Additional information for Bedknobs and Broomsticks, which has a domestic theatrical release set for December 13, 1971. The film is being distributed by Walt Disney Pictures and has not yet been rated. Bedknobs and Broomsticks has a total running time of 117 minutes.
PT
Peru
Livre
Brazil
o.Al.
West Germany
M/4
Portugal
G
New Zealand
AL
Netherlands
Atp
Argentina
G
Australia
G
Canada
TE
Chile
S
Finland
Btl
Sweden
U
UK
G
USA
L
Iceland
117min
139min
99min
89min
Hokus pokus kosteskaft
Denmark
Hokus pokus kosteskaft
Norway
La bruja novata
Argentina
La bruja novata
Spain
Ágygömb és seprűnyél
Hungary
A Meiga novata
Spain
Bedknobs and Broomsticks: 25th Anniversary Special Edition
USA
Die tollkühne Hexe in ihrem fliegenden Bett
West Germany
Galki od lózka i kije od miotly
Poland
Heksen en bezemstelen
Netherlands
Hokkuspokkus taikaluudalla
Finland
L'apprentie sorcière
France
Magisses kai skoupoxyla
Greece
Pomi d'ottone e manici di scopa
Italy
Sängknoppar och kvastskaft
Sweden
Se Minha Cama Voasse
Brazil
Se a Minha Cama Voasse...
Portugal
October 07, 1971
UK
November 11, 1971
USA
December 13, 1971
USA
December 23, 1971
Argentina
January 07, 1972
Brazil
October 16, 1972
Spain
October 23, 1972
Sweden
October 27, 1972
Finland
October 27, 1972
France
December 14, 1972
Italy
December 15, 1972
West Germany
December 26, 1972
Denmark
January 18, 1973
Hong Kong
March 10, 1973
Japan
September 19, 1974
Uruguay
June 24, 1981
France
August 18, 1983
Australia
You'll beWITCHED! You'll beDAZZLED! You'll be swept into a world of enchantment BEYOND ANYTHING BEFORE!
Bedknobs and BroomsticksThe movie is mainly set in a small South Coast English village, Pepperinge Eye, during World War II: an elderly farmer (Cyril Delevanti) is painting out the sign-posts, the Home Guard are exercising, led by General Sir Brian Teagler (Reginald Owen) and Captain Aisley Greer (Arthur Gould-Porter), and Mrs. Hobday (Tessie OShea) is allocating homes to children whom have been evacuated from London (sent to the countryside away from the risk of bombing raids). The three Rawlings children, Charlie (Ian Weighill), Carrie (Cindy OCallaghan) and Paul (Roy Smart) are reluctantly taken in by Miss Eglantine Price (Angela Lansbury). The children are also unhappy, not least at Miss Price's vegetarian lifestyle, and plan to run back to London, but unexpectedly discover, through her attempts to fly on a broomstick, that Miss Price is a trainee witch, complete with black cat ("Cosmic Creepers") and fully fitted magical laboratory ("poisoned dragons liver"); and to ensure their silence about this, she presents Paul, the youngest, with a magical bed-knob with which he can cause the bed to travel anywhere.Miss Price is eagerly awaiting the last installment of her magic correspondence course from 'Professor' Emelius Browne (David Tomlinson) of the College of Witchcraft and Wizardry, and is very disappointed when it fails to arrive, the College having closed. Using the bed (song: 'Age of Not Believing'), she and the children visit Mr. Browne in London, where he is revealed as a somewhat shady stage-magician turned street-vendor selling magic tricks: he takes Miss Price and the children to his home, a mansion abandoned because of an unexploded bomb in the front garden, where the children play in the nursery and he, astounded that Miss Price can actually perform genuine magic, firstly tries to induce her to form a magic variety act with him (song: 'Eglantine'), and then (after being briefly turned into a white rabbit by Miss Price to force him to be sensible) reveals that he copied all the spells used in his correspondence course from an old book, 'The Spells of Astaroth', of which, however, he only possesses the first half, without the "substitutiary locomotion" spell so desired by Miss Price.Mr. Browne decides the other half of the book is likely to be found in the Portobello Road street-market, so all go there the following day to search for the book, meeting amongst others an old-book-seller (Ben Wrigley). After an extensive song-and-dance-number (song: 'Portobello Road', featuring representatives of many nations which were part of the Allied WWII forces, including Scots, Indians and Jamaicans), as the market is closing, Browne is approached by the sinister 'spiv' Swinburne (Bruce Forsyth) who takes him (and the children and Miss Price, and the bed) to The Bookman (Sam Jaffe) who possesses the other half of the book, but this also does not contain the spell. It is revealed that the spell is actually inscribed on the 'Star of Astaroth', now in the possession of magically enhanced and now human-like animals, formerly owned by the sorcerer Astaroth, on the Isle of Naboombu. Paul, who has taken a comic-book about the Isle of Naboombu from the nursery, now activates the bed-knob to take Mr. Browne, Miss Price, and the three children there. (The following section of the movie, on Naboombu, is animation with live-action from these five individuals).Arriving at the Isle of Naboombu, the bed and its