IMDb RATING
7.3/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
A young man finds a very special school. It teaches him how to take advantage of people. He begins to put the lessons into operation.A young man finds a very special school. It teaches him how to take advantage of people. He begins to put the lessons into operation.A young man finds a very special school. It teaches him how to take advantage of people. He begins to put the lessons into operation.
Monte Landis
- Fleetsnod
- (as Monty Landis)
Featured review
Don't hesitate: this jolly little movie is pretty much impeccable.
An excellent script, which never falters. And a BOFFO cast of British actors. The quintessential role for Terry-Thomas (tho' "Magnificent Men" is a close second).
But also fine turns from Alistair Sim, John Le Mesurier, Hugh Paddick, Peter Jones. Hattie Jacques does an hilarious voice-parody of Joan Greenwood. Janette Scott is VERY good in a thankless "skirt" role; what a charming personality.
Old car fans will love this. The sport-cars and the mocked-up vintage "Swiftmobile" are worth the price of admission alone. (Sadly, the production designer / props chaps are as yet uncredited at IMDb: perhaps the information is lost.) Very nice camera-setups. Amusingly cheesy sets. A really excellent score from John Addison that is up to Georges Auric's standard.
This has a very jolly, intimate ambiance: a sense of small scale. Feels rather like the b&w Tati movies.
Ahem. Unlike many British comedies, I can really see the attraction of remaking this: the material is so damned good that it could use another go-round, without necessarily insulting the original.
An excellent script, which never falters. And a BOFFO cast of British actors. The quintessential role for Terry-Thomas (tho' "Magnificent Men" is a close second).
But also fine turns from Alistair Sim, John Le Mesurier, Hugh Paddick, Peter Jones. Hattie Jacques does an hilarious voice-parody of Joan Greenwood. Janette Scott is VERY good in a thankless "skirt" role; what a charming personality.
Old car fans will love this. The sport-cars and the mocked-up vintage "Swiftmobile" are worth the price of admission alone. (Sadly, the production designer / props chaps are as yet uncredited at IMDb: perhaps the information is lost.) Very nice camera-setups. Amusingly cheesy sets. A really excellent score from John Addison that is up to Georges Auric's standard.
This has a very jolly, intimate ambiance: a sense of small scale. Feels rather like the b&w Tati movies.
Ahem. Unlike many British comedies, I can really see the attraction of remaking this: the material is so damned good that it could use another go-round, without necessarily insulting the original.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaA first screenplay was written by Peter Ustinov, who was also the first choice for Dennis Price's role as Dunstan Dorcester. He may have contributed to the script in collaboration with the credited Patricia Moyes, who had, at one time, been his secretary.
- GoofsAfter the restaurant meal, Delauney apologizes that he can't give them both a lift because he only has his two-seater, so he offers to take April home in his two-seater. Later, though, both men travel in the car to the second tennis match, apparently intending to collect April on the way.
- Quotes
Mr. Potter: Remember, gentlemen, and mark this well - he who is not not one up is always one down.
- ConnectionsEdited into Heroes of Comedy: Terry-Thomas (1995)
- How long is School for Scoundrels?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- School for Scoundrels or How to Win Without Actually Cheating
- Filming locations
- Thurlby Croft, Mulberry Close, Parson Street, Hendon, London, England, UK(Palfrey's apartment)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 37 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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