Agrega una trama en tu idiomaTwo men who are next-door neighbors constantly battle over seemingly-trivial offenses; on the other hand, their wives are the best of friends. The two couples attempt to win a 'love-thy-neig... Leer todoTwo men who are next-door neighbors constantly battle over seemingly-trivial offenses; on the other hand, their wives are the best of friends. The two couples attempt to win a 'love-thy-neighbor' competition by lying.Two men who are next-door neighbors constantly battle over seemingly-trivial offenses; on the other hand, their wives are the best of friends. The two couples attempt to win a 'love-thy-neighbor' competition by lying.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Andria Lawrence
- Norma
- (as Andrea Lawrence)
John Bindon
- White Groom
- (as John Binden)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Love Thy Neighbour is a strained expansion of a popular 1970s TV Sitcom. It's dealing with race relations between West Indians and White British makes it popular with the humour found in Working Men's Clubs, but the cracks do show.
At times the humour is funny, but very rarely. It's forgettable.
At times the humour is funny, but very rarely. It's forgettable.
What a wonderful gem to find, in 2019. I grew up with the TV series but, never knew there was a follow up movie.
When the series came out I was a tot at 10 years of age however, I could already understand the satire this series depicted, along with "Till Death Do Us Part". Both perfectly depicted life as it was at the time in England.
I could see exactly what the writers were putting up to society, and the cast were the perfect idiom to do so, they were so well matched. They were trying to break down long held barriers between races. To an extent, it worked, it's not there yet.
Jack Smethurst and Kate Williams were already established actors. Rudolph Walker and Nina Baden-Semper were relative newcomers. However, the blend of both, even in the 70's, worked.
The male actors played off each other brilliantly, the female actors played off ecah other because women meet together better tham men do. And that was part of why the series and movie worked, not just because of "colour".
To see faces I hadn't seen in over 40 years, was a joy to behold. To be reminded of the comedy I grew up with, is indescribable, especially in this age of political correctness. This movie was completely incorrect, as it was meant to be (in an age before "correctness".
The multiple storylines that evolved from a simple premise, worked; especially the unexpected love match arriving from an early flight from Trinadad. I won't elaborate, I'll leave that up to the viewer. THAT pulled the movie together, and made it the prefect ending to the TV series, exactly what it all meant in the first place.
Only those of "my" age would know that, Jack Smethurst and Rudolph Walker were actually best of friends. I was one of the lucky ones, who saw Jack being "ambushed" for "This Is Your Life", on his way to dinner, with his wife; and sitting beside him in the car was, Rudolf and HIS wife. For the younger generation, Rudolf Walker, OBE, plays Patrick Trueman in "Eastenders" on BBC TV.
When the series came out I was a tot at 10 years of age however, I could already understand the satire this series depicted, along with "Till Death Do Us Part". Both perfectly depicted life as it was at the time in England.
I could see exactly what the writers were putting up to society, and the cast were the perfect idiom to do so, they were so well matched. They were trying to break down long held barriers between races. To an extent, it worked, it's not there yet.
Jack Smethurst and Kate Williams were already established actors. Rudolph Walker and Nina Baden-Semper were relative newcomers. However, the blend of both, even in the 70's, worked.
The male actors played off each other brilliantly, the female actors played off ecah other because women meet together better tham men do. And that was part of why the series and movie worked, not just because of "colour".
To see faces I hadn't seen in over 40 years, was a joy to behold. To be reminded of the comedy I grew up with, is indescribable, especially in this age of political correctness. This movie was completely incorrect, as it was meant to be (in an age before "correctness".
The multiple storylines that evolved from a simple premise, worked; especially the unexpected love match arriving from an early flight from Trinadad. I won't elaborate, I'll leave that up to the viewer. THAT pulled the movie together, and made it the prefect ending to the TV series, exactly what it all meant in the first place.
Only those of "my" age would know that, Jack Smethurst and Rudolph Walker were actually best of friends. I was one of the lucky ones, who saw Jack being "ambushed" for "This Is Your Life", on his way to dinner, with his wife; and sitting beside him in the car was, Rudolf and HIS wife. For the younger generation, Rudolf Walker, OBE, plays Patrick Trueman in "Eastenders" on BBC TV.
Terrible dated film
Grreat supporting roles by Tommy Godfrey, Keith Marsh & Patricia Hayes.
Very politically incorrect now - & I suspect then.
Not worth a watch
This is a great comedy, highlighting what it was like to live next door to racist bigot. But also shows that both main characters are actually as bad as each other. Based on the hit ITV comedy, this is very politically incorrect. And its all the better for it, comedy after all is to entertain. The movies only real drawback is there isnt much of a plot. However the cast are as great as usual. Jack Smethurst and Rudolph Walker make one hell of a team, playing off each other in a oneupmanship kind of way.It's been many years since i saw this movie and last week was finally able to buy it on dvd. The fact that the movie still contains genuine laugh out loud moments, means that i can recommend this movie, just like i would of back in the 1970's.
Love Thy Neighbour is the film based on the British TV sitcom of the same name. The film came out in 1973 and is about two couples, one black, one white who are neighbours on the same street in London and is about both the mens attempts at one-upmanship based on their mutual dislike of each others races. Its a piece of cinematic history from a decade before pc and its not a racist film per see as the biggest bigot is the white man and usually comes off worst in both this film and the TV series it is based on. I doubt very much that today's younger audiences will fund it acceptable, let alone funny due to its subject matter and script but for those of a certain age it can be very funny in a very British early 70s way and well worth a watch as both a comedy and as a study of how Britain used to be 50 years ago.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe south west London street Maple Terrace in Twickenham is home to the Booths (at number 65) and the Reynolds (at 67).
- ConexionesReferenced in Hammer: The Studio That Dripped Blood! (1987)
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- How long is Love Thy Neighbour?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 25 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.66 : 1
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