The Absent-Minded Professor
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Robert Stevenson
Fred Macmurray
Nancy Olson
Keenan Wynn
Tommy Kirk
Ed Wynn
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Ned Brainard, the science professor at a smalltown college, is so forgetful that he has left his fiancée, Betsy Carlisle, waiting at the altar on two different occasions. Though determined not to miss the third ceremony, he becomes engrossed in an experiment and again fails to appear. He does not become a bridegroom, but he does become the inventor of a black, rubbery, antigravitational substance which rises to a greater height each time it is bounced. After naming the product "flubber," he substitutes it for the motor of his old Model T and is soon soaring through the sky. Giddy with success, he secretly places some flubber on the shoes of the college's basketball players, enabling them to bounce over the heads of their opponents and win an easy victory. Word of his discovery soon attracts the attention of a scheming alumnus, Alonzo Hawk, who steals the professor's car. Ned places some flubber on Alonzo's shoes, however, and leaves him bouncing higher and higher on his front lawn. Then, with the aid of Betsy, he rescues his car and takes off for Washington, D. C. After completely upsetting the Pentagon's defense system, he lands on the White House lawn and becomes a national hero and, finally, Betsy's husband.
Director
Robert Stevenson
Cast
Fred Macmurray
Nancy Olson
Keenan Wynn
Tommy Kirk
Ed Wynn
Leon Ames
Elliott Reid
Edward Andrews
David Lewis
Jack Mullaney
Belle Montrose
Wally Brown
Don Ross
James Westerfield
Charlie Briggs
Alan Hewitt
Wendell Holmes
Wally Boag
Forrest Lewis
Alan Carney
Gage Clarke
Raymond Bailey
Leon Tyler
Ned Wynn
Crew
George Bruns
Gertrude Casey
Carroll Clark
Edward Colman
Robert O. Cook
Don Dagradi
Walt Disney
Peter Ellenshaw
Hal Gausman
Chuck Keehne
Evelyn Kennedy
Emile Kuri
Eustace Lycett
Franklyn Marks
Robert A. Mattey
Pat Mcnalley
Joshua Meador
Joshua Meador
Ruth Sandifer
Robert Shannon
Richard M. Sherman
Robert B. Sherman
Dean Thomas
Arthur J. Vitarelli
Bill Walsh
Bill Walsh
Cotton Warburton
Photo Collections
Videos
Movie Clip
Hosted Intro
Promo
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Art Direction
Best Cinematography
Best Special Effects
Articles
The Absent-Minded Professor
The story by Samuel W. Taylor was simple and well-suited for supporting a series of inventive special effects sequences. Professor Ned Brainard (Fred MacMurray) teaches science at small-town Medfield College. His experiments lead to comic explosions, both in his classroom and at his home garage laboratory. One particular explosion causes him to miss (for a third time!) his nuptials to fiancee Betsy Carlisle (Nancy Olson). Brainard's attentions are diverted by a new discovery: a gooey substance which defies gravity by bouncing ever higher with each impact. The Professor dubs the flying rubber substance "Flubber." When the greedy town tycoon Alonzo Hawk (Keenan Wynn) threatens to close down Medfield College, Prof. Brainard sets out to use Flubber to save the school. He discovers that a bit of the stuff applied to the sneakers of the school's basketball team does wonders for their scoring percentage! Other applications of the substance eventually lead the professor on a dangerous mission to the White House via his flying, Flubberized Model T automobile!
Songwriters Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman penned "The Medfield Fight Song," for The Absent-Minded Professor. It was the first song the Sherman brothers wrote for a Disney film; they would go on to compose numbers for many animated and live-action features at the studio, including The Parent Trap (1961), The Sword in the Stone (1963), Mary Poppins (1964), The Jungle Book (1967), and Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971).
The Absent-Minded Professor was nominated for three Oscars®: Best Cinematography (Black-and-White), Best Art Direction, and Best Special Effects. The Hustler (1961) took home the first two honors, and while the Disney film should have been a shoe-in for the Best Special Effects prize, that honor went instead to the only other nominee, The Guns of Navarone (1961).
The success of this film led to a direct sequel which reunited almost the entire cast and crew, although Son of Flubber (1963) proved to be even more lightweight than its predecessor. The formula for Disney's live-action success was hit upon, however, leading to a seemingly endless series of madcap science-situation comedies from the studio such as The Misadventures of Merlin Jones (1964), The Monkey's Uncle (1965), The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1969), and many others. The setting of Medfield College itself was repeated in several of Disney's other live-action comedies. The Absent-Minded Professor has been remade twice as a 1988 TV movie starring Harry Anderson, and a big-budget Robin Williams vehicle, Flubber (1997).
Producer: Walt Disney
Associate Producer: Bill Walsh Director: Robert Stevenson
Screenplay: Bill Walsh, story by Samuel W. Taylor
Cinematography: Edward Colman
Film Editing: Cotton Warburton
Art Direction: Carroll Clark
Set Decoration: Hal Gausman, Emile Kuri
Music: George Bruns
Special Effects: Peter Ellenshaw, Eustace Lycett, Robert A. Mattey, Joshua Meador
Cast: Fred MacMurray (Prof. Ned Brainard), Nancy Olson (Betsy Carlisle), Keenan Wynn (Alonzo P. Hawk), Tommy Kirk (Biff Hawk), Leon Ames (President Rufus Daggett), Edward Andrews (Defense Secretary), Ed Wynn (Fire Chief).
BW-97m.
by John M. Miller
The Absent-Minded Professor
Quotes
Let's see, flying rubber, Flubber.- Prof. Ned Brainard
Corners beautifully doesn't it?- Prof. Ned Brainard
Trivia
Notes
Son of Flubber, q. v., is a sequel.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States March 16, 1961
Released in United States March 17, 1961
Released in United States on Video August 13, 1996
Based on the short story "A Situation of Gravity," written by Samuel W. Taylor.
Released in United States March 16, 1961 (New York City)
Released in United States March 17, 1961 (Los Angeles)
Released in United States on Video August 13, 1996
Released in USA on video as part of Walt Disney's Family Film Collection.