A couple of down-at-heel specimens (Clark and McCullough) take on the job of insurance men, and, after exploiting their wrestling powers, manage to sell insurance to the president of the company employing them and to one who has hitherto proved unapproachable..


Is this worth a watch? If you like old-school, frantic physical comedy that doesn't care about making sense, yeah, jump in. But if you need a story that actually goes somewhere or characters who act like real humans, stay far, far away. It’s a messy, loud, 20-minute fever dream. Bobby Clark and Paul McCullough are bas...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Mark Sandrich

Unknown Director
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"Is this worth a watch? If you like old-school, frantic physical comedy that doesn't care about making sense, yeah, jump in. But if you need a story that actually goes somewhere or characters who act like real humans, stay far, far away. It’s a messy, loud, 20-minute fever dream. Bobby Clark and Paul McCullough are basically human pinballs here. They’re playing insurance men, but they’re clearly just playing themselves, which is the only reason this works at all. They have this frantic energy th..."
Bobby Clark, Mark Sandrich, John Grey, William Grew
United States


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