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Don't Lose Your Head

  • 1967
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
3,3 k
MA NOTE
Don't Lose Your Head (1967)
The time of the French revolution, and Citizen Robespierre is beheading the French aristocracy. When word gets to England, two noblemen, Sir Rodney Ffing and Lord Darcy take it upon themselves to aid there French counterparts. Sir Rodney is a master of disguise, and becomes "the black fingernail", scourge of Camembert and Bidet, leaders of the French secret police...
Lire trailer2:42
1 Video
35 photos
ActionAventureComédieParodieSatire

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDuring French Revolution, English nobles Sir Rodney and Lord Darcy aid French aristocracy against Robespierre. Disguised as "Black Fingernail", Sir Rodney battles Camembert and Bidet, French... Tout lireDuring French Revolution, English nobles Sir Rodney and Lord Darcy aid French aristocracy against Robespierre. Disguised as "Black Fingernail", Sir Rodney battles Camembert and Bidet, French secret police leaders.During French Revolution, English nobles Sir Rodney and Lord Darcy aid French aristocracy against Robespierre. Disguised as "Black Fingernail", Sir Rodney battles Camembert and Bidet, French secret police leaders.

  • Réalisation
    • Gerald Thomas
  • Scénario
    • Talbot Rothwell
  • Casting principal
    • Sidney James
    • Kenneth Williams
    • Jim Dale
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    3,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Gerald Thomas
    • Scénario
      • Talbot Rothwell
    • Casting principal
      • Sidney James
      • Kenneth Williams
      • Jim Dale
    • 27avis d'utilisateurs
    • 6avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:42
    Trailer

    Photos35

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    Rôles principaux64

    Modifier
    Sidney James
    Sidney James
    • Sir Rodney Effing
    Kenneth Williams
    Kenneth Williams
    • Citizen Camembert
    Jim Dale
    Jim Dale
    • Lord Darcy Pue
    Charles Hawtrey
    Charles Hawtrey
    • Duc de Pommfrit
    Peter Butterworth
    Peter Butterworth
    • Citizen Bidet
    Joan Sims
    Joan Sims
    • Désirée Dubarry
    Dany Robin
    Dany Robin
    • Jacqueline
    Peter Gilmore
    Peter Gilmore
    • Citizen Robespierre
    Marianne Stone
    Marianne Stone
    • Landlady
    Michael Ward
    • Henri
    Leon Greene
    Leon Greene
    • Malabonce
    David Davenport
    • Sergeant
    Richard Shaw
    • Captain of Soldiers
    Valerie Van Ost
    Valerie Van Ost
    • Second Lady…
    Jennifer Clulow
    • First Lady
    Jacqueline Pearce
    Jacqueline Pearce
    • Third Lady
    Lewis Alexander
    • Citizen
    • (non crédité)
    Patrick Allen
    Patrick Allen
    • Narrator
    • (voix)
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Gerald Thomas
    • Scénario
      • Talbot Rothwell
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs27

    6,53.3K
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    Avis à la une

    kmoh-1

    A near miss

    Misfiring Carry On (the 'Carry On' name was dropped during a spat with a distributor), with plenty of good moments that don't quite add up to a top-rank whole. The plot leans heavily on Barry K. Barnes' 1937 offering The Return of the Scarlet Pimpernel, with Sid James in the Barnes role, Jim Dale in Anthony Bushell's, Kenneth Williams in Francis Lister's, Joan Sims in Margaretta Scott's, Charles Hawtrey in O. B. Clarence's, and Dany Robin in Sophie Stewart's. Most of them have a great time, especially Williams, Sims and Hawtrey, while Sid James dominates the plot.

    Jim Dale has a thankless unmemorable supporting role, and the wheeze of casting a sexy French actress (her career was drawing to a close at this point), like that of casting Phil Silvers in the previous entry Follow That Camel, was a mistake, failing to generate international interest while diluting the very English comedy. Like Silvers, Robin wanders through the film gamely with a strong sense that she has no idea what is really happening, but, hey, a job's a job.

    Plenty of good moments and lines, usually delivered by Hawtrey or Sims ("Come my dear, shall we take a walk in the arbour?" "Oh, I 'ad no idea we were so close to the sea"), and lots of great character names and puns, while Williams' sharp intakes of breath get more and more exaggerated as the film goes on. Watch out for a good ad lib from Williams when Peter Butterworth accidentally knocks his hat off. There is a strong sense that the English may be less stylish and clever than the French, but they are more easygoing and fun, and generally better - in a strong tradition of lampoons of Napoleon and French centralisation that also reaches forward to the Brexit debate.

