BILL AND COO (1948). Director: Dean Reisner.
A monstrous winged creature swoops down to earth periodically to bring death and terror to earth's inhabitants. No, it isn't the monster bird of The Giant Claw, but rather a big black crow known as "the Black Menace." In the town of Chirpendale, a cabbie named Bill loves a pretty bird named Coo and life might be idyllic for them and their neighbors were it not for the Black Menace. In this oddball one-of-a-kind movie all of the characters are played by actual birds -- some wearing little outfits -- on a tiny set. Once the novelty wears off -- after about five minutes -- what's left is a vaguely "cute" but generally tedious time-waster that might amuse very young children -- or not. The problem is that compared to dogs, cats, and chimps, the birds in this don't have a hell of a lot of personality. It gets points for originality, certainly. But it doesn't compare favorable to such all-animal (and animatronics) movies like Babe.
Verdict: For bird lovers -- or bird-brains -- only. **.
Ken Murray's? Wasn't he the one who took all the home movies of classic stars? Was he also a film producer?
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Yes, indeed, as well as a sometime director and even an actor with 37 credits [The Man who shot Libery Vallance]. .
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