Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThis movie debut for saucy British TV comic Benny Hill has Benny leaving his job as a sweeper after winning some money. He becomes a private detective and investigates a plot to assassinate ... Leer todoThis movie debut for saucy British TV comic Benny Hill has Benny leaving his job as a sweeper after winning some money. He becomes a private detective and investigates a plot to assassinate British scientists.This movie debut for saucy British TV comic Benny Hill has Benny leaving his job as a sweeper after winning some money. He becomes a private detective and investigates a plot to assassinate British scientists.
Opiniones destacadas
Frantic, energetic slapstick comedy with spy and sci-fi elements (despite the title, it is NOT a parody of whodunits). Plenty of destruction and mayhem, and Belinda Lee is wonderful as "Strong Girl" Frankie ("men do not like to be dominated by women", she says at one point - I bet if the woman looks like Belinda Lee most men wouldn't mind at all....) **1/2 out of 4.
Benny Hill as a private detective Hugo Dill is excellent for what it is. Nothing serious lots of gags, enjoyable on all accounts. Good fare for that type of Comedy out during those latter 50. And if you're a Benny Hill fan just sit back and enjoy the show. Naysayers go away.
Benny Hill was a great comic actor later on in his career. In this you can see the potential. With 5 secs of Jess Conrad and much more of Belinda Lee what more can you ask for to while away the time.
My Ratings:
Story 1.25: Direction 1.50: Pace 1.75: Acting 1.50: Entertaining 1.75:
Total 7.75 out of 10.
I do believe it's a shame that you need to watch old movies to have a good laugh. However, since most of today's humour is puerile rubbish, which is by and large unamusing, then back in time I'll travel. Thank god for the time machine called video.
Hugo is an accident-prone fellow whose luck isn't too great but has a strange way of working in his favour. In this story, we catch him working as an ice-rink sweeper. However, Hugo has dreams above his station. He fantasises about becoming a Private Eye. Today could be the day his luck changes because he's just won first prize, in the monthly detective magazine he reads. A large cash reward and a fully trained bloodhound. Which is lucky, because his bad luck has just cost him his job.
No sooner has he opened the doors of his agency than a woman enters and obtains his services... though it's not to be a detective. Through a series of consequences and mishap, the woman believes Hugo to be a talent agent. Now, the conversation between her and Hugo is beautifully sculptured and written. You know the two are assuming different things. However, the exchange works. This style of chat is a hard thing to create, but T E B Clarke does it so well. What elicits amusement is the juxtaposition between the pair and their parlance. I was chuckling hardily at this scene.
Unfortunately... or fortunately, these misfortunes of happenstance continue and suddenly Hugo finds himself embroiled in an international conspiracy to blow up the worlds best scientists... and a misconstrued attempted kidnapping.
ThisWho Done It is a hell of a well-constructed story with lots of humourous twists and turns. But the humour isn't limited to dialogue and situation. No, director Basil Deardon adds more than a splash of slapstick. Of which, the catastrophe on ice and the malfunctioning weather machine were my favourites. Deardon's pacing and timing are perfect for these styles of comedy. Even the way he works the shots and scenes add to the power of the film. These are sublime, and most won't appreciate them. But the part where Hugo, who is impersonating the foreign professor, realises he's in trouble is excellent. It's shot between three rooms. The main room on the left, the hall in the centre, and a secondary lounge to the right. The section is important to drive the comedy, and Deardon nails it. However, he does it so smoothly you don't notice how excellent it is. Because your eyes are glued to the screen, and you're engrossed in the segment.
Not only are the writing and the direction good, but the cast is also great. This is the first time I'd seen Benny Hill in a movie. I'd never thought of him as a movie actor until Talking Pictures aired this film. Now, I'm going to see if there are any others I've missed.
There's nothing wrong with film at all. The only reason I didn't give it higher marks is that it feels dated. It's especially evident in the weather machine. It's funny. And, at the time, the effects would have looked great and more than passible. But, not so now. It's these small things that restrict the ratings.
I'd happily recommend this to everybody. It made me laugh out loud a few times, and that is great. Plus it's a movie for all the family. You don't have to worry if a comedian is going to throw in some inappropriate content just for a cheap laugh.
Please skate on over to my The Game Is Afoot and Just For Laughs lists to see where I've rated this lucky unlucky Private Eye.
