Film Review
One of the all-time classics of British cinema,
I'm All Right Jack is a hilarious
satire of trade unionism and corporate malpractice which still
resonates today. It is a direct sequel to the Boulting Brothers'
earlier comedy
Private's Progress
(1956) and brings back many of the players of that film. Ian
Carmichael reprises the role of the gauche accident prone Stanley
Windrush, Terry-Thomas returns as the tetchy Major Hitchcock (armed
with his familiar catchphrase "What an absolute shower!"), whilst
Dennis Price and Richard Attenborough are the villains, exuding oily
nastiness from just about every orifice. With such a strong cast
it seems all the more remarkable that the star of the film is none of
the above but a then relatively unknown young actor called Peter
Sellers.
This is the film that set Peter Sellers securely on the road to
international stardom. Previously, he had made some memorable
appearances in supporting roles, notably in
The Ladykillers
(1955), and was known for his work on the BBC radio programme,
The Goon Show.
I'm All Right Jack gave Sellers
ample opportunity to demonstrate his talent as an actor and a comic
performer, and he excelled in both departments. His portrayal of
the bolshy yet sympathetic trades union rep Fred Kite earned him
critical acclaim and won him the Best Actor BAFTA in 1960. Unlike
his co-stars, who give highly caricatured performances, Sellers
delivers a convincing character turn, which is as poignant as it is
amusing.
I'm All Right Jack has
been described as anti-union film. In fact,
as the title implies, its target is not the unions but a society which
has somehow lost its way in the aftermath of post-war austerity.
Even as early as the late 1950s, the me-first society had sprung into
being, with every man, woman and child eternally occupied with getting
one over on his neighbour. This sorry reality is perfectly
encapsulated in the sequence where spectators at a civilised debate (hosted
by the then ubiquitous TV personality Malcolm Muggeridge) end up
scrambling for a few bank notes, like wild animals fighting over scraps of
meat. Welcome to the human race. What a shower.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Stanley Windrush is an enthusiastic upper crust Englishman who, having
completed his stint in the army and at Oxford, is eager to make his
mark on the world. He begins by applying for managerial positions
in various companies, but when this ends disastrously, Stanley agrees
to start work as an unskilled labourer at a munitions factory owned by
his uncle, Bertram Tracepurcel. Stanley's posh accent immediately
draws the suspicion and mistrust of his colleagues, who mistake him for
a time-and-motion expert. Trades union shop steward Fred Kite
takes the matter up with his personnel officer, Major Hitchcock.
When the latter offers to sack Stanley, Mr Kite, a fervent believer in
workers' rights, relents and befriends the newcomer, even offering him
a room in his house. But then Stanley triggers a strike when he
unwittingly demonstrates to the bona fide time-and-motion expert that
he can perform his job much more efficiently than his colleagues.
The strike serves the interests of Tracepurcel, who intends to profit
by the transfer of a large Middle East export contract to another
company, owned by his friend Sidney De Vere Cox. Unfortunately,
the scheme backfires when Cox's own workers all come out in sympathy...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.