The Wild Weird World of Dr. Goldfoot (TV Movie 1965) Poster

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7/10
It wasn't a movie - but that don't mean it wasn't good
vinnie-bartilucci13 February 2005
This was indeed not a film. It was in fact an episode of the old TV dance show "Shindig" that AIP basically took over and did a half-hour long story to plug the upcoming release of Dr Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine.

It's quite a bit different from the film, but the basic concept is the same - Dr Goldfoot (Price) has built a line of lovely girl robots including the delicious Susan Hart.

Interestingly, Vincent Price explained in an interview many years later that in its original form, Dr Goldfoot was supposed to be more of a musical. Songs that tied into the plot would have made it more like what Rocky Horror would do many years later. The songs were cut from the script (and assumedly never recorded) but a lot of them showed up in this little episode. It's a neat look at what might have been for this classic.

The short (for lack of a better term) is available on a DVD called "Vincent Price-The Sinister Image" that is basically a long-form interview with Price, where he discusses his whole career. The Weird Wild World of Dr. Goldfoot is on the disk as an extra, but it's the main reason I bought the disk.
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5/10
SHINDIG!: The Wild, Weird World Of Dr. Goldfoot (Mel Ferber, 1965; TV) **
Bunuel197630 April 2010
At the same time as DR. GOLDFOOT AND THE GIRL BOMBS (1966; see above), I also managed to get hold of this rare TV program which actually served to introduce the dastardly character to U.S. audiences as a sort of teaser for his first official 'vehicle'. In keeping with the times and the studio (AIP), all three Goldfoot movies feature youthful male leads then at the height of their popularity: after Frankie Avalon in DR. GOLDFOOT AND THE BIKINI MACHINE (1965), then, but before Fabian from GIRL BOMBS, here we have blond Tommy Kirk. Incidentally, while I do not recall the first film very well (despite having watched it not too long ago, which suggests that it is rather forgettable!), I have a feeling that the plot of this one is basically a condensation of it (running a half-hour rather than one-and-a-half, though it is still padded-out with dated adverts by the various sponsors!). Apart from star Vincent Price, we have two other cast members of BIKINI MACHINE: Susan Hart (in much the same part of leading Girl Robot) and Harvey Lembeck (only a "guest star" in the film proper but here given the sizable role of Goldfoot's buffoonish henchman, making up for his mistakes by flattering the boss with such magnanimous designations as "King Of Evil" and, most hilariously, "Wizard Of Rottenness"). Needless to say, given its modest origins and lack of color, the effort all feels a bit half-hearted in this case – then again, one might argue that being shorter than the others, it is easier to digest!
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Hardly qualifies as a movie.
Artemis-915 December 2002
Someone picked up a B-grade movie, altered (slightly) the cast and crew, and passed it as a movie. Anyone who wishes to see the real thing, Vincent Price as a good parody of 007's Dr. No (that was top news back in 1965) should refer to "Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine" (1965). There is a remake of the bikini machine, also with Vincent Price, with more slapstick humour and girls losing the tops of their bikinis - filmed in the Italian Riviera, "Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombers" (1966). Both are recommended B-movies, making fun of serious spy movies and teenage party movies of the Sixties.
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3/10
The Dr Goldfoot Series-Part 2: The Wild Weird World.
morrison-dylan-fan30 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
After catching Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine (1965-also reviewed) I checked to see extras the uploader had included in this set,and was surprised to see a TV special in the contents, which led to me finding out how weird this world could be.

View on the film:

Commenting later on the films, Vincent Price said "It could have been fun, but they cut all the music out". For this TV special, director Mel Ferber put the music back in, for dance numbers, which could have been swinging, but missteps with flat dancing shot with stilted cameras, and plodding, dry lyrics. Designed as a way to hype up the first film, Vincent Price is the lone bright spark in this special, thanks to Price gleefully laughing at creating the bikini machine of Dr. Goldfoot.
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