occupants falls into the lagoon, where it is washed into a sunken ship, the Beautiful Briny Ballroom where the fish are dancing: Mr. Browne and Miss Price join in (song: 'Beautiful Briny Sea'), and win the prize of a gold cup, but then all the fish disperse on seeing a fish-hook descend, which catches on the bed and draws it and the humans to the surface. There they meet a talking bear, who takes them to meet the King's secretary (a secretary bird): the King (a lion) is in a dreadful rage because there is no-one to referee his football match. Mr. Browne volunteers. The football match, between the King's team, the 'Dirty Yellows' (lion, hyena, gorilla, warthog, crocodile, rhinoceros), and the 'True Blues' (ostrich, elephant, cheetah, hippopotamus, kangaroo - yes, there are more players on the King's side) then takes place, the King scoring the winning goal, and Mr. Browne getting thoroughly beaten up, although not fatally injured, to the disappointment of the medical staff (vultures). After the match Mr. Browne pulls the "gypsy switch" on the King, substituting his referee's whistle for the Star of Astaroth round the King's neck: the humans then leave (pursued by the King as soon as he realizes what has occurred).Back in Pepperinge Eye, Miss Price tries to read the Star, but as it has come from another world, it has evaporated: however Paul finds the five magic words of the substitutiary locomotion spell on a picture of the Star in his comic-book. Miss Price tries out the spell, which animates clothing, with initially uncontrolled effect (also affecting the hat of the local curate, Mr. Jelk (Roddy McDowall): song: 'Substitutiary Locomotion'). Mrs. Hobday arrives to inform Miss Price that alternative accommodation has been found for the children - which saddens them. Mr. Browne also decides he should return to London, and goes to the station to await the milk-train.However, a troop of German soldiers under the command of Colonel Heller (John Ericson) have landed from a U-boat (submarine) on a raid, and take over Miss Price's cottage for their headquarters. She and the children are taken to the local castle, now a museum, and locked in: they are joined by Mr. Browne, who has also spotted the Germans and managed to turn himself into a white rabbit in order to enter. Using the substitutiary locomotion spell, Miss Price animates the entire contents of the museum, some hundreds of costumes of Vikings, Knights, Cavaliers, Hussars etc., plus drums, trumpets and a trio of bagpipe players, and launches these against the Germans, herself directing them from her broomstick. The Germans, including their sergeant (Rick Traeger) are driven with numerous comic effects back to the U-Boat, although they have left explosives which destroy Miss Price's magical laboratory. Miss Price is injured, at which the whole substitutiary locomotion activated army collapses. The Home Guard arrive to see the Germans leaving, and to claim the victory. The movie ends with the children remaining with Miss Price, and Mr. Browne joining the army, escorted by the Home Guard (song: 'Old Home Guard').
Robert Stevenson
Director(s)
Ralph Wright
Ted Berman
Bill Walsh
Don DaGradi
Mary Norton
Writer(s)
Bill Walsh
producer
Producer(s)
Irwin Kostal
Composer(s)
Miss Price
Angela Lansbury
Emelius
David Tomlinson
Mr. Jelk
Roddy McDowall
Bookman
Sam Jaffe
Col. Heller
John Ericson
Swinburne
Bruce Forsyth
Carrie
Cindy O'Callaghan
Paul
Roy Snart
Charlie
Ian Weighill
Mrs. Hobday
Tessie O'Shea
Capt. Greer (as Arthur E. Gould-Porter)
Arthur Gould-Porter
Portobello Rd. Workman
Ben Wrigley
Gen. Teagler
Reginald Owen
Elderly Farmer
Cyril Delevanti
German Sergeant
Rick Traeger
German Sergeant
Manfred Lating
Vendor
John Orchard
Codfish (voice) (as Robert Holt)
Bob Holt
Secretary Bird / Lion (voice)
Lennie Weinrib
Bear (voice)
Dal McKennon
Soldier at Portobello Road (uncredited)
Leon Alton
German Soldier (uncredited)
Conrad Bachmann
(uncredited)
Eric Brotherson
Soldier Playing Tenor Saxophone (uncredited)
James Brugman
Soldier (uncredited)
Patrick Sullivan Burke
Old Home Guardsman (uncredited)
Patrick Dennis-Leigh
Vendor (uncredited)
Anthony Eustrel
Old Piano Player (uncredited)
Morgan Farley
Shopkeeper (uncredited)
Ina Gould
Old Home Guardsman (uncredited)
Delos Jewkes
Vendor (uncredited)
Sid Kane
Spectator at Emelius' Failed Magic Performance (uncredited)
Milt Larsen
Mr. Widdenfield - Museum Guard (restored version) (uncredited)
Arthur Malet
Old Home Guardsman (uncredited)
George Mann
Minor Role (uncredited)
Chris Marks
(uncredited)
Barbara Morrison
Vendor (uncredited)
Richard Peel
Old Home Guardsman (uncredited)
Jack Raine
Portobello Dancer (uncredited)
Maxine Semon
Old Home Guardsman (uncredited)
Arthur Space
An apprentice witch, three kids and a cynical conman search for the missing component to a magic spell useful to the defense of Britain.
Director(s)
Ted Berman
Bill Walsh
Don DaGradi
Mary Norton
Writer(s)
producer
Producer(s)
Composer(s)
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