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IMDbPro

The Adventures of Barry McKenzie

  • 1972
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 54min
NOTE IMDb
5,6/10
966
MA NOTE
The Adventures of Barry McKenzie (1972)
Comedy

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueYoung Australian, Barry McKenzie, travels to England with his Aunt Edna after his father dies and a request is revealed in his will.Young Australian, Barry McKenzie, travels to England with his Aunt Edna after his father dies and a request is revealed in his will.Young Australian, Barry McKenzie, travels to England with his Aunt Edna after his father dies and a request is revealed in his will.

  • Réalisation
    • Bruce Beresford
  • Scénario
    • Bruce Beresford
    • Barry Humphries
  • Casting principal
    • Barry Crocker
    • Barry Humphries
    • Dick Bentley
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,6/10
    966
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Bruce Beresford
    • Scénario
      • Bruce Beresford
      • Barry Humphries
    • Casting principal
      • Barry Crocker
      • Barry Humphries
      • Dick Bentley
    • 19avis d'utilisateurs
    • 14avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos64

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    + 60
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    Rôles principaux45

    Modifier
    Barry Crocker
    Barry Crocker
    • Barry McKenzie
    Barry Humphries
    Barry Humphries
    • Aunt Edna Everage…
    Dick Bentley
    Dick Bentley
    • Detective
    Peter Cook
    Peter Cook
    • Dominic
    Avice Landone
    Avice Landone
    • Mrs. Gort
    • (as Avice Landon)
    Spike Milligan
    Spike Milligan
    • Landlord
    Dennis Price
    Dennis Price
    • Mr. Gort
    Joan Bakewell
    • Self
    Paul Bertram
    • Curly
    Margo Lloyd
    • Mrs. McKenzie
    Wilfred Grove
    • Customs Officer
    Bernard Spear
    • Cabbie
    Jonathan Hardy
    Jonathan Hardy
    • Groove Courtenay
    Maria O'Brien
    • Caroline Thighs
    Jenny Tomasin
    Jenny Tomasin
    • Sarah Gort
    Christopher Malcolm
    Christopher Malcolm
    • Sean
    Julie Covington
    • Blanche
    John Joyce
    • Maurie Miller
    • Réalisation
      • Bruce Beresford
    • Scénario
      • Bruce Beresford
      • Barry Humphries
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs19

    5,6966
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    10

    Avis à la une

    Bernie-56

    Now available on DVD in Australia

    Fans will be delighted to learned that 'The Adventures of Barry McKenzie' is now available on DVD. I bought my copy at JB HiFi at the bargain price of $11. It is a PAL Region 4 disk. However, like the VHS version, the print quality is appalling. It must have been taken from a well-worn cinema release. It is dark, horrendously scratchy at the reel changes and has frames missing. The source must have been broken and repaired. Oh for a digitally remastered version of an unreleased print. Still, it's a heck of a lot better than nothing. One delightful small part is the first appearance on film of John Clarke. He is an effete ex-patriate Australian, wearing a tight paisley shirt and in a wig (or at least a hilarious comb-over), podgily overweight, and speaking in a pseud's accent. Delightful.
    6gut-6

    A flawed but occasionally brilliant landmark

    This film was a stylistic, cultural and commercial breakthrough, the first hugely profitable Australian film in decades, and the start of the revival of the Australian film industry. The humour was utterly non-PC and outrageously crude for its day. At last the hideous ocker in England was portrayed on film in all his drunken ribald glory.

    However time has not been kind to it. Some of the individual jokes are still hysterically funny, such as Spike Milligan's introduction to the hotel, the Indian aphrodisiacs, and Delamphrey's attempts at psychoanalysis. Other jokes have worn thin though having been adopted by the culture at large (e.g. the largely invented Australian slang) or use of similar jokes by other comedians. Much of the humour doesn't go beyond simply using the crude invented slang in conversation. Today it isn't particularly outrageous or funny. The purportedly stereotypical depictions of English snobbery and Australian crudity are too extreme and grotesque even for a comedy, and further detract from the effectiveness of the comedy.

    Another major flaw is structural. "The Adventures of Barry Mackenzie" and its main character is based on a series of self-contained comic strips. A movie on the other hand is built around scenes of protracted dialogue, development within a scene, and development of the narrative across scenes. Indeed Humphries himself has stated he didn't believe his comic strips could be adapted for film for this very reason. As a result the film is highly episodic, with some very tendentious, unfunny and laboured links written to string the episodes together. This isn't helped by the fact that Humphries is essentially a solo performer whose stock-in-trade is the self-contained one-liner. He usually has a relatively brief setup (if any) leading to his jokes in stage performances. In consequence the dialogue is often stilted and unnatural, clumsily and unfunnily targetted towards the recitation of slang expressions or the delivery of some other self-contained comic idea. I don't normally criticise comedies for flaws in structure or logic because they are essentially vehicles for jokes, but in this case these flaws are distractingly obvious and jarring, and the jokes aren't funny enough to prevent the viewer noticing.

    Still, the funniest of the jokes are classics, and overall it remains enjoyable. The sequel is funnier though, perhaps because it resolves (but only partially) some of the original's flaws.

