Film Review
The
Carry On team spoofed
like they had never spoofed before in this gloriously silly send up of
the spy-thriller genre, mercilessly lampooning the kind of films that
were proving to be their nearest competitor at the box
office. Producer Peter Rogers and director Gerald Thomas clearly had the recently released James Bond
films in their sights (hence the obvious references to
Dr No and
From Russia With Love) but earlier
spy films, notably Carol Reed's
The Third Man (1949), also come
in for some caustic mimicry.
The film buffs will see at once that the opening credits sequence is a direct
(and very cheeky) homage to the classic film noir thriller
D.O.A. (1950).
Needless to say, not everyone saw the joke. Albert R. Broccoli, the producer of the James
Bond films, threatened legal action when he learned that one of the
characters in the film was to be named James Bind, Agent
006-and-a-half.
The last of the
Carry On
films to be made in black-and-white,
Spying
marked something of a turning point for the series.
Two films back, screenwriter Talbot Rothwell had taken over from Norman Hudis and
already he had come close to perfecting the comedy style of the classic,
or middle period, Carry Ons, a style that was defined by a family-friendly mix
of riotous slapstick and saucy double entendre.
Carry On Spying was the first in a straight run of eight or so
of the most popular Carry Ons.
This is the film in which Barbara Windsor made her
Carry On
debut, and you can't help wondering how the series ever managed without
her. Put her, Kenneth Williams and Charles Hawtrey in the same
space, and the result can hardly fail to be an explosive and hilarious
cocktail. Williams is at his most relentlessly funny in this film,
adopting the snide persona that had earlier brought
him to the public's attention in his radio shows for the BBC, including
the now legendary
Hancock's Half Hour.
He even gets to slip in his oft-repeated catchphrase, "'Ere, stop
messin' about" in vitually every other scene (prompting co-star Dilys Laye
to slip in her immitative ad lib). With its Keystone Kops-style
denouement,
Carry On Spying does get
a little silly in a few places but, for all that, it is easily
one of the better entries in the series.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Gerald Thomas film:
Carry On Screaming (1966)
Film Synopsis
When a top secret formula is stolen from a government laboratory, the
British secret services hastily set about recovering it. They
have just 36 hours before it falls into the hands of the evil Dr Crow,
the leader of a criminal organisation known as STENCH (the Society for
the Total Extinction of Non-Conforming Humans). With their best
men already assigned, they fall back on their least reliable agent,
Desmond Simpkins, and three trainees: Harold Crump, Daphne Honeybutt
and Charlie Bind. The four agents make their way to Vienna
to liaise with field operative Carstairs, who has just witnessed the
formula being passed to another enemy agent, the Fat Man. Having
failed to recover the formula, Simpkins and his team pursue the Fat Man
to Algiers, where they are more successful. But as they head back
to England on the Orient Express, the four agents realise that the
STENCH men have not given up. Captured and taken to Dr Crow's
underground lair, they soon discover the downside to their profession...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.