Film Review
When
Carry On England hit
cinema screens in the UK in 1976 it was clear to just about everyone
(except perhaps producer Peter Rogers) that the Carry On series was
dead and buried.
Most of the regulars had departed, the Carry On
innuendo-based humour was hopelessly dated, and the production team
couldn't find a writer to replace the great Talbot Rothwell, who had
delivered the series' best films. By trying to emulate the smutty
sex comedies of the time, exemplified by the
Confessions films, the Carry Ons
merely hastened their own demise.
The plot of
Carry On England
was originally intended for ATV's popular television series
Carry On Laughing, but Peter Rogers
thought that it would work better as a full-length film. What
Rogers probably had in mind was an updated version of
Carry On Sergeant, the film
that launched the series in 1958. What he got was a shambolic
mess consisting of lewd humour of the most cringe-worthy kind and
pathetic attempts at slapstick - an obscene parody of a Carry On
film.
It is a mystery just why the production team chose to put the loyal
regulars (Joan Sims and Peter Butterworth) in minor supporting roles,
whilst newcomers Patrick Mower and Judy Geeson (who have next to no
ability as comic performers) were given starring roles. Windsor
Davies at least looks as if he is trying to be funny, even if he is
merely reprising his role from the BBC TV series
It Ain't Half Hot Mum.
Kenneth Connor receives top-billing even though it is abundantly clear
that he is not star material. Even if Kenneth Williams had agreed
to appear in this film (luckily he wasn't because of other
commitments), he would only have been cast in a minor role (that played
by Peter Jones).
Carry On
Self-Immolation would have been a better title.
Sid James, the king of the Carry Ons, had died a week before filming
began, and this could explain the funereal mood that pervades the
film. For a comedy, this is a pretty grim affair, and it feels
that the entire life force and humour have been drained from it by some
vampiric entity (although it could equally be put down to appalling
screenwriting). There may well be one or two good jokes in
this film, but unless you have detection equipment which is at least
ten times the size of Jodrell Bank, you are unlikely to find them.
Not surprisingly,
Carry On England
bombed at the box office (no pun intended) and it took many years to
recover its production cost through television screenings and video
sales. It was only the second Carry On to lose money, after
Carry On At Your Convenience
(1971) (which, incidentally, is a far, far better film).
You would have thought that by this time Peter Rogers and Gerald Thomas
would have got the message. But no, there would be one more nail
in the coffin before the series was consigned to history. And
what a nail it would be...
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Gerald Thomas film:
That's Carry On (1977)
Film Synopsis
England, 1940. A mixed sex anti-aircraft battery has been set up
somewhere in England but, despite the best efforts of the military
commanders, no one has yet succeeded in converting the unruly ensemble
of male and female privates into an effective fighting force. In
desperation, the top brass send Captain S. Melly, a renowned bungler,
to the battery, in the hope that his incompetence and ignorance may
succeed where skill and cunning have so far failed.
Unfortunately, Melly is up against a formidable challenge, since his
privates are far more preoccupied with making love than war...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.