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IMDbPro

Orders Are Orders

  • 1954
  • 1 h 18 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
4,8/10
308
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Peter Sellers, Margot Grahame, and Brian Reece in Orders Are Orders (1954)
Comedy

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn American movie company wants to shoot a science-fiction film using a British army barracks as a location, and its soldiers as actors.An American movie company wants to shoot a science-fiction film using a British army barracks as a location, and its soldiers as actors.An American movie company wants to shoot a science-fiction film using a British army barracks as a location, and its soldiers as actors.

  • Direção
    • David Paltenghi
  • Roteiristas
    • Ian Hay
    • Anthony Armstrong
    • Donald Taylor
  • Artistas
    • Brian Reece
    • Margot Grahame
    • Raymond Huntley
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    4,8/10
    308
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • David Paltenghi
    • Roteiristas
      • Ian Hay
      • Anthony Armstrong
      • Donald Taylor
    • Artistas
      • Brian Reece
      • Margot Grahame
      • Raymond Huntley
    • 14Avaliações de usuários
    • 1Avaliação da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos1

    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal37

    Editar
    Brian Reece
    Brian Reece
    • Captain Harper
    Margot Grahame
    Margot Grahame
    • Wanda Sinclair
    Raymond Huntley
    Raymond Huntley
    • Colonel Bellamy
    Sidney James
    Sidney James
    • Ed Waggermeyer
    Tony Hancock
    Tony Hancock
    • Lt. Wilfred Cartroad
    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Private Goffin
    June Thorburn
    June Thorburn
    • Veronica Bellamy
    Peter Martyn
    • Lt. Broke
    Maureen Swanson
    Maureen Swanson
    • Joanne Delamere
    Clive Morton
    Clive Morton
    • Lt. General Sir Cuthbert Grahame Foxe
    Bill Fraser
    • Private Slee
    Edward Lexy
    Edward Lexy
    • Capt. Ledger
    Michael Trubshawe
    Michael Trubshawe
    • A.D.C.
    Maureen Pryor
    • Miss Marigold
    Barry MacKay
    Barry MacKay
    • R.S.M. Benson
    • (as Barry McKay)
    Mark Baker
    • Scriptwriter
    Donald Hewlett
    Donald Hewlett
    • Lincoln Green
    Reginald Hearne
    • Sgt. Spurway
    • Direção
      • David Paltenghi
    • Roteiristas
      • Ian Hay
      • Anthony Armstrong
      • Donald Taylor
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários14

    4,8308
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    4richardchatten

    Devil Dogs at Beaconsfield

    Incredibly enough this was the second film version of an ancient army farce 'satirising' the film business. It's one of those rare films with an Introducing credit that actually counts for something, since it's Tony Hancock who's being introduced; and he gets the final close up. However, it was not an auspicious film debut since when he took his wife to see it at the Astoria in Charing Cross Road and asked if he'd be able to get in, was told "Get in? You can have the whole circle if you want it"! Hancock's future TV co-star 'Sidney' (as he was then billed) James playing yet another of the Americans he was then typecast as himself dismissed it as "a bit of a stinker".

    It's more interesting to watch now than it was at the time since in addition to Hancock & James so many of the cast later made their mark on TV, including Bill Fraser, Gerald Campion and Eric Sykes (whose only screen credit is for additional dialogue). Maureen Pryor is memorably laconic as the gum-chewing continuity girl in trousers; and even Donald Pleasance puts in a fleeting appearance.

    And of course there's a plump young Peter Sellers who a dozen years later reprised this film's plot for 'After the Fox' as well as guesting in Hancock's final completed film, 'The Wrong Box'.
    2JoeytheBrit

    Orders are Orders review

    Awful low-budget comedy in which a British army camp (manned apparently by only half-a-dozen soldiers) is overrun by American movie producer Sid James (!) and his crew. Laughs are non-existent despite featuring the likes of Peter Sellers, Tony Hancock and Bill Fraser. A young Donald Pleasance also makes a brief appearance.
    5jonasskjoett

    Military Comedy with a Thin Storyline

    Military men marching pridefully and gloriously in the the morning sun, with delightful music played by the military orchestra, just getting ready to another hard working day at the army barracks, or are they? In the setting of the rising sun there is a big line of cars and trucks heading for the barracks, what are they doing here and who are they? The question is solved fast, and to the military mens big surprise its a film production company, who has planned to make a "big blockbuster" science fiction movie at the army barracks, but one commanding officer is distend to make it very difficult for the Hollywood film crew... and for then on, the movie just shows a cheap slice of comedy and a little bit of romance, and thats about it.

    What we do get out of this comedy is a thin storyline, and some decent funny characters, but not memorable. The funniest character is Peter Sellers, and he is probably the only one you will remember the most, when you have sat through this movie.

