Film Review
One of the saucier BBC sitcoms,
Up
Pompeii was quite well regarded when it first aired on
television in the early 1970s, thanks mainly to the superlative comedic
talents of its star, Frankie Howerd. Unlike many sitcoms of
this period, this one did translate fairly successfully to the big
screen and the lewd humour is of the standard of the original series,
neither better nor worse. This film was followed by two
less respectable sequels,
Up the
Chastity Belt (1971) and
Up
the Front (1972).
The original
Up Pompeii
series was created by Talbot Rothwell, who is best known as the writer
of the Carry On films. Consequently, this film will appeal most
to aficionados of the Carry Ons, although, be warned, the jokes are
generally much smuttier (and much less funny). Today, the jokes
look as old as the period in which the story is set and you can't help
wondering just
why the series
was so popular. (Did people really find jokes about cucumbers
amusing back in 1971? God, things must have been desperate.)
Howerd is a delight as the naughty slave with a one-track mind,
but as for the rest... did anyone tell them that this was meant to be a
comedy? If you get three laughs out of this, you've done
well.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Pompeii, 79 AD. Mount Vesuvius is about to blow its top, but the
locals are too preoccupied with their binging, whoring and general
all-round debauchery to notice. Lurcio is busy making the
preparations for an orgy to be hosted by his master, Ludicrus Sextus,
when he has a set-to with the sour-tempered centurion Bilius. In
the scuffle, Lurcio inadvertently switches one of his cucumbers for a
scroll which names several conspirators who are involved in a plot to
kill the Emperor Nero. One of the would-be assassins is the
proconsul Prosperus Maximus, who is incensed when he learns that the
scroll has gone missing. Realising that Lurcio and his master
could give away the plot (chance would be a fine thing), Prosperus
Maximus has no choice but to kill them both, with a little help from
his adorable wife Voluptua...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.