    But the plot is quite tiresome, and the climax, with a huge sword fight in which various stuntmen gradually ruin Camembert's ill-gotten art collection is extraordinarily tedious. Moments stay in the memory, but the film as a whole does not.
    7hitchcockthelegend

    Scarlet Pimpernel, ooh I say madame

    Dandy fop Sir Rodney Effing has an alter ego, The Black Fingernail. A man, who along with his partner, Lord Darcy Pue, rescue French aristocrats from the clutches of the revolutionary police chief, Citizen Camembert.

    Carry On producer Peter Rogers had severed his links with Anglo Amalgamated and swiftly signed up with Rank Organisation. Miffed at losing their number one cash franchise, and no doubt with a touch of petulance, Anglo's brass refused Rogers permission to using the "Carry On" prefix. Thus this picture was initially released as just "Don't Lose Your Head" in 1966. Eventually common sense prevailed, and this rightly became known as the 13th franchise entry as "Carry On Don't Lose Your Head" {tho the American release of it being called "Carry On Pimpernel" makes better sense one feels}.

    Spoofing The Scarlet Pimpernel legacy with a ream of innuendo and double entendre's, the Carry On team deliver one of the better efforts from the series. This is in the main down to Talbot Rothwell's screenplay. Rothwell wrote the screenplay for 20 of the series efforts, he was someone who director and producer both trusted, and crucially that the cast also had faith in. Here his writing is excellent, if of course you be a fan of the saucy shenanigans that came with this particular part of British cinema that is? With characters called Citizen Camembert {refered to as the big cheese, get it?}, Duc de Pommfrit, Citizen Bidet and Sir Rodney Effing {yes that's two F's}, Rothwell lets loose with wave after wave of cheeky dialogue, all delivered with comic aplomb from the likes of Sid James, Joan Sims, Kenneth Williams, Charles Hawtrey, Jim Dale and the undervalued Peter Butterworth.

    There's also a real good production from Rogers. Armed with £200,000, Rogers assembled a fine wardrobe of period costumes and hired out Clandon Hall, Cliveden House and Waddesdon Manor to give the story its 18th Century feel. It's also a film that asks of its stalwarts to do a little bit more than just say risqué lines and act the goat. Oh it's all still gaudy and simple in premise, for sure, but some nice swordplay and derring-do from the boys shouldn't go unnoticed. It of course is just like most of the others they made, a cheeky romp, but to me it's proof positive that the "Carry On" series had some crackers mixed in with the dregs. Sit back and romp with the rompers I say. 7.5/10
    8TheLittleSongbird

    One of the best of the Carry on series easily

    I always have enjoyed the Carry On movies, they are a lot of fun and there are some very talented actors in the series. There are some stinkers like England, Emmanuelle and Columbus sure, but there are gems like Screaming(my personal favourite, Cleo, Up the Khyber and Camping. Don't Lose Your Head is up there with the best entries of the series. For me it wasn't perfect, Jim Dale is wasted and Jacqueline's harp scene is cringe-worthy. However, it is tightly directed, never dull and is beautifully designed. The music is also suitably rousing, and while simple the story spoofs The Scarlet Pimpernel in a very sharp and hilarious manner. The writing and the cast though were what made Don't Lose Your Head as good as it was. Right from the names, brilliant comic incidents and entendres the gags are plentiful and the memorable quotes endless, it is really a very wittily and hilariously written film. The bloody sight exchange is a scream in particular. Sidney James is superb(even when camping it up he still manages to make for a dashing fop), of the Carry On series I think he has only been better in Khyber. Kenneth Williams steals every scene and possibly even the entire film, his comic timing is spot on and it is worth seeing him for his facial expressions alone. Charles Hawtrey has some great lines and delivers them with utter comic conviction, while Joan Sims also excels as a very aptly-named character. Overall, very good and one of the best of an entertaining series. 8/10 Bethany Cox
    6Leofwine_draca

    Carry On's lavish costume comedy

    CARRY ON DON'T LOSE YOUR HEAD was made at the peak of the popularity of the Carry On films, where they could afford to splash out on lavish sets, costumes and locations in movies set in various historical eras. It's a pretty typical entry in the film series, and not the most appealing one I've seen; by now, at least half of the jokes were feeling quite stale, to me, and not a patch on the CARRY ONs of seven, eight years before.

