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IMDbPro

Après moi le déluge

Original title: I'm All Right Jack
  • 1959
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
Richard Attenborough, Peter Sellers, Ian Carmichael, and Dennis Price in Après moi le déluge (1959)
A naive aristocrat in search of a career becomes caught up in the struggles between his profit-minded uncle and an aggressive labor union.
Play trailer3:04
1 Video
35 Photos
SatireComedy

A naive, dimwitted young man of aristocratic background in search of a career becomes caught up in the struggles between his profit-minded uncle and an aggressive labor union.A naive, dimwitted young man of aristocratic background in search of a career becomes caught up in the struggles between his profit-minded uncle and an aggressive labor union.A naive, dimwitted young man of aristocratic background in search of a career becomes caught up in the struggles between his profit-minded uncle and an aggressive labor union.

  • Director
    • John Boulting
  • Writers
    • Alan Hackney
    • Frank Harvey
    • John Boulting
  • Stars
    • Ian Carmichael
    • Terry-Thomas
    • Peter Sellers
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Boulting
    • Writers
      • Alan Hackney
      • Frank Harvey
      • John Boulting
    • Stars
      • Ian Carmichael
      • Terry-Thomas
      • Peter Sellers
    • 54User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 BAFTA Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 3:04
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    Photos35

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Ian Carmichael
    Ian Carmichael
    • Stanley Windrush
    Terry-Thomas
    Terry-Thomas
    • Maj. Hitchcock
    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Fred Kite…
    Richard Attenborough
    Richard Attenborough
    • Sidney De Vere Cox
    Dennis Price
    Dennis Price
    • Bertram Tracepurcel
    • (as Denis Price)
    Margaret Rutherford
    Margaret Rutherford
    • Aunt Dolly
    Irene Handl
    Irene Handl
    • Mrs. Kite
    Liz Fraser
    Liz Fraser
    • Cynthia Kite
    Miles Malleson
    Miles Malleson
    • Windrush Snr.
    Marne Maitland
    Marne Maitland
    • Mr. Mohammed
    John Le Mesurier
    John Le Mesurier
    • Waters
    Raymond Huntley
    Raymond Huntley
    • Magistrate
    Victor Maddern
    Victor Maddern
    • Knowles
    Kenneth Griffith
    Kenneth Griffith
    • Dai
    Fred Griffiths
    • Charlie
    Donal Donnelly
    Donal Donnelly
    • Perce Carter
    John Comer
    John Comer
    • Shop Steward
    Sam Kydd
    Sam Kydd
    • Shop Steward
    • Director
      • John Boulting
    • Writers
      • Alan Hackney
      • Frank Harvey
      • John Boulting
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews54

    7.14.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8planktonrules

    Silly but insightful

    If it hadn't been for the fact that a similar (though less cynical) film had been made just a few years earlier (THE MAN IN THE WHITE SUIT), I might have scored this parody a bit higher. Despite obviously being a comedy, the film is an amazingly insightful attack on the floundering state of British labor following the Second World War. While Britain used to be the most productive country on the planet, during this era they were torn apart by strikes and work slowdowns. Yet the film doesn't just attack labor unions with their unreasonable demands and poor work ethic. It also attacks factory owners who actually exploit this to their own interests. This film is obviously a loud declaration that the British Empire is in fact dead.

    The film begins with an upper class twit named 'Windrush' going to work for the first time. However, he really isn't cut out for management despite his Oxford education--and he seems better suited to manual labor. The problem is that after failing again and again in management, he is simply too good as a blue collar worker. This is because he works way too hard and makes all his extremely lazy co-workers look bad! And, when management documents how much work one motivated man CAN do, this ultimately results in a strike, as management wants the workers output to increase--or at least that's what they claimed. All this set in motion by a slow-witted but very decent upper class gent working as a forklift driver!!

    The film is very well written and clever. While younger audience members might not appreciate the film's insights, it is funny in a droll sort of way. Additionally, having wonderful actors such as Peter Sellers and Terry-Thomas sure didn't hurt! Overall, sharp social and political satire that does a great job of attacking labor and management and giving insights into the decline of the British economy.
    9hitchcockthelegend

    Near masterpiece from the brilliant Boulting brothers.

