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IMDbPro

Lucky Jim

  • 1957
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 35min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,9/10
796
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Ian Carmichael in Lucky Jim (1957)
Comedy

Jim Dixon si sente tutt'altro che fortunato. All'università deve eseguire gli ordini del distratto e noioso professor Welch per avere qualche speranza di mantenere il suo lavoro.Jim Dixon si sente tutt'altro che fortunato. All'università deve eseguire gli ordini del distratto e noioso professor Welch per avere qualche speranza di mantenere il suo lavoro.Jim Dixon si sente tutt'altro che fortunato. All'università deve eseguire gli ordini del distratto e noioso professor Welch per avere qualche speranza di mantenere il suo lavoro.

  • Regia
    • John Boulting
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Kingsley Amis
    • Patrick Campbell
    • Jeffrey Dell
  • Star
    • John Welsh
    • Ronald Cardew
    • Hugh Griffith
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,9/10
    796
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • John Boulting
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Kingsley Amis
      • Patrick Campbell
      • Jeffrey Dell
    • Star
      • John Welsh
      • Ronald Cardew
      • Hugh Griffith
    • 26Recensioni degli utenti
    • 4Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto12

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    Interpreti principali43

    Modifica
    John Welsh
    John Welsh
    • The Principal
    • (as John Welch)
    Ronald Cardew
    • Registrar
    Hugh Griffith
    Hugh Griffith
    • Professor Welch
    Kenneth Griffith
    Kenneth Griffith
    • Cyril Johns
    Ian Carmichael
    Ian Carmichael
    • Jim Dixon
    Jeremy Hawk
    Jeremy Hawk
    • Bill Atkinson
    Penny Morrell
    • Miss Wilson
    John Cairney
    John Cairney
    • Roberts
    Maureen Connell
    Maureen Connell
    • Margaret Peel
    Reginald Beckwith
    Reginald Beckwith
    • University Porter
    Jean Anderson
    Jean Anderson
    • Mrs. Welch
    Ian Wilson
    Ian Wilson
    • Glee Singer
    Sharon Acker
    Sharon Acker
    • Christine Callaghan
    Terry-Thomas
    Terry-Thomas
    • Bertrand Welch
    Clive Morton
    Clive Morton
    • Sir Hector Gore-Urquhart
    Charles Lamb
    • Contractor
    Henry B. Longhurst
    • Professor Hutchinson
    • (as Henry Longhurst)
    Jeremy Longhurst
    • Waiter
    • Regia
      • John Boulting
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Kingsley Amis
      • Patrick Campbell
      • Jeffrey Dell
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti26

    5,9796
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    5Prismark10

    Lucky education

    Kingsley Amis might not had liked the adaptation of his novel set in a redbrick university in 1950s Britain when university education started to expand and took on some working class students. The Boulting brothers film comes across a little too much of an Ealing comedy for my liking with slapstick and loses the novel's edge.

    Ian Carmichael is the northern grammar school boy made good but looking for a permanent teaching job at the university. To do this he has to toady to Professor Welch and his family and every task he is entrusted to do ends in disaster sometimes due to Jim's shortcomings.

    As a lecturer Jim is passionate with a leftist slant on history in contrast with Professor Welch dull and old fashioned musings which we see when Jim has to deliver Welch's lecture.

    In between we have Jim getting into escapades with Terry Thomas and his Canadian girlfriend and a slapstick scene involving a parade with flowers on the quadrant of the university.

    However whilst Carmichael is spirited as Jim he looks too old, even worse Terry Thomas looks too old as the son of the Professor Welch.

    The film is episodic and although starts promisingly enough it tries too hard to be an Ealing style comedy rather than a satirical adaptation. The redbrick university never convinces maybe I have seen too many of these places that were built in the 1960s.
    Oct

    The dull thud of pulled punches

    Kingsley Amis's first and best novel drew much satirical thrust from its evocation of the late 1940s, when British idealism about the socialist government elected in the first flush of World War Two victory was petering out. The ex-communist university lecturer Amis's ambiguity about putting The People in charge- later expressed in a vehement rejection of educational egalitarianism- is already implicit in this campus chronicle.

