters
- Jan 1, 1946 Wide
Critic Reviews
-
Steve Crum, Dispatch-Tribune Newspapers
A bold Abbott & Costello venture, featuring the team in separate roles entirely, which was very inventive for its time.
See more critic ratings and reviews on Rotten Tomatoes
Fresh (60% or more critics rated the movie positively)
Rotten (59% or fewer critics rated the movie positively)
Featured Audience Ratings
Currently unavailable on Flixster
Also available on
Other Retailers
Subscription Services
Cast
-
Lou Costello
as Horatio Prim
-
Bud Abbott
as Cuthbert, Dr. Greenway
-
Marjorie Reynolds
as Melody Allen
-
Binnie Barnes
as Mildred Prescott
-
Gale Sondergaard
as Emily
-
John Shelton
as Sheldon Gage
-
Jess Barker
as Tom Danbury
-
Robert H. Barrat
as Maj. Putnam
-
Donald MacBride
as Lieutenant Mason
-
Ann Gillis
as Nora
-
Lynne Baggett
as June Prescott
-
William Hall
as Connors
-
Rex Lease
as Sgt. Makepeace
- Kirk Alyn
-
Walter S. Baldwin
as Bates
-
Wheaton Chambers
as Guard
-
Vernon P. Downing
as Leigh
-
Marjorie Eaton
as Bessie
- Myron Healey
-
Boyd Irwin
as Cranwell
-
Selmar Jackson
as Curator
-
Harry Woolman
as Motorcycle Rider
-
John Crawford
as Dandies
- George Carlton
-
Harry Brown
as 2nd Sergeant
- Scott Thomson