    I'm All Right Jack is directed and produced by John and Roy Boulting from a script by Frank Harvey, John Boulting and Alan Hackney. It's based on the novel Private Life by Hackney and is a sequel to the Boulting's 1956 film Private's Progress. Returning from the first film are Ian Carmichael, Dennis Price, Richard Attenborough, Terry-Thomas, Victor Madden & Miles Malleson. While Peter Sellers (BAFTA for Best Actor) and a ream of British comedy actors of the time make up the rest of the cast.

    Looking to force a crooked deal, Bertram Tracepurcel (Price) and his cohort Sydney de Vere Cox (Attenborough) convince Major Hitchcock (Thomas), the personnel manager at the local missile factory, to hire Tracepurcel's nephew, Stanley Windrush (Carmichael), knowing full well that his earnest and wet behind the ears approach to work will cause fractions within the work force. Then it's expected that Bolshoi shop steward Fred Kite (Sellers) will call a strike that will see the crooked plan to fruition.

    Between 1956 and 1963 the Boulting brothers produced a number of satirical movies, I'm All Right Jack is arguably the finest of the bunch. Given that it's now admittedly a dated time capsule, for some of the dialogue would simply be shot down in this day and age, one has to judge and value it for the time it was made. The first and most striking thing about the film is that nobody escapes the firing line, this is not merely a device to kick the trade unions with {and a kicking they do get}, but also the government, the media, big industries and the good old chestnut of the old school brigade. All are in the sights of the Boulting's and the team. The overriding message being that all of them are out for themselves, self-interest and feathering of ones nest is the order of the times.

    Also winning a BAFTA was the screenplay, with that you still need the cast to do do it justice. Ian Carmichael was an undervalued performer in that he was an unselfish actor feeding set ups to his costars. That is never more evident than it is here where the likes of Margaret Rutherford, Irene Handl, John Le Mesurier, Liz Fraser & Victor Madden benefit greatly playing off of Carmichael's toff twit twittering. But it's Sellers movie all the way. Which considering he didn't want to do the movie originally, saying he couldn't see the role of Kite being funny, makes his turn all the more special. Studying for weeks labour leaders and politico types, Sellers, with suit too tight, cropped hair and a Hitler moustache, nails the pompous militancy of the shop steward leader. It doesn't stop there, couple it with the contrast of Kite's home life, where the Boulting's are slyly digging away at facades, and you get a two side of the coin performance that's a joy from start to finish.

    Very much like Ealing's sharp 51 piece, The Man In The White Suit, this is cynical, but classy, British cinema across the board. Throwing punches and with cheek unbound, I'm All Right Jack has razor sharp teeth from which to take a bite of the comedy pie with. 9/10
    8slokes

    Bravest New World You Ever Did See

    Ah, progress. Never mind that tosh. "I'm All Right Jack" is a hilarious send up of the 20th century very much on point today, an anything-goes capitalist-meets-socialist system where workers and owners are equally victimized.

    Peter Sellers won the British Academy Award for Best British Actor for his performance as union leader Fred Kite, beating out a field that year which included Laurence Olivier, Laurence Harvey, Richard Burton, and Peter Finch. Ian Carmichael is the actual lead actor in "I'm All Right Jack", and Kite doesn't even show up until after the first 20 minutes, but Sellers makes Kite a compelling and comedic character worth remembering as a symbol of organized labor run amuk.

    A kind of sequel to "Private's Progress", also featuring Carmichael in the role of Stanley Windrush, "I'm All Right Jack" is a swinging social satire. Two factory owners (played by Dennis Price and Richard Attenborough) conspire to create a labor strike at a munitions factory to get a higher price. To do that, they need someone to create a bit of friction. Enter Windrush, a total innocent upper-class twit who only cares about earning his pay, no matter how much that offends Kite and other labor leaders.

    "We're living in the welfare state," says the middle manager Hitchcock (Terry-Thomas). "I call it the farewell state."

    "I'm All Right Jack" starts out very cheeky indeed, with a surprising eyeful of female nudity circa 1959 and cracks at religion and the military. Later, a stuttering character sees an array of photographers and asks: "Why don't you tell them to f-f-f-photograph something worthwhile."

