I remember seeing this on TV in the late 70s - and it stayed with me! It's charming, loud, colourful - a great kids film. I put it on for some friends at a party recently - and naturally they thought I was mad and expected something sick to happen to the puppets a la "Meet the feebles" But no - its wholesome clean fun.
jack wild is in fine form, as is mama cass, and the somehow attractive witchy poo.
If you like the banana splits and you are in your 30's this will re-create that surreal childhood Saturday morning vibe!
Even if I've realised now that Puf himself is a bit crap - as all he does is get captured and run away! Quality TV movie - if, like me, you are into death metal - you'll love it!
Pufnstuf
1970
Action / Adventure / Comedy / Family / Fantasy / Musical
Plot summary
Young Jimmy is being pursued by the evil Wilhemina W. Witchiepoo. More specifically, Witchiepoo is after Jimmy's small friend, a small solid gold diamond encrusted talking flute named Freddy. Witchiepoo knows that if she has Freddy in her possession, she will definitely be named Witch of the Year at the upcoming witch's convention. In Witchiepoo's pursuit of them, Jimmy and Freddy escape to Living Island, where Witchiepoo's wicked castle is located. But Living Island is also a fantastical land of among other things talking animals, talking trees and talking winds. The mayor of Living Island is H.R. Pufnstuf, a talking dragon. Pufnstuf and his friends do whatever they need to to protect Jimmy and Freddy from Witchiepoo's evil grip. Pufnstuf and his friends have to get Jimmy and Freddy off the island to their ultimate safety. In the end, Jimmy may have to save Pufnstuf and all the good guys, as another of Witchiepoo's plans is to serve spit-roasted dragon at the convention.
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Great fun!
Pufnstuf
Right after the H. R. Pufnstuf television series ended its initial run, this film was quickly made to take advantage of its popularity. Financed by Universal and Kellogg's, the sponsors of the TV show, this film adds two new witches alongside Billie Hayes' Wilhelmina W. Witchiepoo: Witch Hazel, played by co-creator Sid Krofft's neighbor Cass Elliot and Boss Witch, played by Martha Raye, who was so beloved by the cast and crew that she ended up playing Benita Bizarre in the Kroffts' next show The Bugaloos.
The first choice to play Boss Witch? Bette Davis. When Sid called her, she was so upset that she was his first choice to play a witch that she hung up on him.
Pufnstuf is going to seem absolutely insane to anyone who didn't grow up in the 70s. It tells the story of Jimmy (Jack Wild),who gets along with absolutely no one in his school and then ends up getting kicked out of the school band before he meets a magical talking flute named Freddy. Today, we would get Jimmy the right drugs and therapy and he'd be successful integrated into a group of kids that would understand him - before mercilessly roasting him on social media - but in 1970 Jimmy ends up on an evil boat and being taken to Living Island, which is ruled by Mayor H. R. Pufnstuf.
As for the antaognists, Witchiepoo wants to steal Freddy the Flute away from Jimmy in order to impress the visiting Witches' Council and win the Witch of the Year Award. Oh yeah - th witches also plan on eating Pufnstuf, who I assume tastes like the best sashimi ever made.
What's wild is that Norman Gimbel and Charles Fox worked together for the first time creating the music for this movie and stuck together afterward, writing the songs "Killing Me Softly with His Song", "I Got A Name", "Ready To Take A Chance Again" and many other popular songs.
You know who had it rough? Marty Krofft, who accepted the guardianship of Jack Wild while the teenage boy was working in the United States, in addition to producing the show and movie.
I've always wondered if McDonald's ripped off the Kroffts. And I was right. The show was the subject of a successful lawsuit - Sid & Marty Krofft Television Productions Inc. V. McDonald's Corp., 562 F.2d 1157, - which was decided in the Krofft's favor by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1977.
Pufnstuf the movie was directed by Hollingsworth Morse, who also made Daughters of Satan and Ark II, and was written by John Fenton Murray, who also scripted Arnold, Lidsville, Sigmund and the Sea Monster and Partridge Family 2200 AD., and Si Rose, who wrote plenty of TV.
You can now get this movie from the awesome people at Kino Lorber, who have released it on blu ray along with an extra trailer. I'm excited to have this film as part of my collection and you will be too.
I'm rooting for witchipoo.
A flute that talks, a dragon sheriff who seems to lack firey breath, a stove that does a bad Edward G. Robinson impression, a house that sneezes, and all sorts of talking characters that appear to be in drag (check out the dancing frog) join "Oliver's" Jack Wild in this corny adventure. The Saturday morning live action kiddie show was successful enough at the time to warrant a big screen version, and it's entertaining enough to warrant a few laughs, but they are often embarrassing for adults, especially when they recall howling at stuff like this when they were a kid.
The energetic performance of Billie Hayes is the major reason to watch this, not the sappy score. Of the songs, only Mama Cass's "Different" stands out, having hidden meanings for kids bullied like Jack here, an outcast in his school simply because he's British. So while this at times seems to be simple children's entertainment, it does try to teach some valuable lessons. Only the most patient of adults will be able to get through it without cringing. References to cultural icons like the Gabor sisters and W.C. Fields as voices of some of the characters hidden inside the costumes, while a stereotypical John Wayne impersonator plays the skybound west wind. Famous little persons Billy Barty and Angelo Rossito are hidden inside some of the smaller costumes. Martha Raye is fairly amusing in a cameo as "boss witch".