Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueStruggling entertainers who are trying to put on a show pose as servants to wealthy woman in hopes of raising the money.Struggling entertainers who are trying to put on a show pose as servants to wealthy woman in hopes of raising the money.Struggling entertainers who are trying to put on a show pose as servants to wealthy woman in hopes of raising the money.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Richard Murdoch
- 'Stinker'
- (as Richard {Stinker} Murdoch/Richard Murdoch)
Eleanor Farrell
- Self
- (as Forsythe Seamon & Farrell)
Charlie Forsythe
- Self
- (as Forsythe Seamon & Farrell)
Addie Seamon
- Self
- (as Forsythe Seamon & Farrell)
Avis à la une
More low-brow humour featuring Arthur Askey in women's clothing. I Thank You is clearly trying to emulate similar 'zany' American movies of the era, but tries far too hard with woefully threadbare material. Even Will Hay's regular foils Graham Moffatt and Moore Marriott fail to lift the quality of the humour.
"I Thank You" is the best of the films that Arthur Askey made. With his friends Moore and Graham Moffatt and Richard Murdoch, Askey romps and stomps his way through mayhem with many laughs and chuckles. They are joined by some talented performers of the day that add a musical production touch to this comedy.
The plot is a fairly simple one, but the hilarious chaos of many scenes makes one wonder if it was all scripted that way, or if the leads were just ad-libbing as they went along. It is clear that they were enjoying the making of this film.
No doubt this and other comedies of the period did a lot to ease tensions during the war. Farce of this type probably helped many in England keep the proverbial British stiff upper lip during the German bombing of London. The closing scene of the troupe entertaining Londoners in a bomb shelter was a fitting tribute to the English and to the entertainers who did their part for the war effort.
This is a fun film that rivals the best of the raucous movies of the Marx Brothers and Three Stooges in America.
The plot is a fairly simple one, but the hilarious chaos of many scenes makes one wonder if it was all scripted that way, or if the leads were just ad-libbing as they went along. It is clear that they were enjoying the making of this film.
No doubt this and other comedies of the period did a lot to ease tensions during the war. Farce of this type probably helped many in England keep the proverbial British stiff upper lip during the German bombing of London. The closing scene of the troupe entertaining Londoners in a bomb shelter was a fitting tribute to the English and to the entertainers who did their part for the war effort.
This is a fun film that rivals the best of the raucous movies of the Marx Brothers and Three Stooges in America.
If you ever wondered what British music hall or American vaudeville was all about, this is a pretty good representation of the styles of humor and performance from those circles. The plot is so old, it creaks; jokes are corny and people break into song all the time, but everyone is so committed to what they're doing, you're completely entertained. You'll remember Arthur Askey's delivery of the line "I thank you" for a long time.
The vaudeville team of Forsythe, Seamon & Farrell get some nice showcasing here. While Charles Forsythe and Eleanor Farrell can sing and deliver a punchline, Addie Seamon plays "Peaches", a Gracie Allen ditz who can dance up a storm. You won't forget her.
Great fun for a Saturday afternoon.
The vaudeville team of Forsythe, Seamon & Farrell get some nice showcasing here. While Charles Forsythe and Eleanor Farrell can sing and deliver a punchline, Addie Seamon plays "Peaches", a Gracie Allen ditz who can dance up a storm. You won't forget her.
Great fun for a Saturday afternoon.
10panden1
A tremendously funny film, with quick one liners a plenty.
Interspersed with some very catchy tunes, over acting, and a story line silly enough to follow. One of my all time favorite, British films. Sit back and have a laugh.
Interspersed with some very catchy tunes, over acting, and a story line silly enough to follow. One of my all time favorite, British films. Sit back and have a laugh.
`Big-hearted Arthur Askey' was a major British star of cinema, TV, and even, much earlier, Music Hall. On the evidence of `I Thank You' (a catch-phrase pronounced Aye Theng Yew) he was a comical little man with great timing but I just couldn't get a laugh out of this movie. And its not simply a case of what made people smile more than fifty years ago not being relevant today. A couple of nights previously I had watched an even older film, `Nothing Sacred' and found it absolutely hilarious.
`I Thank You' was made & set during the Second World War. It opens & closes in the London Underground where the population went to escape the German air raids, includes a couple of novelty songs plus performances from Richard `Stinker' Murdoch who became a top radio script-writer and Kathleen Harrison who always seemed to play a maid until she had great success in the fifties in The Huggetts series of films.
It's hard to recommend `I Thank You' which is often frantic and farcical; the best I can say is that it is mercifully short at seventy-odd minutes.
`I Thank You' was made & set during the Second World War. It opens & closes in the London Underground where the population went to escape the German air raids, includes a couple of novelty songs plus performances from Richard `Stinker' Murdoch who became a top radio script-writer and Kathleen Harrison who always seemed to play a maid until she had great success in the fifties in The Huggetts series of films.
It's hard to recommend `I Thank You' which is often frantic and farcical; the best I can say is that it is mercifully short at seventy-odd minutes.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesConsidered by Arthur Askey to be the "stinker" of his film career.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Hitler: The Comedy Years (2007)
- Bandes originalesHello To The Sun
(uncredited)
Written by Noel Gay and Frank Eyton
Performed by Arthur Askey
Reprised by Eleanor Farrell and Charlie Forsythe
Performed by the whole cast at the end of the film
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Lieux de tournage
- Gaumont-British Studios, Lime Grove, Shepherd's Bush, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(studio: made at Gaumont-British Studios, London.)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 23 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was I Thank You (1941) officially released in Canada in English?
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