Agrega una trama en tu idiomaMarried comic actors Hattie Jacques and John LeMesurier seem the perfect couple, with their two young sons and the legendary Christmas dinners they host for their friends. However, in 1963, ... Leer todoMarried comic actors Hattie Jacques and John LeMesurier seem the perfect couple, with their two young sons and the legendary Christmas dinners they host for their friends. However, in 1963, after a charity fund raiser for leukaemia, Hattie meets the young and handsome John Schofi... Leer todoMarried comic actors Hattie Jacques and John LeMesurier seem the perfect couple, with their two young sons and the legendary Christmas dinners they host for their friends. However, in 1963, after a charity fund raiser for leukaemia, Hattie meets the young and handsome John Schofield, whose son died of the disease. He tells her that she is lovely and boosts her confide... Leer todo
- Premios
- 2 nominaciones en total
- Self
- (material de archivo)
- (sin créditos)
- Amanda Barrie
- (sin créditos)
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- Self
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- (sin créditos)
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Opiniones destacadas
As a kid I grew up on The Carry on films, adoring Hattie Jacques, growing up believing that the stern faced actress was frigid and somewhat dowdy, little knowing of the passions that burned away. Ever feminine, I will forever adore Hattie, events here won't change my opinion of her.
John Schofield seemed to have a profound affect on her, Adrian Turner is great in the role, they don't miss a moment to show off his ripped body.
Ruth Jones does a great job, she makes Hattie sweet, conflicted and incredibly feminine. Great job from Bathurst also.
John Le Mesurier has always struck me as such a sad character, adorable, but definitely somewhat withdrawn, I wonder if this is exactly what he was like. Could anyone exist in such a situation?
Loved it, 9/10
I'd love to know what John's car was.
Ruth Jones portrays Jacques as a woman with a healthy sexual appetite and great generosity of spirit that made her easy prey for good-looking young men. The film itself - beset by distracting directorial tics by Dan Zeff including wobbly steadicam photography and the inevitable switches between black & white and colour - attempts to turn this simple tale into an Antonioniesque study in alienation.
The chronology is often rather suspect, Robert Bathurst doesn't really look or sound much like Le Mesurier; while the single most egregious omission is that there are only a couple of fleeting references to Eric Sykes.
And I simply cannot believe that Esma Cannon was capable of swearing so much.
Such a remarkable story, featuring the lives of two of Britain's best-loved actors of the 60's and 70's, was always going to have a high curiosity value bordering on prurience but failed, for me, by not taking sides and playing it all too neutrally. Perhaps this was due to pressure from the family and friends of the late Ms Jacques, I would imagine, but in trying to dress her liaison with the otherwise spivvy, on-the-make Schofield as some grand love affair, both are let off far too lightly. Remember that this triangle was played out with two young children in attendance too and unsavoury doesn't even begin to describe the showbiz goings-on here. We're almost directed to have sympathy for the self-deprecating jolly fat lady getting herself a young bloke and her emotional conflict in deciding which of the two Johns to plump (sorry) for when in fact her complicity in the goings-on here is morally reprehensible.
Thus I found it an awkward watch and came away from it by not respecting or liking any of the three leads, even LeMesurier, so much is his "door-mat" impression played out. The acting is good however, Ruth Jones doing a not quite lady-like enough impression of Jacques but otherwise carrying off the physical and vocal transformation well. Robert Bathurst doesn't look much like LeMesurier facially but gets his shrug-shoulders world- weariness down-pat, while Aidan Turner is excellent as the vile Schofield, the unwelcome cuckoo in the nest. The dialogue I did find to be characterful and subtle, histrionics avoided as the situation progresses.
Life-styles of the rich and famous are always morbidly inviting but on the whole I wish I'd looked the other way, rather like Hattie should have before she started on her ill- considered affair.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaRobert Bathurst, who played John Le Mesurier, subsequently went on to play the character of Sergeant Wilson in Dad's Army: The Lost Episodes (2019), a series of remakes of the three missing episodes of Dad's Army (1968). In the original series, Sergeant Wilson was played by John Le Mesurier.
- ErroresScenes are included showing filming of Carry on Cabby (1963), including a clapper board with that title. However, this movie was produced as "Call Me a Cab". The title was changed after production was completed.
- Citas
[Hattie meets John Schofield for the first time when he drives up in a red E-Type Jaguar sports car]
John Schofield: Are you all right here, or do you need to sit in the back like the Queen?
Hattie Jacques: [coyly] I'd need six months' notice to squeeze my behind in there.
- Créditos curiososPrologue: "This film is based on a true story. Some events have been created or changed."
- ConexionesFeatured in The Amazing Hattie Jacques: Larger than Life (2022)
- Bandas sonorasCarry on Cabby
Composed by Eric Rogers
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1