    One thing that was a little bit funny, was the movie they were filming in the movie, its funny because it looks like a Ed Wood production, very unimagined and just cheap. There is not one time where you believe its a making of a expensive science fiction movie, and just looking at the film crew playing "big time Hollywood stars" is so laughable... and by the way I have never seen a badder costume design for a Martian in a movie, since 'Ghidrah, the Three-Headed Monster' 1964, and that is pretty bad!

    See it if you are in a good laughing mood, if your sad its just sad to look at.
    6trimmerb1234

    Peter Sellers in his first* feature film "and introducing Tony Handcock"

    This a fairly unremarkable film from the era except for the presence of the two (later) major stars - but well worth seeing for the jewel of a performance from Sellers. Both went on to make their names in comedy but this meeting on film was to be the one and only. Did each or either sense that the other was a potential rival? Their parts here are completely without interaction. Thereafter their paths diverged, Sellers became a bigger and bigger name in cinema and Hancock instead found success on television. Very interesting to compare and contrast the two performers and performances.

    Both had had success on radio playing a wide range of characters (voices). Sellers though excelled as comic character actor of chameleon like abilities as can be seen here but was never a comedian with his own comic personna. Hancock however was more comedian than character actor other than briefly burlesqueing a range of (much) earlier British film star performers. With the aid of comedy writers Alan Simpson and Ray Galton Hancock did go on to establish a comic personna - not apparently too far away from his real self - but in time became uncomfortable surrounded by a regular cast and finally - but most memorably and successfully - became the sole star of his show. The demons however did not stop, he became dissatisfied with the character and format but was tragically unable to find a successor. Hancock was an acknowledged genius but with an elusive ill-definable talent. Here he looks uncomfortable and uncertain unsupported by a hit and miss script. He was never to find his feet in films, perhaps the validation of a live audience had been essential to calm his insecurities.

    In contrast Seller's performance was as complete and brilliant as it ever was, unsurprisingly he became a film star in his own right within a few short years. Few could have failed to notice his talent here as half of a crafty fiddling duo of barrack orderlies (the other half the excellent comic character actor Bill Fraser). Their short scene together about 50 minutes in, with Brian Reece as the amorous Captain, is a jewel and as complete, self-assured and accomplished as anything Sellers subsequently did for Ealing, with this part of the script at least fitting like a glove.

    Some reviewers scoff at the threadbare nature of the supposedly big American Sci-Fi feature shot at the barracks but this is to misunderstand almost everything. Clearly the fictional production was a very very budget affair, actual manned space flight was then still 3 years away. And Britain itself in 1954 was threadbare - rationing had only finished 2 years earlier and the film markets and actual budgets were around 10% of their American equivalents. That being said, the biggest grandest pre-war science fiction film of all "The Shape of Things to Come", was British, born apparently of a highly advantageous tax arrangement. Again, oddly, American budget sci-fi and pot-boiler feature films of this era were very adept at looking far grander than their actual budgets.

    For fans, watch this film to see the earliest appearance of the mega-star Sellers was to become. Either sit through or skip through the mainly "chaotic and shouty" parts another reviewer nicely describes.

    *Sellers had made 3 earlier films, zany unsuccessful very low budget affairs with his then {radio) "Goonshow" comrades, remembered now more for their names than the merits of the films.
    5boblipton

    True Enough

    Maybe Orders are orders, but service comedies are about disorder. An American film company invades a a British army base to make a Martian-Invasion movie, and proceeds to flimflam the people in charge to get their own way. It's a bit odd to hear Sid James essay a Brooklyn accent as the sleazy producer-director, but he's also got Margot Grahame as his star in a constantly changing role, as Colonel Raymond Huntley's wife,, and gum-chewing Britons of both sexes and scanty costumes abounding. With a rat in the barracks, Tony Hancock trying to practice a military band for a coming competition, Peter Sellers trying to make a few bob on the deal and a general coming to inspect the base, it's extremely frantic and even occasionally funny.

    It's clearly a movie made for the British market, and how they landed Miss Grahame for this role is a bit of a mystery to me. It was her last regular film role. Three years later, she would take a part in Preminger's ambitious but ill-fated SAINT JOAN. She had been Britain's highest paid film actress in the 1930s, England's answer to Jean Harlow. Perhaps she had simply had enough and wanted to retire. She died in 1982 at age 80.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Eric Sykes' first feature.
    • Erros de gravação
      Whilst the production company loads their lorry near the end, the shot is flipped, as evidenced by the letters and numbers on the index plate (number plate).
    • Citações

      Colonel Bellamy: I hope he wasn't offensive, sir?

      Lt. General Sir Cuthbert Grahame Foxe: On the contrary, he was most affectionate. He put his arms round me, gave me a cigar and called me 'buddy'.

    • Conexões
      Remake of Orders Is Orders (1933)

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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 8 de maio de 1955 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origem
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Locações de filme
      • Beaconsfield Film Studios, Station Road, Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(studio: made at Beaconsfield Studios, England)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 18 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Peter Sellers, Margot Grahame, and Brian Reece in Orders Are Orders (1954)
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    By what name was Orders Are Orders (1954) officially released in Canada in English?
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