Film Review
With five box office hits under their belt, the
Carry On
team finally make it into glorious Eastman colour. Alas, the jokes are
the same and any improvement in production values is hardly
perceptible. If anything,
Carry
On Crusing feels like an uninspired compilation of the previous
films in the series. The plot (what there is of it) is virtually identical to that of
Carry On Teacher, and many of
the jokes and comic situations are obviously recycled from the earlier
films. Fortunately, the familar
Carry
On stars are out in force, shipshape and Bristol fashion, to
make this happy bout of wilful self-plagiarism worth watching.
Kenneth Connor, who had inexplicably bagged most of the
screentime in the first five
Carry On
films, is knocked back a peg or two here and ends up playing second
fiddle to the unbeatable team of Sid James and Kenneth Williams.
James had yet to get into his stride and is still cast pretty much as
the straight man, but he gives great value, as ever, and his exchanges
with Williams provide the film with its funniest moments.
Dilys Laye was a last minute substitution for Joan Sims, who fell
ill just before filming was due to commence, and Lance Percival replaced
Charles Hawtrey (his one and only
Carry On
outing) when the latter's agent failed to wheedle
a large pay increase out of producer Peter Rogers. Liz Fraser
is on fine form in the second of her four
Carry On
appearances.
Having somehow managed to get away with using the same basic storyline
six times (is that a record?), screenwriter Norman Hudis bows out at
this (low) point. In the next film,
Carry On Cabby, the great Talbot
Rothwell would take over and, within a year or two, effectively create
what we now recognise as the classic
Carry
On film.
Carry On
Cruising is by no means the best of the early
Carry Ons, but it is inoffensive
fun and, with its reliance on good, old-fashioned slapstick rather than tacky innuendo, is the
one film in the series that is better suited for children than adults.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Gerald Thomas film:
Carry on Cabby (1963)
Film Synopsis
Wellington Crowther is the captain of a Mediterranean cruise ship, the
SS Happy Wanderer. If his
next cruise goes well, he expects to get a transfer to a brand new
transatlantic liner, which for him would be a dream promotion.
Unfortunately, it looks as if this dream might be scuppered, since five
of his crew have been replaced by what, at first sight, look like
category one imbeciles. Within no time at all, First Officer
Marjoribanks (pronounced Marchbanks), ship's surgeon Dr Binn, ship's
cook Wilfred Haines, steward Tom Tree and barman Sam Turner have made
their mark, a dirty great black one in the captain's books.
Meanwhile, two of the passengers, spinsters Flo and Gladys, are on the look out
for prospective husbands. Whilst one is understandably taken with
the gym instructor, the other somehow attracts the attention of Dr
Binn...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.