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The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins

  • 1971
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 47min
NOTE IMDb
5,3/10
525
MA NOTE
The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins (1971)
SatireSlapstickComedy

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThis early Seventies British comedy takes us through seven short stories based on the Seven Deadly Sins. This film is a montage of different styles, from Spike Milligan's mainly silent "Slot... Tout lireThis early Seventies British comedy takes us through seven short stories based on the Seven Deadly Sins. This film is a montage of different styles, from Spike Milligan's mainly silent "Sloth", to the leering Harry H Corbett in "Lust".This early Seventies British comedy takes us through seven short stories based on the Seven Deadly Sins. This film is a montage of different styles, from Spike Milligan's mainly silent "Sloth", to the leering Harry H Corbett in "Lust".

  • Réalisation
    • Graham Stark
  • Scénario
    • Bob Larbey
    • John Esmonde
    • Dave Freeman
  • Casting principal
    • Felicity Devonshire
    • Bruce Forsyth
    • Paul Whitsun-Jones
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,3/10
    525
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Graham Stark
    • Scénario
      • Bob Larbey
      • John Esmonde
      • Dave Freeman
    • Casting principal
      • Felicity Devonshire
      • Bruce Forsyth
      • Paul Whitsun-Jones
    • 11avis d'utilisateurs
    • 9avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos44

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    Rôles principaux52

    Modifier
    Felicity Devonshire
    • Nude Girl
    Bruce Forsyth
    Bruce Forsyth
    • Clayton (segment "Avarice")
    Paul Whitsun-Jones
    • Elsinore (segment "Avarice")
    Bernard Bresslaw
    Bernard Bresslaw
    • Mr. Violet (segment "Avarice")
    Joan Sims
    Joan Sims
    • Policewoman (segment "Avarice")
    Roy Hudd
    Roy Hudd
    • Fisherman (segment "Avarice")
    Julie Samuel
    Julie Samuel
    • Petrol Attendant (segment "Avarice")
    Cheryl Hall
    Cheryl Hall
    • Vanessa (segment "Avarice")
    Suzanne Heath
    • Chloe (segment "Avarice")
    • (as Susanne Heath)
    Harry Secombe
    Harry Secombe
    • Stanley (segment "Envy")
    Geoffrey Bayldon
    Geoffrey Bayldon
    • Vernon (segment "Envy")
    June Whitfield
    June Whitfield
    • Mildred (segment "Envy")
    Carmel Cryan
    • Vera (segment "Envy")
    Leslie Phillips
    Leslie Phillips
    • Dickie (segment "Gluttony")
    Julie Ege
    Julie Ege
    • Ingrid (segment "Gluttony")
    Patrick Newell
    Patrick Newell
    • Doctor (segment "Gluttony")
    Rosemarie Reede
    • Woman (segment "Gluttony")
    • (as Rosemarie Reed)
    Sarah Golding
    • Secretary (segment "Gluttony")
    • Réalisation
      • Graham Stark
    • Scénario
      • Bob Larbey
      • John Esmonde
      • Dave Freeman
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs11

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    Avis à la une

    6GiraffeDoor

    Neither magnificent nor sinful.

    Mostly pretty bland comedy, desperately contrived around its concept with an air quaint British naughtiness to keep it afloat.

    I have a low key appreciation for "Pride" and "Gluttony" is sort of ribald good fun; it's fapable at the very least.

    Unsurprisingly it's "Lust" that stands out among the crowd but not because it's funny or sexy. It's a disarmingly haunting depiction of loneliness and desperation.
    5canndyman

    Painful & dated all-star comedy compendium

    I first saw this film as a child, and it's stayed with me all these years - with its certain familiarity and a hankering for times gone by, when comedy was a lot more unsophisticated and didn't always require a great deal of intellectual engagement.

    Viewing it now, all these decades later, its many flaws are apparent - and it must take a fair bit of dedication for anyone to want to sit through it!

    As the title suggests, the film revolves around each of the seven deadly sins, with an individual segment for each one of around 15 mins. These are written and directed by different people, and have a different cast each time.

    One bonus of this is the huge and familIar cast of the great and good of British comedy from this period in the early 70s - though perhaps not many would be recognizable outside these shores.

    The comedy, such as it is though, is laboured, cheesy and sadly nearly always misses the mark.

    The first two segments (starring Bruce Forsyth and Harry Secombe) are strangely compelling - despite their absurdities and daft endings.

    Things take a dip though with a muddled third segment - starring the reliable Leslie Phillips in a role typically suited to his caddish and lecherous on-screen image, and surely written with him in mind.

    Harry H Corbett stars in the fourth segment - it's one of the better stories here (set mostly on a tube train and tube station), but suffers from a decidedly corny ending - one that's also a bit sad too.

