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4/10
This is a telephone commercial, people!
boom-operator11 December 2008
The credits that I can see while watching this as part of a Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode don't say so, but this must have been sponsored by Western Electric as a soft-sell for their telephones.

Our first clue is that the angels use modified telephone installer handsets - the kind with the dial on the back. Our next clue is how the phone is the cap of every room's imaginary redesign. Finally, it is the phone that gives the composer the idea for the song that springs the couple on to their honeymoon.

Common element: telephones.

There are similar short films extolling electricity, gas, cars, and, uh, cars (lots of cars). This one is tastefully done and doesn't quite hit you over the head with "phones come in colors now so order one today!" sensibility.
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2/10
Where Fantasy and stupidity meet... *SPOILERS*
icehole48 March 2002
Warning: Spoilers
I was surprised to find out Bell telephone made this - the phone is so minor to the plotline, it's not really that important. Basically what happens is this: a newlywed couple start out for their honeymoon. Then they get a call from his boss. He's a songwriter, and has written a song for a musical. A prima donna singer says she won't sing the song he wrote - it "doesn't have enough wishing in it." The couple are despondent. The wife goes into the kitchen and starts wishing about how her life was better. There's also a Charles Nelson Riley clone that starts making her very minor wishes come true. She sings, but doesn't really sing very well. A severe lack of reality and excessive stupidity shoot this one down.

Avoid if possible.
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2/10
Finding out this was made by a telephone company helps me understand a bit.
Aaron137518 February 2012
This short preceded the film "Night of the Blood Beast" on an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000. I had a hard time trying to understand what this film was trying to convey as it is about an angel who is sent down to Earth to help a man and woman finally get to their honeymoon after nearly a year of marriage. Yes, all the problems of the world and this is what heaven focuses on which probably explains why the world is in such a sorry shape today. Well the man has to write a jingle, meanwhile, the wife dreams of having her house redecorated and having phones everywhere! Which later I found out that a phone company was behind the short so the point of the whole thing is phones are great or something and you can have a color and style of phone that matches every decor. Why they felt to add an angel and the whole honeymoon subplot is beyond me, perhaps to pad it out and make it less direct? All I know is that this seemed to be a rather pointless short and that people actually took the time to put this thing together...seems like such a waste of time looking back on it as nobody is all that wild about house phones anymore.
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What was THAT all about?
rrea12 September 2001
Included in MST3K's Shorts Vol. 3, this short was produced for Bell Telephone to show how the telephone can help out in everyday situations, or something - it's really hard to tell what the film's message was supposed to be. A young couple is ready to leave on a (postponed one year already) honeymoon, but they can't until the husband re-writes the "dreaming" song for copper-bottomed ballerina diva Sonia. Thanks to inspiration from the rotary dial of the telephone the husband, after smoking what appears to be three packs of cigarettes, is able to finish the song and the young couple is finally able to leave on their honeymoon. The telephone had so little to do with the story that Tom Servo's comment at the end of the film pretty-much sums it up for me: "What the hell was that all about?"
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5/10
musical phone commercial kitsch!
didi-512 May 2009
Yes, the lady of the house is obsessed with co-ordinating telephones for every room so this must be a commercial in disguise! Directed by Gower Champion (he of the dancing duo) it really is an odd entry into musical shorts. Virginia Gibson (Mary) sings and dances a bit while husband Ward Ellis (Jeff) has to write one final song before they go on honeymoon.

Of course the inspiration for the song is ... the telephone and the rotary dial! Rather naff and cute and extremely kitsch, this short also has a camp angel called Wilbur who doesn't seem to do a great deal expect perch on the roof and throw down some fairy dust ...
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5/10
Requiem for a Honeymoon
johnny_burnaway25 June 2015
Writing music for a television show ought to be a glamorous profession but it seems the songmeisters of yesterday's TV variety shows lived in modest houses with outdated furnishings and crappy appliances. Jeff is one such unlucky composer, but he's in a good mood. He and his wife, Mary, are about to set off on a long-delayed honeymoon. That is, until the phone rings. It seems the diva slated to appear on the show wants a new song and wants it now. No honeymoon until new song is in the can! What's a young musician to do? In the face of this bad news, Jeff is up to smoking the better part of a carton of cigarettes but not much more. Luckily, Jeff's flamboyant guardian angel is loitering on the roof with a bag of nose candy, and Mary's got a fixation with telephones...

Phones, and their place in the interior design of the 50's, are about as close as this short comes to having a point. While Jeff struggles with his new assignment, Mary wanders about the house, wishing for updates to her decor. Every upgrade includes a new phone, although I suspect a phone in the bathroom would be a little weird.

This short is good, if pointless, fun. The songs are catchy, and Mary is quite fetching when she's done up in her evening wear. There's no reason given for why Jeff and Mary went a whole year with no honeymoon. However, given that one of the lines in Mary's wishing song is, "I wish that refrigerator door would close and stay closed," maybe they were waiting for a time when neither of them was down with salmonella.

