Film Review
With the British film industry facing terminal decline in the 1970s,
film producers had the bright idea of transposing popular TV comedy
series to the big screen, in the misguided belief that it was the
sitcoms that were keeping all the punters at home.
Steptoe and Son proved to be more
resilient than most to this transition from small to big screen, mainly
because it could fall back on the talent of its writers, Ray Galton and
Alan Simpson, and its two stars, Wilfrid Brambell and Harry H. Corbett,
who formed an unbeatable double act.
When the film was made,
Steptoe and
Son was one of the most popular comedy series on British
television, mid-way through its second run, which ended in 1974 when
the principals grew tired of their roles and decided to call it a
day. The concept of the situation is ludicrously simple but
proved to be a goldmine of comic possibility, which Galton and Simpson
mined for all it was worth. A father and son are trapped in a
relationship of mutual dependency, the former ruthlessly playing on the
latter's conscience to ensure he never leaves home. In what is the classic
prison-gaoler set-up, the son is eternally imprisoned through
a deluded sense of duty towards his exploitative father.
Steptoe and
Son is essentially a kind of Pinter-esque love story, in which the father and the son
are bound to one another through a combination of love, hate and
skulduggery. This tragic scenario was virtually replayed in real-life
by Brambell and Corbett, who became victims of their own success.
The film recycles ideas and situations in episodes from the TV series,
but with a larger canvas to paint on, it offers a more substantial
storyline, one which sees Harold married and able to enjoy the fruits
of fatherhood, albeit all too briefly. The jokes are noticeably
harder to come by that in the original TV show, as the writers seem to
be more preoccupied with pathos than humour. The one decent gag
involves a naked man, an easily shocked female on-looker and a box of
Flash detergent -
possibly the most inspired example of product placement in film history.
Cliff Owen's
direction is surprisingly bland and characterless, compounding the
dullness of the narrative and the lacklustre contributions from the
supporting artistes. The magical rapport between Wilfrid
Brambell and Harry H. Corbett salvages the film and gives it a
poignancy and depth which the TV series often lacked, particularly in
the later years. The success of this film resulted in a
sequel,
Steptoe and Son Ride Again.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Albert and Harold Steptoe are a father and son rag-and-bone team who
scrape a living in the less salubrious area of London. Despite
numerous attempts, Harold has failed to escape from his father and, now
into middle-age, he fears he will never be able to live his own
life. Then he meets Zita, a beautiful young nightclub stripper
who, for some reason he cannot fathom, finds him irresistibly
attractive. For the first time, Harold has found true love, and
the couple marry after a whirlwind romance. But, as ever, Albert
can be relied upon to totally destroy Harold's dreams...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.