    The fifth segment, starring Ian Carmichael and Alfie Bass is probably the best of this weak bunch. It studies class differences, and how this is tackled when a wealthy man in a Rolls-Royce meets a more humble man in a battered old jalopy head-on in a narrow country lane, with neither party willing to swallow their pride and back up to let the other car go.

    After this highlight though, things fall apart with the final two segments. The first is a silent comedy starring Spike Milligan (among others) and feels very forced. It fails to raise any laughs, or even anything in the way of entertainment - and the bar hadn't exactly been set very high.

    The final segment is a ludicrous story of two men who want to murder the oppressive local park keeper (played by 'On the Buses' Stephen Lewis), and this sorry and laughter-free story can't end soon enough...

    All in all then, a real hotch-potch of poor comedy, and one that does its many stars a great disservice.

    I guess it's worth watching these days just for its oddity value - like 'it's so bad it's good' kind of thing.

    My favorite part was spotting the locations in and around Pinewood Studios, and also spotting all the many famous faces, some in quite minor or supporting roles too.

    View at your peril, but be warned - 'Carry On' this is not!
    RodrigAndrisan

    "English Comedy"

    A collage film, made up of many episodes without any connection between them. It should be Comedy, but it isn't. Not even an episode has fun, everything is without salt and without pepper, super-boring. Unfortunately for all the actors involved, obviously many talented, they are trapped without escape in some very bad scenarios. If Benny Hill or Rowan Atkinson had played all the roles, I think it would have been a success.
    5kittenkongshow

    Mixed Bag

    Graham Stark brings one of the great casts in British film history - a great if uneven time capsule.

    I remember watching this on Granada on a Sunday afternoon, I doubt it'll ever turn up on anything bar the wonderful Talking pictures...

    anyway as with most Portmanteau films if you don't enjoy one bit...wait for the next!

    Wish sometimes I was born earlier to see some of films in the cinema...
    3The_Secretive_Bus

    From bad to brilliant

    Just watched this little known 1971 comedy film today, after purchasing it as a budget DVD title. Though I'd heard it was rubbish, the cast made me get it (Ian Carmichael, Spike Milligan, Harry Secombe, Harry H Corbett... basically every comedy actor in the early 70s makes an appearance).

    It's a very lop-sided film. Basically, it's just 7 sketches, all padded out to about 15 minutes, strung together and placed under one banner, each one ostensibly about one of the 7 deadly sins.

    We start with some very cheap looking animated stuff with a director and cameraman gaping at some footage of a naked woman (seen from behind), including an HILARIOUS bit where the woman turns around and the two animated characters cunningly place themselves between her unmentionable areas and the audience. You might be tempted to turn off the film now, though this brief intro is saved by one funny gag. The director (voiced fairly disastrously by Graham Stark throughout) says something like "this has nothing to do with the film you are about to see, unless you count being a peeping Tom as one of:" "THE SEVEN MAGNIFICENT DEADLY SINS"... "which it isn't."

    Yeah, written down it's rubbish, but it works quite well watching it. Anyway, wee little animated Stark gets chucked into a cinema and watches the credits of the film that are so small you can hardly read them - though from what I could see they were mostly played in reverse order. Hmm. We then actually start the film proper with the first segment:

    Averice

    Bruce Forsyth (!!!) is the chauffeur of an arrogant fat bloke. His boss loses a 50p coin down a drain, and Bruce is told to get it back. So begins a long, painfully drawn out and unfunny segment in which Bruce tramps around some sewers for a while, Bernard Bresslaw turns up to say a few lines, Joan Sims appears as a policewoman, and a fisherman pulls some young dolly girls. If you find Bruce walking off screen, followed by a "WOAAAAAAHHHHH!" and a splash sound effect amusing (and this joke is employed 3 times), you'll like this. If not, then, like me, you'll find yourself being distracted by a speck on the wall.

    Greed

    Geoffrey Bayldon and June Whitfield own a posh house. Harry Secombe and his wife, who apparently have won the pools or something, pull up in a car, where the wife tells Harry she wants the house, and that he should make the inhabitants an offer. When Bayldon naturally refuses, Harry is told to get the house - or else. It makes absolutely no sense, like many other segments of this film. It's also not very funny. Secombe tries gamely, but you can only go so far with the old "are you going to let me have it?" / cue bucket-of-water-thrown-in-the-face gag. He also attempts to disguise himself as different characters, all of whom sound exactly like Harry Secombe. Oh, and the ending is rubbish too. Mostly irredeemable.

    Gluttony

    Thank God, it's Leslie Phillips! In a sketch called "Gluttony"! Surely this one will hark back to funnier, saucier works? Well, no, not really. Rather than play his usual sex-hound, Phillips plays a man who works for a health-food firm, but who loves to eat junk food. The sexy female vice-president invites him for dinner, which he is told by his doctor he cannot eat. Cue some slapstick which is so hard to work out it's not worth worrying about - I hadn't a clue what was supposed to be represented most of the time, though it somehow ends up with Phillips eating roast duck in a shower. Of course, this being Phillips, he gets seduced by the woman, but it's handled dreadfully (if you pardon the expression). Some innuendo so bad it would make the Carry On team whimper, and you've got possibly the most disappointing segment of the film, and certainly the worst thing Phillips has ever been in.

