Film Review
The first of the really bad Carry Ons,
Carry on Behind visibly suffers
from the loss of the series' stalwart writer, Talbot Rothwell, and the
popular regulars. Jim Dale had long departed to embrace a
more diverse career in film and theatre, Charles Hawtrey
had been dropped a few years earlier, Sid James was busy with theatre commitments, and
Hattie Jacques and Barbara Windsor were likewise unavailable. Windor Davies, the star of
the popular BBC television sitcom
It
Ain't Half Hot Mum, is a poor replacement for Sid James, and
producer Peter Rogers's decision to hire German film star Elke Sommer as the
film's glamorous lead was perhaps not the wisest move. The fact
that Ms Sommer was paid far more than the other Carry On stars did
little to endear her to the rest of the cast and she is so obviously
the film's weakest point, saddled with tired language
mis-interpretation gags of the "We shall be soon having it off"
variety.
With Talbot Rothwell out of the frame, the task of writing this Carry
On fell to Dave Freeman, a prolific screenwriter who had scripted
Gerald Thomas's
Bless This House
(1972) a few years earlier. Freeman was considered a safe pair of
hands - he had written for the
Carry
On Christmas specials for television and the spin-off series
Carry On Laughing - but his own two
Carry On films -
Carry On Behind
and
Carry On Columbus - are
regarded as two of the weakest entries in the series.
This is the first Carry On in which the ensemble cast fails to gel and
consequently feels like a badly constructed compilation movie.
This is partly because we miss the old regulars, but mainly because the
screenplay is such a mess. There are one or two good gags and a
very poignant scene with Joan Sims and Peter Butterworth (which almost
merits a BAFTA), but it is clear that
Carry
on Behind is just a shoddy rehash of
Carry On Camping (1969).
The harmless innuendo of that earlier film is replaced with coarser
humour and overt sexual references that make this much less suitable
for a family audience. By this stage, the Carry On films were
desperately trying to keep up with other British sex comedies, but as
can be seen here they were just falling behind and beginning to scrape
the bottom. Surely the Carry Ons couldn't get any worse than this...?
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Gerald Thomas film:
Carry on England (1976)
Film Synopsis
The renowned archaeologist Professor Roland Crump arrives at a British
caravan site to excavate the remains of a Roman settlement. He is
accompanied by Professor Anna Vooshka, whose unfamiliarity with the
English language will lead to many a misunderstanding as they set about
uncovering the secrets of the past. Butcher Fred Ramsden and his
buddy Ernie have a different kind of uncovering in mind when they turn up
in their caravan. Their wives think they are on a fishing
holiday, and indeed they are, although what they hope to catch are not
mackerel but pretty young things with a liking for the older man.
The other holidaymakers include a young couple with an errant wolfhound
and an older couple accompanied by their nagging mother-in-law and a
Mynah bird that swears like a trooper. None of the above knows
that the camp site is built on an old Roman mine which could collapse
at any moment...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.