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The Bargee

  • 1964
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
578
YOUR RATING
The Bargee (1964)
Hemel Pike is a canal-barge Casanova, aided and abetted by his illiterate cousin Ronnie. Hemel has a girl in every town along his route, and each one is intent on marriage. He is finally caught when one of the girls, Christine, falls pregnant.
Play trailer2:55
2 Videos
35 Photos
Comedy

A lock-keeper entrusts his daughter with a canal Casanova, and she soon falls pregnant. He refuses to open his locks until the guilty party confesses.A lock-keeper entrusts his daughter with a canal Casanova, and she soon falls pregnant. He refuses to open his locks until the guilty party confesses.A lock-keeper entrusts his daughter with a canal Casanova, and she soon falls pregnant. He refuses to open his locks until the guilty party confesses.

  • Director
    • Duncan Wood
  • Writers
    • Ray Galton
    • Alan Simpson
  • Stars
    • Harry H. Corbett
    • Hugh Griffith
    • Eric Sykes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    578
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Duncan Wood
    • Writers
      • Ray Galton
      • Alan Simpson
    • Stars
      • Harry H. Corbett
      • Hugh Griffith
      • Eric Sykes
    • 16User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:55
    Trailer
    The Bargee: Opening
    Clip 1:36
    The Bargee: Opening
    The Bargee: Opening
    Clip 1:36
    The Bargee: Opening

    Photos35

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Harry H. Corbett
    Harry H. Corbett
    • Hemel Pike
    Hugh Griffith
    Hugh Griffith
    • Joe Turnbull
    Eric Sykes
    Eric Sykes
    • The Mariner
    Ronnie Barker
    Ronnie Barker
    • Ronnie
    Julia Foster
    Julia Foster
    • Christine Turnbull
    Miriam Karlin
    Miriam Karlin
    • Nellie Marsh
    Eric Barker
    Eric Barker
    • Parks - Foreman
    Derek Nimmo
    • Doctor Scott
    Norman Bird
    Norman Bird
    • Waterways Supervisor - Albert Williams
    Richard Briers
    Richard Briers
    • Tomkins
    Brian Wilde
    Brian Wilde
    • Policeman
    George A. Cooper
    George A. Cooper
    • Official In Office
    Grazina Frame
    • Girl In Office
    Jo Rowbottom
    • Cynthia
    • (as Jo Rowbotham)
    Edwin Apps
    Edwin Apps
    • George (Barman)
    Godfrey Winn
    • Self - Announcer
    • (voice)
    Chris Adcock
    • Bargee
    • (uncredited)
    Jim Beasley
    • Pub Patron
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Duncan Wood
    • Writers
      • Ray Galton
      • Alan Simpson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    6.2578
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    Featured reviews

    10ouzman-1

    Glad this was made?

    Yes. To answer the question.

    Why yes? Well it starred the wonderful acting of Harry H Corbett and Ron Barker yet - amazingly - this duo appear awkward and contrived whilst working together in this film. Harry on his own is pure screen gold.

    Probably thought at the time to be marketed as a ribald comedy - it isn't. Nellie chasing a grown man with a knife down the Rickmansworth cut - followed by Eric Sykes taking snaps of the domestic- isn't very funny or laugh out loud. Dreadful. Eric Sykes playing a jolly naval Jack Tar barely amuses me but clearly had more talent in his naval than I will ever possess. Sad to see such a cameo by a great that could produce 'The Plank'.

    Harry H is amazing and died tragically, far too soon. Ronnie went on to work with another Corbett in the golden years of British comedy TV. Both pure talents of gold.

    The story line is as weak as the canal embankments found at the time - with the waterways on the point of extinction and about to go into decay and recession. Cuts to cuts were on the way in 60s Britain, transport water and railways destroyed by the bent bureaucrats. What a miserable sodding place England was in the swinging sixties! Perhaps the film reflects this POV, enlivened by the slap and tickle that ensured a more hopeful future Generation X. Galton and Simpson could always write well and pathos came naturally to these talented scriptwriters. So why not forgive the film lacking real joie de vivre that Genevieve and Titfield can provide? Watch it more than once and it will grow on you.

    Luckily this film has preserved a happy jaunt down memory lane and possibly helped to inspire enthusiasts wishing to keep open the 200 year old waterways of industrial England.

    The film would have to be on the shelf today of any self-respecting canal boats' DVD collection - alongside 'Genevieve' and 'The Titfield Thunderbolt'. It has none of the charm of those two fine films outside of the film's unique backdrop. But what a list of stars all great in their own way. Derek Nimmo, Hugh Griffith and the truly scrumptious Julie Foster. It is a remarkable film of a bygone yesteryear and those British stars - so moving. MaKEs US ALL wanna be on those boats once in your life, eh? I love it.
    7richard-meredith27

    The Bargee grows on you

    Yes, it is nostalgic. Yes, it is slow, but canal boats can only cruise at 4 m.p.h. so perhaps it matches the storyline. Anyway, who says film has to be frenetic all the time? Harry H. Corbett is superb. It's a shame he never received more recognition for his talents during his life time. The film also was an early chance for Ronnie Barker to shine as Hemel's dim witted cousin. But my favourite supporting players are Eric Sykes' canal enthusiast energetically freewheeling through his scenes. He turns what are little more than vignettes into perfect sketches. Jo Rowbottom appears as one of Hemel's squeezes. Her brief appearance is actually quite touching- Hemel treats her badly, and she knows it.