    Lust

    It was around now that I felt like giving up, but persevered when I saw it was good old Harry H Corbett up next. And this segment is indeed pretty good - actually, from now on, each segment has some merit. This one is very simple - Harry is a fairly sexually frustrated bloke who wants a bird. He spends a while talking to himself, before popping down to pull a woman ... at the local London Underground station. Like you do.

    Despite this fairly illogical set up, it's actually pretty funny - Harry H takes some fairly weak material and turns it into something golden, simply because he's Harry H. A bit where he mistakenly chats up Bill Pertwee on a train is the highlight of this segment. However, the last scene where he, using a phonebooth, chats up a woman in the very next booth becomes distinctly more uncomfortable the longer you watch it, with Harry coming across as someone you'd likely want to put away - until the last gag, which makes you feel sorry for him. A very uneven sketch, this one, which only just manages to succeed thanks to it's star.

    Pride

    Ian Carmichael and Alfie Bass are driving their cars, down a one way road in the country, and meet each other up in the middle. Both refuse to back up. And so a battle of wills penned by the always fantastic Galton and Simpson (more remembered for their work with Tony Hancock) plays on. This sketch somewhat loses steam about halfway through, but there are enough twists and turns to keep you interested. Ian Carmichael is sublime at playing his usual toffee-nosed twit, and doesn't disappoint. There isn't much to really say about this one, besides the fact that it's good.

    Sloth

    The best piece of the film, managing to be laugh out loud hilarious. It's by Spike Milligan, and is a silent movie composed of lots of rapidly cut scenes, in which characters are amusingly idle. On paper, this looks disastrous - it isn't. Lots off familiar faces turn up in it, including Spike himself, Marty Feldman, Peter Butterworth, Graham Stark, and Ronnie Barker. Most of the lines are very Goonish, and include Barker purchasing a walnut, which he can't open - so he asks a woman in front of him in the bus queue if she could place it in the road - "A passing vehicle might break it open." Another theme has a man walking along a field and coming into contact with a tree. Rather than simply walk around it, he decides to wait till the tree falls down. It's all wonderfully silly, and well worth your time.

    Wrath

    Two old men decided to kill off Blakey from "On the Buses". Utterly bizarre, this sketch succeeds in being amusing for the most part as it combines usual class-warfare humour with the utter inanity of it's premise - Ronald Frazer and friend feel victimised by the miserly Blakey, a park keeper. When they litter the park in protest, Blakey says something like "I'll 'ave the law on you!" to which Ronald a few seconds later responds "We'll have to kill him." It's mad. There's a homage to "Psycho" in there, and all three characters are killed in an exploding public convenience. The two old chaps are sitting in a white cloudy void, and decide they can litter all they want. Blakey turns up and tells them to put it all in the bin.

    "We can do what we like! We're in Heaven."

    "Oh no you bloody well 'ain't!"

    The entire film ends with the two old men being made to pick up the paper with a pitchfork, whilst Blakey laughs at them like a loon whilst the screen goes red. Possibly the most enduring, and frighteningly macabre, image of the film.



    So, all in all, a mixed bag. Only the last three sketches really work, with the one in the middle being OK, and the first three being terrible. The animated linking material with the animated Graham Stark is inane and grates quickly, and the whole thing ends with a twee 70s song. Overall, this film would probably get a 5/10 from me, though frankly I'm still too bewildered by the last sketch to think straight.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The segments "Pride" and "Lust" had originally been television plays in the series Comedy Playhouse (1961)
    • Gaffes
      In the Pride section, the Rolls Royce has, at first, both the RAC and AA badges as it travels down the lane, then only one, the RAC badge, for the rest of the piece.
    • Citations

      Doctor: I take it he didn't get to the pudding?

      Ingrid: No, he didn't get that far.

      Doctor: Pitty. I like something that's rather sweet.

      Ingrid: I'm sure you do.

      Doctor: Perhaps I'd better take a look at it?

    • Crédits fous
      Felicity Devonshire tops the cast list during the end credits, but instead of receiving a written character description, she is represented by a drawing of how she appears in the film.
    • Connexions
      References Naissance d'une nation (1915)
    • Bandes originales
      Envy, Greed An' Gluttony
      (the Seven Deadly Sins theme)

      Sung by Middle of the Road (as The Middle Of The Road)

      Written by Roy Budd and Jack Fishman

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    FAQ

    • How long is The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins?
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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • novembre 1971 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Die herrlichen sieben Todsünden
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Société de production
      • Tigon Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 47 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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