Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueOne hot June day, three friends decide there is nothing they would like to do more than to get away from London. A boating holiday with lots of fresh air and exercise would be just the very ... Tout lireOne hot June day, three friends decide there is nothing they would like to do more than to get away from London. A boating holiday with lots of fresh air and exercise would be just the very thing, or so their doctors tell them. So, after debating the merits of hotel or camp beds ... Tout lireOne hot June day, three friends decide there is nothing they would like to do more than to get away from London. A boating holiday with lots of fresh air and exercise would be just the very thing, or so their doctors tell them. So, after debating the merits of hotel or camp beds and what to pack, they set off on their voyage - a trip up the Thames from Kingston to Oxf... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Avis à la une
The book is apparently very popular in England, with a mix of humor, sentimentality and self mocking the English seem particular fond of, and the movie is clearly done by people who feel that fondness towards the source.
Like the book, there are parts that are quite amusing, and like the books, there are parts that are more travelogue. The balance is a little more toward the travelogue here, surprisingly, although these parts drag less in the movie than in the book.
It's a quiet, sly sort of humor and a charming, small, elegantly done movie. It's not as good as the book, but it's very enjoyable.
Finally, this excellent adaptation is available on DVD in the UK (Region 2 DVD), but can be played on region-free DVD players in the US, or one a computer's DVD player if it's set temporarily to Region 2, or made region-free. I've seen it available at several UK retailers online.
I've been waiting since 1978 for a professional release of this delightful little film. :-) jfk
A frankly interesting curiosity, not only because it reports on a boat trip on the Thames, from Kingston to Oxford, by three young men, at the end of the 19th century, but also because it features several notable talents, in front of and behind the camera, destined for fame and success.
Palin was already a star in 1975, due to his participation in the Monthy Python series, and Curry debuted, that same year, his most famous role, that of Transvestite, Transylvanian Transsexual, in the cult musical comedy, Rocky Horror Picture Show. Moore would have a long career in film and television, notably in the series Rock Follies or the war classic, A Bridge Too Far. Frears would be one of the most important British directors of his generation, nominated twice for an Oscar for best director (The Grifters and The Queen), winning an Emmy and three BAFTAs. Finally, screenwriter Tom Stoppard also had a hugely successful career, winning an Oscar in 1999 (The Passion of Shakespeare) and nominated for another (Brazil, by Terry Gilliam, another former Python).
With so many stars, this obscure work, made in 1975 for the BBC, gains increased and deserved interest.
The ironic and critical tone of British imperial high society, so Monty Python-like, dominates. But there is also the flavor of travel chronicles, of which Palin would be an excellent maker, through the series he made for the BBC, in which he traveled almost the entire world.
It is not a humor film, in the strictest sense, it is an ironic, critical, fun and elegant chronicle of an era, a culture, a civilization, decadent but brilliant.
A pleasant surprise.
Tom Stoppard wrote the screenplay for this TV movie. In his own words, he had no idea of which bits were supposed to be funny. The result is an engaging idyll under the direction of Stephen Frears about the happy vagueness of younger sons of the middle class, intermingled with lovely shots of the upper Thames and various monuments to obscure people.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesTom Stoppard had never read Jerome K. Jerome's famous novel when he was asked to adapt it for this television movie. He claimed that this was actually a help, as "I didn't know which bits were supposed to be funny."
- Citations
Jerome: Maidenhead itself is too snobby to be pleasant. It is the haunt of the river swell and his overdressed female companion. It is the town of showy hotels, patronised chiefly by dudes and ballet girls. It is the witch's kitchen from which go forth those demons of the river-steam-launches.
- ConnexionsEdited into Diminishing Returns: Beavis and Butt-Head Do America (2017)