Film Review
Of the many popular British sitcoms of the 1970s, one that is still
held in particular affection is
Man
About the House, a show that ran for six series and regularly
drew audiences of sixteen million viewers. Arguably, it is the
sitcom which captures the spirit of the early 1970s most vividly, with
its outrageous fashions and even more outrageous social attitudes (the
jokes about race, homosexuality and women's rights that pepper this and
similar comedies would be unthinkable today). Unlike many
subsequent film re-workings of TV sitcoms of the 1970s -
On the Buses (1971),
Steptoe and Son (1972),
Are You Being Served? (1977) - the film
version of
Man About the House
is a fair reflection of the series that inspired it, a feel-good romp
that makes effective use of its stars and leaves a warm glow of
nostalgia for an era that is well and truly past.
Whether it's hirsute Robin being humiliated in a game of strip poker by
his flatmates Chrissy and Jo, or hopeless George constantly under siege
from his sexually frustrated wife Mildred, the film never lets us forget
how funny the original series was, although it seldom attains its level
of laugh-out-loud brilliance. The plot, a rambling affair
involving a property development scheme, feels like an unnecessary
distraction from the humorous comic interaction between the five main
protagonists, played to perfection (as always) by a quintet of comic
delights: Richard O'Sullivan, Paula Wilcox, Sally Thomsett, Brian
Murphy and Yootha Joyce. By the time the characters start running
around the corridors at Thames Television the comedy express has come
well and truly off the rails, but the sudden appearance of Spike
Milligan, springing up like a troll Jack-in-the-Box and leering
manically into the camera, makes it all worth while. When the original
television series ended, Joyce and Murphy were given their own
spin-off series, which also made it to the big screen - as
George and Mildred (1980).
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
London, in the mid-1970s. Robin, a student chef, shares an
apartment with two trendy, independently minded young women, Chrissy
and Jo. Their landlord, George Roper, is tempted to sell
his Edwardian terraced house to an ambitious property developer, Morris
Pluthero, but his wife Mildred soon scorches this idea. To
prevent the property developer from buying up all the houses in their
street and demolishing them to make way for a new office block, Mildred
and her three young tenants start a campaign, hoping to gain the
support of the prominent politician Sir Edmund Weir. When
Pluthero discovers that Weir is keeping his mistress in one of the
houses, the politician has no choice but to sell his house. In no
time at all, Pluthero has acquired all but one of the houses in the
street. The only house remaining is that belonging to Mr
Roper. When Mildred's away, George will have his day...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.