Film Review
One of the most popular British television sitcoms of the late 1970s,
George and Mildred was thought to
be a safe bet for a movie spin-off, but with the British film industry now
in a state of terminal decline it proved to be the final nail in the coffin for
TV-to-big screen comedy makeovers. The one fatal mistake the
film's producers made was failing to persuade Johnnie Mortimer and
Brian Cooke, the creators of both the original series and its
dysfunctional married couple, to script the film. Instead,
another veteran television writer, Dick Sharples, was drafted in and
what we get is a bland imitation of
George and Mildred
lazily grafted onto a limp comedy gangster film, which is barely
sustained by its miserly portions of recycled gags.
Yootha Joyce and Brian Murphy are, as you would expect, the main
attraction but even their combined efforts are not enough to salvage a
tediously formulaic comedy misfire. Had the film stuck to the
premise of the original TV series it could have made an enjoyable
class-themed satire, with Mildred fighting a losing battle as she
tries to drag her crude, socially inept husband towards middle class gentility.
The film has none of the subtlety or wit of the series that spawned it
and even with acting heavyweights like Stratford Johns and Kenneth Cope on the
cast list it struggles to be even mildly entertaining. To compound
the film's failure, its UK release was completely overshadowed by the death of Yootha Joyce
from alcohol poisoning. The critics panned the film for all it
was worth and it bombed at the box office. Whilst there is some
fun to be had in seeing George and Mildred battling it out together one last time you
can't help wishing that Joyce and Murphy had put their foot down and
insisted on a better script.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
The Ropers' adventure of a lifetime begins when Mildred decides that
she and George will celebrate their wedding anniversary in one of
London's top hotels. The weekend gets off to a bad start when
George is mistaken for a hitman by crooked businessman Harry
Pinto. When Pinto realises his error, he sends another hired
killer after George, not knowing that another hitman, in the employ of
his rival, has the same man in his sights. As the bodies start
piling up around the unwitting Ropers, Mildred begins to wish she had
stayed at home...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.