The Tunnel of Love (1958)
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29% of users liked it
(199 ratings)
Though very tame by contemporary standards, Tunnel of Love was considered the last word in racy comedy back in 1958. Adapted from the Broadway hit by Peter DeVries and Joseph Fields, the film stars Doris Day and Richard Widmark as suburbanites Isolde and Augie Poole. Isolde and Augie desperately… More Though very tame by contemporary standards, Tunnel of Love was considered the last word in racy comedy back in 1958. Adapted from the Broadway hit by Peter DeVries and Joseph Fields, the film stars Doris Day and Richard Widmark as suburbanites Isolde and Augie Poole. Isolde and Augie desperately want a child, but for diverse reasons have never been able to conceive. They decide to adopt a child, prompting a visit to the Poole home by pretty adoption-agency officer Estelle Novick (Gia Scala). Through a series of misundertandings, Estelle decides that Augie isn't a likely candidate for fatherhood, a notion he tries to dispell by taking her out to dinner. One thing leads to another, and the next morning Augie wakes up in a strange motel room with a monstrous hangover. Months later, Estelle pays a visit to Augie, informing him that she's pregnant and in dire need of a great deal of money. Certain that he's the father, Augie goes to great lengths to hide his "indiscretion" from his wife. But Isolde begins to suspect that something is amiss when the adoption agency shows up with a baby that looks disturbingly like her husband. Nothing is quite what it seems, of course, but neither the characters nor the audience find this out til the very end. As comic contrast to the childless Pooles, Elizabeth Fraser co-stars as the couple's eternally pregant next-door-neighbor Alice Pepper, whose husband Dick (Gig Young) looks appropriately worn out. Tunnel of Love was Gene Kelly's first directorial assignment on a film in which he himself didn't appear. (As a footnote, it's worth noting that during the original Broadway run of Tunnel of Love, Augie Poole was briefly portrayed by Johnny Carson). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- Directed By
- Gene Kelly
- Genres
- Romance, Classics, Comedy
- In Theaters
- Nov 21, 1958 Wide
- On DVD
- Apr 7, 2009
Critic Reviews
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David Cornelius, DVDTalk.com
Full of missteps as the cast tries its darnedest to get around a limp screenplay and its unlikable characters.
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John J. Puccio, Movie Metropolis
...harmless and inconsequential, never outright funny but occasionally amusing in a low-key manner.
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Dennis Schwartz, Ozus' World Movie Reviews
The actors are game, but the film was flat and not a bit funny.
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Cast
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Doris Day
as Isolde Poole
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Richard Widmark
as Augie Poole
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Gig Young
as Dick Pepper
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Gia Scala
as Estelle Novick
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Elisabeth Fraser
as Alice Pepper
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Elizabeth Wilson
as Miss MacCracken
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Vikki Dougan
as Actress
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Doodles Weaver
as Escort
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Charles Wagenheim
as Day Motel Man
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Robert B. Williams
as Night Motel Man
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The Esquire Trio
as Themselves