    On a historical note, the opening shot shows the Hegarty's private mini-ferry approaching the Luna Park pontoon wharf, which many Sydneysiders would fondly remember but neither of which now exist.
    9Bernard-16

    Cult status

    A hit at the time but now better categorised as an Australian cult film. The humour is broad, unsubtle and, in the final scene where a BBC studio fire is extinguished by urinating on it, crude. Contains just about every cliche about the traditional Australian pilgrimage to 'the old country', and every cliche about those rapacious, stuck up, whinging, Tory Brits. Would be acceptable to the British because of its strong cast of well known actors, and to Australians of that generation, who can 'get' the humour. Americans -- forget it. The language and jokes are in the Australian dialect of English and as such will be unintelligible.
    foxfaurot

    My Experience Promoting "The Adventures of Barry McKenzie

    I worked with MCA Australia as the Assistant Film Promotions Manager on The Adventures of Barry McKenzie. MCA was the film distributer throughout the major cities in Australia of this film. At that time, it was rated the most popular Australian film in their history. I worked directly with Barry Humphries who not only starred in the movie as four different characters, but was instrumental in introducing Foster's Lager, the Bazza McKenzie Hat and the Aunt Edna character (who manifested herself into Dame Edna, who is widely recognized world-wide). Not to forget Bruce Beresford and Barry McKenzie! I still have a copy of the comic strip "Bazza Pulls it Off" and "The Wonderful World of Barry McKenzie" (which the movie script was derived from). Sadly, I lost the Barry McKenzie Soundtrack.

    I'll never forget the Grand Opening Premiere at The Ascot Theatre in Sydney with all the cast, producers, directors, etc. The after party was held at The St. George's Club where Foster's Lager was consumed in abundance.

    If anyone knows how to obtain a copy of this film in a video format, I'd love to purchase it. It would bring back so many of my memories of the wonderful experiences I had during the four and half years I lived in Australia.

    Please feel free to e-mail me at if you have any idea how to access a copy of the movie.

    Deborah Faurot, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
    5tim-764-291856

    The Cinematic 'pit' of Aussie Culture...

    I'm trying to - and failing spectacularly - to think of a British - or U.S. - equivalent of the titular Barry MacKenzie and his so-called 'adventures'. After being 'required' to leave his native Down Under, young Barry Crocker (MacKenzie), with his Aunt Dame Edna Everage, jet to a fog-bound and freezing Britain (via Hong Kong, where he stocks up on high import duty luxury goods).

    Nicely ripping off our UK stereotypes, we see their black cab motor past Stonehenge and then up the M3, to London. Not sure, geographically where the airport was, but as Bruce Beresford's popular filmed version of the comic-strip character that ran in Private Eye never seems to follow logic or reason, this doesn't matter an iota.

    From the above over-charging cabbie, who cites windscreen-wiper depreciation and conversation as chargeable extras, the 'hotel' is no better. More sketch-lead than story, it's sporadic, in turns the best, grubbiest Aussie slang and humour but also tedious, lame and stupid.

    It's still quite a tonic though, in these days of political correctness, reminding us of our faults as a nation, even if they're obvious targets and during probably our least salubrious decade. Dame Edna, oddly, looks much less feminine than 'she' does now, her voice still not having found its niche and wavers between warbling, mannish falsetto and a sore- throat sufferer. Barry Humphries (Dame Edna, of course) does better as the creepy psychiatrist who interviews Barry, after he suffers a bump on the head and ends up in hospital, but soon discharges him due to being just too much troublesome!

    Peter Cook is a wasted opportunity, only appearing as an unfunny TV exec ten minutes before the end and a young Joan Bakewell as the resulting late night's arts programme interviewer/presenter, who gets the blunt end of MacKenzie's subtleties....

    Meanwhile, the constantly running joke about 'tubes' (tinnies) of Fosters is a refreshing one, too.

    It ranges between 7/10 to two, so five overall is a fair compromise, though on a good day, it could reach 6.

    My DVD was part of the 12 disc boxed set, Australian Cinema Collection, to which I gently refer to with my review title.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This picture was one of fifty Australian films selected for preservation as part of the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia's Kodak / Atlab Cinema Collection Restoration Project.
    • Gaffes
      In Caroline Thigh's flat Barry empties the curried chicken and prawn aphrodisiac down his boxers, staining his t-shirt. When he is thrown out of her flat the t-shirt is clean.
    • Citations

      Barry McKenzie: Now listen mate, I need to splash the boots. You know, strain the potatoes. Water the horses. You know, go where the big knobs hang out. Shake hands with the wife's best friend? Drain the dragon? Siphon the python? Ring the rattlesnake? You know, unbutton the mutton? Like, point Percy at the porcelain?

      Blanche: I think he wants to go to the loo.

    • Crédits fous
      'Based on the "Barry McKenzie" comic strip written by Barry Humphries with drawings by Nicholas Garland, as published in "Private "Eye" from an idea by Peter Cook.'
    • Connexions
      Featured in The Graham Kennedy Show: Épisode datant du 26 septembre 1972 (1972)
    • Bandes originales
      Waltzing Matilda
      (uncredited)

      Words by A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson

      Music by Christine MacPherson

      Heard during the drinking session at Curly's flat and as a theme at the television studio

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Adventures of Barry McKenzie?Alimenté par Alexa
    • what kind of hat does Bazza Wear?
    • What does the slang mean?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 12 octobre 1972 (Australie)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Australie
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Приключения Барри МакКензи
    • Lieux de tournage
      • The King's Head, 17 Hogarth Place, Kensington, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(exterior of pub)
    • Société de production
      • Longford Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 54 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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