    If nothing else, Give it a try if you are a film buff! It's a 'spot the British character actor' film. Perfect rainy afternoon fare, except it has only been shown once on television in the last ten years.
    zzapper-2

    All the pace of a barge!!

    David Mayall correctly identifies the film as a useful bit of social history, with many outside shots of a lost way of life. This does sufficiently warn potential viewers that as a comedy it is as dull as ditchwater. Ronnie Barker is crushed by Harry Corbets character. This is the kind of product which almost killed the British Film Industry. Have people voted 10 for this film out of irony? (Confession I was unable to see the end of film). Did any one pay to see this at the time?
    david-697

    Highly under-rated.

    This is very much a star vehicle for Harry H. Corbett, fresh from the success of 'Steptoe And Son'. Indeed, the 'Steptoe' associations do not end there, as the presence of Ray Galton, Alan Simpson and Duncan Wood suggest.

    Like 'Steptoe', this movie is based around a traditional but dying industry (by the end of the film it has only 18 months), that of commercial narrow boat trading. The difference is that in 'Steptoe' the totting is very much a grim existence, but here it is a pretty much idyllic life and you can readily understand Hemel Pike's reluctance to give it up. The Technicolor helps provide a dream-like tone.

    Galton and Simpson's script is strong, mixing comedy and drama as Corbett's 'Casanova of the canals' succumbs to the charms of the winsome daughter of the fiery Hugh Griffith. There is an equally strong cast to match, notably Eric Sykes as an incompetent amateur mariner and Miriam Karlin as a vengeful woman who discovers that she is not the only woman in Corbett's life. In my eyes Ronnie Barker steals every scene he is in.

    This is possibly Corbett's best screen outing as star and is far better than its general reputation suggests. I first saw it around ten years ago and it failed to make an impression, re-watching it today, I fell in love with it.
    5Tony-Holmes

    Pleasant enough, gentle comedy with a hint of British social history

    Some rather odd reviews on here, though any new viewers will get the general gist of the film from them.

    Lothario bargee, girl in every 'port' (or at least all the calling points between London & Brum on the canals). That's Corbett, and his illiterate cousin Ronnie Barker, who'd go on to be one of the top-3 comedy actors here, due to Open All Hours, Porridge, and the 2 Ronnies, and that's just the main ones!

    To correct a few, Corbett WAS already Steptoe by the time this film happened, and I expect the director and backers wanted a script that played to those mannerisms, using Galton & Simpson (Steptoe creators -- as well as writing lots of other comedy material) was a good way to ensure it.

    Prismark writes an unusually poor review, this was NOT like a "bad Carry on film", that series was aimed at an entirely different crowd (or did I miss Sid James & Babs Windsor somewhere?!).

    Oh, and 'dimplet' (more like DIM-plet??) who is presumably American slagged off the film, but gave it 9 out of 10?!

    The film is just a gentle comedy, a distraction, playing to the strengths of a mass of British character and comedy actors. Brian Wilde and Ronnie Barker would go on to great success in Porridge, Miriam Karlin had been a comedy icon in 'Rag Trade'. Julia Foster may have got selected for the massive hit film Alfie as a result of her performance in this! Etc Etc.

    It adds in a poignant nod to the imminent demise of the canals as working transport for heavy loads, a respected trade in the UK for a couple of hundred years, and carrying with it the rise of the industrial age in the Victorian years.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The narrow-boats Banstead and Bellerophon which were used in the film were built in 1936 and are still in existence (2016). Bellerophon became a horse drawn trip-boat on the River Wey and was renamed Iona. In this guise it made an appearance in the British TV soap Coronation Street (1960). Banstead continued to work for British Waterways until 1969 when it was sold to private use and after a career as camping boat and tearoom, Banstead is now fully restored to working condition and can often be seen on the Grand Union canal where it remains a minor celebrity, as many locals still remember the filming of The Bargee (1964) with fond memories.
    • Goofs
      When planning the journey on the Grand Union Canal, the pair agree the first night at Rickmansworth, the second at Boxmoor and the third at Apsley. Geographically, Apsley is before Boxmoor and also the two places are only a mile apart, so would not both be overnight stopping points, even if in the correct order.
    • Quotes

      [Doctor Scott has just told Joe that his daughter is pregnant]

      Joe: She must have been drugged or something. She couldn't have done it by herself.

      Doctor Scott: No, quite.

      Joe: I'll kill him! So help me, I'll kill him! They way I've looked after her. I promised her mother I'd send her to grammar school. And now the first yob that comes along, this happens.

      Doctor Scott: [trying to be reassuring] Oh come now. It may not have been the *first* one.

    • Soundtracks
      In Party Mood
      (uncredited)

      Composed by Jack Strachey

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 1, 1964 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kanalens Casanova
    • Filming locations
      • Wolverton Aqueduct, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Associated British Picture Corporation (ABPC)
      • Galton-Simpson
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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