    The Boulting Brothers, themselves on the left, worked "Lucky Jim" into the mildly satirical cycle of movies which made them the main successors to Ealing in the 1950s and early 1960s. But by updating it to the present and filling it with their rep company of character actors, they lost the plot.

    Written by the newspaper humorist Patrick Campbell, this picturisation skates over the hypocrisy of Professor Welch and his clan as moneyed leftists-- an early depiction of limousine liberalism-- and concentrates on slapstick. Ian Carmichael, whose northern accent comes and goes, is too posh to play a grammar school lad who has blundered into the wrong profession. Terry-Thomas is too old and too T-T ("extra-ordinary fellah!") for Bertrand Welch, the spoilt son-- and why make him a novelist rather than a painter, when visual fun could have been had with his awful daubs to make up for the absence of Amis's authorial voice?

    Most of the novel's heft comes from the gap between Jim Dixon's forced toadying and his secret derision, expressed in making faces and fantasising elaborate practical jokes. Little of this can get through in a script which majors on pratfalls and all-too-Britishly endorses Jim as the good guy by having the Welch's dog adopt him. And the provincial campus is too grand for the era of austerity and demobbed students Amis imagined, as though the Boultings secretly hankered to relocate the tale to Oxbridge.

    All that said, there are incidental pleasures. Hugh Griffiths is spot-on as "Neddy" Welch, as is his namesake Kenneth as the creepy Evan Johns. Unexpectedly, given the initial compromises, the denouement (which was slapstick in the book too) gets closer to Amis's acrid eloquence, although drunks on screen become tiresome faster than directors realise. Interestingly in view of Amis's later problems with American publishers, the Boultings tone down the novel's misogyny. Margaret Peel is less neurotic, predatory and manipulative in the film. Jim's love object Christine, alas, is a tittering cipher on both page and screen. The British cinema wasn't doing sex in the Fifties unless it was "exposing" tarts in Soho.
    8davidvickery0698

    Hilarious satire, notably sharp-edged for its time

    This is an outstanding movie whose meticulously-crafted set pieces frequently had me in stitches. Superbly cast, Ian Carmichael, Hugh Griffiths and Terry-Thomas were in exceptional form, and the luminous beauty of Sharon Acker lights up the film. If you don't find this funny, charming and uplifting, all I can say is that I feel sorry for you!

    The pompous, stiff and class-deferential era of the 1950s is marvellously evoked in this movie. Always the sign of a classic, even the minor characters - Mrs Welch, the taxi driver, the waiter and the university porter, for instance - all hold their own and come across as real people. The appalling persona of Bertrand Welch (Terry-Thomas) with his self-obsessed sense of his own importance is excellently drawn. One to see and quite possibly one to keep.
    6JamesHitchcock

    Your job's a joke, you're broke, your love life's D. O.A.

    Jim Dixon is a junior lecturer at an unnamed provincial university. Kingsley Amis, who wrote the novel on which this film is based, took his title from a song- "Oh, lucky Jim, How I envy him..." (We hear this song a couple of times during the film). As the story opens, however, Jim does not seem to be particularly lucky or enviable. Indeed, his life can be summed up in the words of the theme-song from "Friends":-

    "Your job's a joke, you're broke, your love life's D. O. A."

    He hates his job and his boss, Professor Welch. He is perpetually short of cash and forced to live in a seedy lodging-house. His relationship with his possessive, needy girlfriend Margaret appears to be going nowhere and, while he has set his cap at an attractive blonde named Christine, that relationship also appears to be doomed as she is the girlfriend of Welch's novelist son Bertrand.

    The novel has long been a favourite of mine, but I have never had the same affection for the film version, largely because the film-makers never manage to find an equivalent for Amis's bitingly satirical authorial voice. Scenes which are brilliantly funny in the book, such as Professor Welch's disastrous musical weekend, in the course of which Jim manages to set fire to his bed, or the one in which Jim delivers a lecture while drunk, never come to life in the same way on the screen. The scriptwriters also include some episodes of slapstick humour not found in the book, such as Jim's attempt to organise the floral decorations at an academic ceremony or the chase scene at the end, but these are no substitute for Amis's savage wit.

