Film Review
It probably seemed like a good idea on the drawing board.
Gather together an attractive, big name cast, parachute them into
one of the world's most attractive cities and propel them
though a multiple pile-up of misunderstandings... On paper,
it sounds like a winning formula that could hardly fail. Whilst
the basic premise obviously has some mileage and it is not
inconceivable that the film could have worked, Mark Herman's sloppy
script and even sloppier direction kills stone dead any comic potential
Blame It on the Bellboy may
have had at the conception stage. The result is a flabby, silly, overly
convoluted farce which tries desperately hard to be funny but only
delivers a fraction of the laughs you would expect from such a
distinguished cast.
Just as he was the best thing in
Withnail & I,
Richard Griffiths is the best thing this far lesser film has to offer -
his saucy mix up with Patsy Kensit is matched only by Penelope Wilton's scary audition piece for
The Godfather IV - these are the only two sequences that make the film worth watching.
Dudley Moore (who is so much better in
Arthur)
stands more chance of making us see the funny side of the Black Death than he does
with this film. Fortunately, despite the mediocre script,
the cast perform a remarkable salvage operation (at the risk of their
future careers) and the film just about passes for entertainment, but
only after you have downed a glass or two of your
favourite alcholic beverage.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Three men with virtually identical surnames check into the Hotel
Gabrielli in Venice. Melvyn Orton is a timid estate agent from
the UK who has come to purchase a house for a client, and risks losing
his job if the deal falls through. Maurice Horton is an
overweight provincial mayor who has arranged a holiday romance through
a lonely hearts club, even though he is already a married man.
Mike Lawton is a hired assassin who has been sent to take out a local
mobster. The hotel's bellboy has difficulty understanding English
and consequently mixes up the three men, giving each of them a message
intended for one of the others. When Orton is misdirected to a
villa which turns out to be a gangster meeting place, he falls into the
hands of armed hoodlums, who are convinced he is a hitman. After
he has finally convinced his aggressors of his true identity, Orton has
no choice but to join them in their criminal exploits. Meanwhile,
his near name-sake Horton mistakes a local estate agent, Miss Wright,
for his intended love-hungry spinster, an illusion which Miss Wright
fails to dispel as she seems willing to offer him anything he asks for,
on the expectation of earning a massive commission from the sale of a
rundown house. Horton's real date, Patricia Fulford, ends up
being pursued across Venice by the killer Lawton, who believes she is
his target. When Lawton realises his mistake, an unlikely romance
develops between him and Patricia. Things become even more
confused when Horton's wife turns up, at the most embarrassing moment
possible. From this moment on, anything is possible - and all
because a bellboy has trouble with his aitches!
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.