Film Review
Wetter than the Indian Ocean in the midst of an especially moist monsoon
season,
A Stitch in Time certainly isn't the most sophisticated of
British film comedies, but the under-tens and die-hard fans of Norman Wisdom
(Britain's unlikeliest superstar comedian) will no doubt appreciate the film's
cloyingly twee charms and somewhat forced zany knockabout humour. It
may be hard to believe, but this lumbering mawkish comedy was a massive box
office hit in Britain on its first release back in 1963, the most successful
of Wisdom's all-too-many big screen outings.
Today, Norman Wisdom's idea of comedy (which consists almost entirely of
overly repetitive gumpish slapstick) has a limited appeal, although his films
were unimaginably popular in their day. This one suffers from a painfully
obvious surfeit of industrial strength saccharine, although the visual gags
are impressively staged and some of them are even quite funny. As in
their earlier (and far better) screen-pairings
Just My Luck (1957) and
The Square Peg (1957), Edward
Chapman makes a perfectly lugubrious comedy foil for Norman, although being
an accomplished character actor - appearing in such fine films as It
Always Rains on Sunday
(1947) - he is pretty well wasted in lowbrow comedy fare such as this.
Watch out for fleeting appearances from some other notable British performers
of the time (who all went on to become mainstays of popular British sitcom)
- Peter Jones, Patsy Rowlands, Patrick Cargill and Pat Coombs.
Pre-teen children with an unnaturally high boredom threshold stand the most
chance of enjoying
A Stitch in Time, an appropriate target audience
for the endless round of madcap infantile comedy and Norman's unceasingly
warm, child-like personality. Unfortunately, the spectacle of a seemingly
lobotomised middle-aged goon constantly tripping over his own feet is unlikely
to endear the film to an adult audience - at least not without the assistance
of several glasses of an intoxicating beverage. It's surprising how
many laughs Norman Wisdom can extract after you've ingested three generous
doses of vodka.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Norman Pitkin is an enthusiastic but hopelessly incompetent butcher's assistant.
During a hold up, his boss, Mr Grimsdale, accidentally swallows his valuable
gold watch in a careless attempt to conceal it, and has to be taken into
hospital. Norman thereupon unintentionally wreaks havoc on the wards when
he visits his employer, with the result that the two men are banned from
the hospital. This outcome causes Norman some distress because in the
course of his visit to the hospital he managed to strike up an immediate
friendship with a small orphan girl named Lindy. The kind-hearted Norman
is moved by the girl's inability to talk following the tragic death of her
parents in a plane crash. Undeterred, Norman and Mr Grimsdale come
up with a plan to visit Lindy, but merely end up causing even more mayhem
as a pair of hopeless St John Ambulance recruits...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.