    Ian Carmichael was later to gain a reputation for playing upper-class characters such as Bertie Wooster or the aristocratic detective Lord Peter Wimsey, but in 1957 these productions still lay in the future. Even so he still seems a bit too posh for Jim, who is supposed to be a working-class Northerner, as well as a bit too old at 37. This means that the question of social class, an important theme in the novel, is rather avoided in the film. Contrary to what one reviewer writes, Amis, who in 1954 still considered himself to be on the Left, was not using "Lucky Jim" to satirise well-heeled bourgeois Leftists. (Later, when he had moved sharply to the Right, he was to lay into radical-chic champagne socialists with gusto in novels like "Girl, 20" from 1971). Professor Welch, with his romantic fantasies of some pre-modern pre-industrial "Merrie England", is a nostalgia-obsessed cultural conservative, and Bertrand probably a political one.

    The Jim of the novel is in many ways a flawed character. For one who hopes to make a living by teaching history, he displays a surprising lack of enthusiasm for his subject. He drinks too much, often treats Margaret badly and can be rude and tactless. He devotes a lot of energy to pursuing feuds against those who annoy him and can be oddly childish. The character in the film is very much watered down in an attempt to make him more likeable; this attempt succeeds to some extent, but at the cost of also making him less interesting.

    Maureen Connell's Margaret is less neurotic, hysterical and manipulative here than she is in the book, and as a result becomes completely forgettable. Sharon Acker's Christine is almost equally so. (Christine was English in the book but here becomes Canadian, possibly in order to make the film more marketable in North America). Those characters in the film who do stand out tend to be those who are played in the same way as they are in the novel, notably Hugh Griffith's absent-minded, evasive, pedantic and pretentious Professor Welch and Terry-Thomas's pompous, self-important, snobbish and bullying Bertrand. (Like Carmichael, however, Terry-Thomas at 46 was really too old. He was actually a year older than Griffith who plays his father).

    The film is not altogether a bad one and can provide a few amusing moments. When one considers how good its source novel is, however, it really should have been a lot better. 6/10.
    david-697

    Flawed but fun.

    Fans of Kingsley Amis's brilliant novel might with justification hate this adaptation, but taken on its own terms, it is an enjoyable slice of 'fifties British comedy. While the novel's bite may have been lost, the movie's troubled production history (a few weeks into the filming, the original director, Ealing's Charles Crichton, was replaced) fails to show on the finished film.

    Ian Charmichael is at his best in this movie. The combination of a (realistic) Northern accent, plus a slightly harder edged characterisation, helps distance him from his usual 'silly ass' image. Perhaps he isn't the Dixon of the book, but it is a fair attempt. A first rate cast adds to the fun, in particular a small but perfectly formed cameo by Terry-Thomas steals the movie.

    The final chase is, as been noted, the movie's weakest link (it seems to come out of nowhere and does not fit in with the rest of the film) and is it fair from being the best Amiss adaptation (that honour belongs to the wonderful 'Only Two Can Play'). But despite these flaws, it remains a watch able enough movie.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      At 46 Terry-Thomas was a year older than Hugh Griffith, who played his father. Jean Anderson, playing his mother, was only 4 years older than Thomas.
    • Blooper
      The taxi used by Jim and Christine when leaving the ball has 'Taxi' on a paper sign in the windscreen which is not there in long shot.
    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Opening credits prologue: A Redbrick University in Britain's new Elizabethan age: here are moulded the intellectual Drakes and Raleighs of tomorrow - fearless, independent - and state supported
    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Metropolitan Police: Lucky Jim (1999)
    • Colonne sonore
      Lucky Jim
      and the voice of Al Fernhead singing

      by Fred V. Bowers and Charles Horwitz

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 17 settembre 1957 (Regno Unito)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Volltreffer ins Glück
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • The Royal Masonic School, Bushey, Hertfordshire, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(red-brick university where Jim works)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Charter Film Productions
      • Boulting Brothers
      • British Lion Films
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 35 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White

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