A milkman working for a small dairy business finds his job threatened by a giant conglomerate. Can he save his job, or will he be left crying over split milk?A milkman working for a small dairy business finds his job threatened by a giant conglomerate. Can he save his job, or will he be left crying over split milk?A milkman working for a small dairy business finds his job threatened by a giant conglomerate. Can he save his job, or will he be left crying over split milk?
- Onlooker
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This film is largely innocent and boisterous fun, slapstick and so forth. Even in its day it was hardly considered cutting edge, so it may be of limited appeal to folk who know not of Norman Wisdom and his earlier outings. This is the first Norman Wisdom film in colour and the last to feature regulars Wisdom, Chapman and Desmonde together.
Wisdom we expect to fall about, but others didn't have it easy either; Desmonde passed away two years after this film was made and was in his late fifties (and possibly in poor health) during shooting; he must have been game though; he variously gets sprayed with foam, falls out of a building, drenched with a fire hose, dragged by a runaway lawnmower and hangs from a tree, all whilst doing his trademark 'outraged patrician type' act. Good stuff. Supporting roles from John Le Mesurier, Richard Vernon, Frank Thornton, Peter Jeffrey, and Brian Pringle (as Machiavellian milkman Austin) are well done. Honourable mention goes to Nellie the horse too.
Some of the scenes in this film are quite memorable; the horse tranquilliser's effects on Pitkin and Grimsdale are a nod to the upcoming era of psychedelia.
Yes this is mostly hackneyed, old fashioned, and so forth, but that was really the point; open up a Norman Wisdom film and inside you will find mostly harmless fun, occasionally with a little pathos thrown in. This is a pretty fair example of a Norman Wisdom film; simply being in colour means it is more likely to get watched by some modern audiences.
Did you know
- TriviaThe last film of Jerry Desmonde.
- GoofsAt about 14 minutes and 53 seconds into as Pitkin is about to turn the corner of the house to deliver milk. The blue garden fence and drain pipe has no green leaves hanging from the side. Yet when Pitkin turns the corner now the set version. A hanging green plant can be seen on the corner of the fencing adjacent to the house.
- Quotes
Mr. Grimsdale: Besides, we're beaten, Pitkin. Consolidated's too big.
Norman Pitkin: Oh. You was at Dunkirk, weren't you, Mr Grimsdale? I wonder what would have happened if you'd given up then.
Mr. Grimsdale: You're right, Pitkin. We'll fight them, to the last half-pint of milk!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hyena (2014)
- How long is The Early Bird?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Early Bird
- Filming locations
- Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(studio: made at)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1