    The only major problem with "I'm All Right Jack" is the slowness of the film right up until Windrush arrives at Missiles Ltd., after which the comedy becomes a kind of classless class comedy, where shrapnel flies thick and fast and no one is immune. Sellers' performance is brilliant, giving you a character who's likable even as he plays the antagonist. You can scorn his love of Stalinist Russia, which he boils down to cornfields and ballet, but you empathize with his fairness (not wanting to fire Windrush is his undoubted downfall) and his sensitivity for the feelings of Mrs. Kite (Irene Handl) and their daughter (Liz Fraser). He's just a bit extreme.

    "We cannot and do not accept the principle that incompetence justifies dismissal," Kite argues. "That is victimization."

    The real bad guys are the bosses guying the system, though John Boulting, who directed and co-wrote this with Alan Hackney and Frank Harvey, wants you to see the union abuses that make such a scam not only possible but desirable to the upper classes.

    Sellers also appears at the film's outset as "Sir John", a men's-club inhabitant who witnesses the end of World War II as an unpleasant upending of the old social order, before disappearing in the postwar wake. "A solid block in what seemed the edifice of an ordered and stable society," is his postscript.

    Contrast him with the very hip, 60s-sounding Al Saxon theme song that sticks its post-war, pre-Beatles attitude in your face as smartly as flipping the bird to Churchill (something else we get to see in the first few minutes), and you find yourself watching what had to be for 1959 a very mod film. It still stands up today as one of the best labor-management comedies, even if the British class system it addresses is no more.
    10mzinkin

    Review of "I'm all right Jack - 1959.

    For me, this is the best film of all time. A superb cast of the UK's finest character actors and an A1 script.

    Peter Sellers was truly magnificent as the left wing union shop steward and Terry Thomas excelled in playing the two faced Personnel Manager. Among his classic comments are "The Management have behaved like absolute stinkers" when talking to the union and " They are a complete shower" when talking to Management about the unions. Another fine comment is when on being told that some bigwigs are visiting the factory, Terry Thomas replies "You better spruce the place up a bit, you know soap in the toilets, that sort of thing".

    I must have seen this film at least 20 times and I never grow tired of it. Great story, fine comedy and great acting. Never has a film handled the issue of industrial relations in such an amusing and pertinent manner.
    9malcolmgsw

    Why cant they make films like this anymore

    I remember seeing this film at the ABC Golders Green when it first came out and it seemed pretty funny then.It was on Channel 4 recently and i just believe that this gets better with age.I just wonder why cant they make films like this anymore.Do we have to rely on TV and "Little Britain"to satirise modern Britain.There are just so many small as well as big laughs .It makes you think whether you saw that first time round.Everything about this film was so true about Britain at the time that it was made.I recall that the Boultings were involved with a dispute with trade unions over which they litigated and which i believe they lost.This was their way of getting revenge.Every character is perfectly cast from Sam Kydd and his memorable stutter to dear Margaret Rutherford who was at her comedic zenith in the cinema at that time.Of course Peter Sellers gives what must be one of the top 5 comedic performances in British cinema.His shop steward is just so perfect.Oh why don't they make films like this anymore?

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The machines in the Num Yum factory are a spoof on the Moloch scenes from Fritz Lang's film Metropolis.
    • Goofs
      While Stanley Windrush demonstrates his forklift driving skills for Mr. Waters, he says "Well, I'm shifting these generators from the stores to here, for loading up." He drives over a bump and the (presumed full) boxes bounce as though they were empty.
    • Quotes

      Fred Kite: We do not and cannot accept the principle that incompetence justifies dismissal. That is victimisation.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening quote: "Oh! Brave New World that hath such people in't" --William Shakespeare
    • Connections
      Edited into Heroes of Comedy: Terry-Thomas (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      I'm All Right Jack
      Written by Ken Hare

      Sung by Al Saxon

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 30, 1960 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • I'm All Right Jack
    • Filming locations
      • Flexello Factory, 268 Bath Road, Slough, UK(Stanley Windrush walks up to the factory entrance)
    • Production companies
      • Charter Film Productions
      • Boulting Brothers
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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