The MST3k gang give Once Upon a Honeymoon a good working over. This was the short that taught me never to drink water while watching MST3k.
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1/10
Uhhh, this made no sense.
TOMNEL17 August 2007
I didn't quite get what this was. It's about an angel named Wilbur that lands on a couple's roof and stays up there sprinkling dust that apparently goes through their roof into their house. Meanwhile the couple, Mary and Jeff are struggling because Jeff needs to write a song so they can go on their honeymoon. Then Mary bursts into a long musical number out of nowhere that seems to be advertising for telephones. They end up finding Jeff's song by turning the telephone dial, which somehow makes him think of this song, so they go on a honeymoon. It really makes no sense and I'm not quite sure what the plot actually is. The angel did absolutely nothing except he dropped dust on the telephone, and it really could've been shortened to not have the angel. One particularly funny scene takes place over a couple hours and it seems Jeff has smoked about 40 cigarettes. This is a really bad short.

My rating: BOMB/****. 15 mins.
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1/10
What were they thinking!
hershbep21 March 2006
I have to agree with the other comment! I had no clue what the whole short was about. I thought that Mary just had an unnatural obsession with the telephone. I had no idea that it was a Bell Telephone commercial. And the whole idea with Sonya and Gordon just made the short even dumber. But, the beginning of the short where you have all the angels up on "Cloud Seven" just adds insult to injury. The short by itself is awful which is why I only gave it a 1. However, with the MST3K team adding commentary and humor to it, it's definitely a 10! Hopefully anyone else who reads this comment will find it helpful! And I really wish that MST3K would come back!
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9/10
Fabulous 50's Kitsch, truly a campy classic
modean21 March 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This little bit of cinema is classic 50's kitsch. The honeymooning couple, Jeff and Mary, living in their lovely little home with it's outmoded 40s style kitchen and bedroom, are wanting to go on their honeymoon when a call from Jeff's boss stops them cold. As so many men were in 50's cinema, Jeff is employed in the lucrative field of song writing. Seriously if one considers the number of movies done in the 50's that revolve around song writers, singers, and performers you'd think it was the #1 growth industry of the time. Anyway, the Boss's intrusion throws a wrench into the honeymoon couples plans but fear not! For their guardian Angel, a closeted homosexual named Wilbur, is on the case! Wilbur observes the couple and sprinkles pixie dust (would he have any other kind?) on Mary and brings her fantasy of a newly remodeled kitchen with it's own red wall phone to life, then he does the same thing in the living room and bedroom. When sprinkling pixie dust on Mary doesn't help, he moves to sprinkling some on the phone to inspire Jeff - I'm guessing he avoided sprinkling it directly on Jeff because that would have turned him gay, it's just a theory people - and that does the trick. Jeff, inspired by the sound of Mary dialing the old rotary style phone, writes a new song called castle in the sky and all is right with the world.

The folks who are panning this because they find the plot nonsensical, unbelievable or dumb simply don't get that it's a classic piece of 50's cinema exactly because it's a hokey musical with a nonsensical plot commissioned by Bell to push their line of phones. Folks that don't get that won't get this movie. For them viewing this movie is like asking a third-grader with ADD to sit patiently through an off-Broadway rendition of "Richard the III".
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Fabulous Hollywood musical fantasy!(spoilers)
empowerpr8 December 2003
Warning: Spoilers
Cheerful, almost cult-worthy musical fantasy directed by Broadway's Gower Champion (42nd Street) that was actually created by Bell Systems to push their newest creation: colored telephones for the home designed to match any room's decor. Songwriter Jeff and his new wife Mary are off on their overdue honeymoon when Jeff's boss calls and tells him he needs to re-write his "Wishing Song" to appease a tempermental star. As Jeff works fruitlessly at the piano, Mary begins to sing along with Jeff's music (the orchestra takes over soon after, in true 50's Hollywood style) to wish for things that she'd like: a new kitchen, living room, etc. Every room, of course, feature a new colored telephone. The idea that inspires Jeff to finally write his song actually comes from Mary's rhythmic dialing of their telephone! Lots of fun...if you're a fan of film musicals from that era, you'll enjoy it!
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Pick Your Own Rating! Either Adorably Kitschy or Incredibly Stupid!
drdarkeny-006243 January 2017
A Fifties couple (choreographer Ward Ellis and dancer Virginia Gibson as songsmith Jeff and his wife Mary) are on their way out the door for their honeymoon, delayed one year already, when the show's producer Gordon (long-time character actor Alan Mowbray) calls up with bad news - their show's diva Sonya doesn't like the tune to a big number, and demands an immediate rewrite! Jeff, predictably, suffers from writer's block being asked to produce a new tune on demand - so supernaturally adorable Mary goes into the ::shudder:: outdated kitchen and begins singing about the modern kitchen she wishes she had, complete with telephone -

Speaking of "supernatural", there's an Angel on their roof, Wilbur, who looks and acts like Charles Nelson Reilly playing Sammy Glick, but who is actually longtime B-movie star Chick Chandler. He's been sent to expedite Jeff's and Mary's honeymoon - good thing he has an eight- ball of coke (er, "bag of magic dust") handy, hmmm?

This bit of charming/mindroasting whimsy/insanity was intended to market Bell Telephone's new color-coordinated phones, which could match the decor of any room and came in a variety of shapes as well, but that particular selling point is buried in a supernatural musical comedy one-act that looks like a demented precursor to THE DICK VAN DYKE SHOW. Directed by legendary dance choreographer/director Gower Champion, it's remarkably well done, the script has genuine bits of wit to it, the music is superior to its purpose as a marketing tool, the cast is top-notch and game - and as Tom Servo wondered when it aired on MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000, "What the Hell was that about, anyway?"

Watched on its own its charms this short might not be appreciated, but watched with Mike and the 'Bots, it's a classic of WTF?ery for me. Watch it yourself, and see how you feel....
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