    That being said, there's still much to enjoy here, and aficionados of the films will be in their element. A delightfully weaselly Kenneth Williams camps it up as Citizen Camembert, Robespierre's right-hand man whose job it is to outwit the Black Fingernail, a masked folk hero who keeps on freeing aristocrats from the guillotine.

    Sid James bags the role of the Fingernail and appears to be in his element, with plenty of his trademark dirty laughter and energy to spare. He's supported by a virtually wasted Jim Dale, whose role seems to be entirely redundant, and Joan Sims in one of those nagging wife type roles she always seemed to occupy in later years. The best cast members are Charles Hawtrey as the fey Duc de Pommfrit and Peter Butterworth as the befuddled Citizen Bidet.

    The gags set in and around the guillotine are by far my favourite parts of this movie, although there's a rousing and elaborate sword-fight at the climax to get your teeth into. CARRY ON DON'T LOSE YOUR HEAD also contains one of my favourite gags of all time: Hawtrey is brought a letter just as he's about to be beheaded, and he tells the messenger to drop it into the basket where he'll "read it later". Class stuff.
    7DanTheMan2150AD

    A very backward lot

    Marking a distinct production change from the first twelve and originally released without the iconic prefix, Don't Lose Your Head sees the team raising a hearty two-fingered salute to Madame Guillotine and the entire kingdom of France. A gloriously vulgar romp, the script is rife with iconic wordplay, puns, one-liners and patented double entendres. The film is easily one of the most lavish of the series, a trait that tends to be shared with most historical Carry Ons, with some excellent production values; the sets and costumes belie the low budget. More plot-heavy than most the story drives the narrative rather than the gags, in this sense, it is a more specific parody than the broader joke-led scripts of many other films. Bolstered by a unique style of swordplay in a prolonged swashbuckling finale amongst the general saucy mayhem, Don't Lose Your Head benefits from a cast on top form having the best of times as they carry on chopping their way through history, almost playing like a feature-length episode of Blackadder the Third.

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      After twelve Carry On films and various other comedy releases with Anglos Amalgamated, Peter Rogers was forced to look for a new distribution company. The Rank Organisation proved willing. Legal questions over title ownership and Rank's concern over inheriting a rival's brand name led to the abandonment of the Carry On prefix from this opening venture. In a post-production meeting in February 1967 Rogers commented that: "as the film was more visual than previous "Carry On" productions it could stand on its own without any reference to 'carry on'." Still, Rank were mindful of the success of the series and considered the release as "virtually the thirteenth "Carry On" film". The poster tagline, 'Carry On Laughing Until You Have Hysterics But Don't Lose Your Head' was used as a conscious link with the past and won over earlier suggestions including; "that "Carry On" team has the French Revolution in Convulsions" and "Carry On Tumbrils - they're the new rescue squad of the French Revolution." The American release removed all confusion and simply re-titled the film Carry On Pimpernel.
    • Gaffes
      The modern road leading to the Chateau.
    • Citations

      Lady Binder: But then, you've always had magnificent balls, and I wouldn't miss one of them.

      The Black Fingernail: Thank you Lady Binder.

    • Crédits fous
      In this spoof of public executions via guillotine during the French Revolution, the one song listed in the onscreen Soundtrack credits has the song not "performed by" or "sung by", but rather "executed by".
    • Versions alternatives
      As usual with the Carry On films the BBFC objected to many of the lines when the script was submitted to them, though in the end only a few cuts were made. These included a reference to Jacqueline having 'a pluck' and a stuttered use of 'fishing' during the opening narration.
    • Connexions
      Edited into What a Carry On: Épisode #1.1 (1984)
    • Bandes originales
      Don't Lose Your Head
      Written by Bill Martin and Phil Coulter

      Executed by Mike Sammes (as The Michael Sammes Singers)

      [Played over the opening title and credits]

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    FAQ

    • How long is Carry on Don't Lose Your Head?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 11 juin 1967 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Site officiel
      • Carry On Line
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
      • Espagnol
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Carry on Don't Lose Your Head
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Waddesdon Manor, Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(exterior of Chateau Neuf)
    • Société de production
      • Peter Rogers Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 30 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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