Take Care & Stay Well
I do believe it's a shame that you need to watch old movies to have a good laugh. However, since most of today's humour is puerile rubbish, which is by and large unamusing, then back in time I'll travel. Thank god for the time machine called video.
Hugo is an accident-prone fellow whose luck isn't too great but has a strange way of working in his favour. In this story, we catch him working as an ice-rink sweeper. However, Hugo has dreams above his station. He fantasises about becoming a Private Eye. Today could be the day his luck changes because he's just won first prize, in the monthly detective magazine he reads. A large cash reward and a fully trained bloodhound. Which is lucky, because his bad luck has just cost him his job.
No sooner has he opened the doors of his agency than a woman enters and obtains his services... though it's not to be a detective. Through a series of consequences and mishap, the woman believes Hugo to be a talent agent. Now, the conversation between her and Hugo is beautifully sculptured and written. You know the two are assuming different things. However, the exchange works. This style of chat is a hard thing to create, but T E B Clarke does it so well. What elicits amusement is the juxtaposition between the pair and their parlance. I was chuckling hardily at this scene.
Unfortunately... or fortunately, these misfortunes of happenstance continue and suddenly Hugo finds himself embroiled in an international conspiracy to blow up the worlds best scientists... and a misconstrued attempted kidnapping.
ThisWho Done It is a hell of a well-constructed story with lots of humourous twists and turns. But the humour isn't limited to dialogue and situation. No, director Basil Deardon adds more than a splash of slapstick. Of which, the catastrophe on ice and the malfunctioning weather machine were my favourites. Deardon's pacing and timing are perfect for these styles of comedy. Even the way he works the shots and scenes add to the power of the film. These are sublime, and most won't appreciate them. But the part where Hugo, who is impersonating the foreign professor, realises he's in trouble is excellent. It's shot between three rooms. The main room on the left, the hall in the centre, and a secondary lounge to the right. The section is important to drive the comedy, and Deardon nails it. However, he does it so smoothly you don't notice how excellent it is. Because your eyes are glued to the screen, and you're engrossed in the segment.
Not only are the writing and the direction good, but the cast is also great. This is the first time I'd seen Benny Hill in a movie. I'd never thought of him as a movie actor until Talking Pictures aired this film. Now, I'm going to see if there are any others I've missed.
There's nothing wrong with film at all. The only reason I didn't give it higher marks is that it feels dated. It's especially evident in the weather machine. It's funny. And, at the time, the effects would have looked great and more than passible. But, not so now. It's these small things that restrict the ratings.
I'd happily recommend this to everybody. It made me laugh out loud a few times, and that is great. Plus it's a movie for all the family. You don't have to worry if a comedian is going to throw in some inappropriate content just for a cheap laugh.
Please skate on over to my The Game Is Afoot and Just For Laughs lists to see where I've rated this lucky unlucky Private Eye.
Take Care & Stay Well
On kanopy. The awesome comic benny hill, in his first, full length film role. When hugo gets kicked out of the stage show, he takes any job he can get. And gets mixed up with a group of spies. They hire him to imitate their evil scientist, to demonstrate a machine that can control the weather. And of course, that all goes wrong too. Along the way, he rescues a girl who doesn't need to be rescued. But she's flattered he would go to the trouble. It's mostly pretty light and fluffy. Lots of sight gags, jokes, misunderstandings. Pratfalls. Comedy bits. Co-stars belinda lee as hugo's girlfriend. She made a few more films, but died at twenty five in a car accident, just a few years after this was released. The story is quite silly, and nothing too special. Of course, he needs to dress up in drag, as part of the plot. Historically, it's fun to see a thirty two year old benny hill, years before he starred in his own show. The magic chair scene is right out of the marx brothers, or maybe the three stooges! Directed by basil dearden. He won the bafta for sapphire. Written by tib clarke, who had won his oscar for lavender hill.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOne of the Ealing Comedies series.
- ErroresWhen the heroine tosses a villain out the window, you can see he's being held up by a wire. Then, as he goes through it, the stuntman accidentally destroys the paper "wall" over the window.
- Bandas sonorasWho Done It?
(uncredited)
Music by Philip Green
Lyrics by Marcel Stellman
Sung by Benny Hill over main and end titles
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- How long is Who Done It??Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Zehir Hafiye
- Locaciones de filmación
- Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Final sequences, stock car racing.)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 25 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Who Done It? (1956) officially released in Canada in English?
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