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Le cabotin

Original title: The Entertainer
  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
4K
YOUR RATING
Laurence Olivier and Shirley Anne Field in Le cabotin (1960)
Period DramaShowbiz DramaDrama

Archie Rice, an old-time British music hall performer sinking into final defeat, schemes to stay in show business.Archie Rice, an old-time British music hall performer sinking into final defeat, schemes to stay in show business.Archie Rice, an old-time British music hall performer sinking into final defeat, schemes to stay in show business.

  • Director
    • Tony Richardson
  • Writers
    • John Osborne
    • Nigel Kneale
  • Stars
    • Laurence Olivier
    • Brenda de Banzie
    • Roger Livesey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tony Richardson
    • Writers
      • John Osborne
      • Nigel Kneale
    • Stars
      • Laurence Olivier
      • Brenda de Banzie
      • Roger Livesey
    • 46User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Photos80

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Laurence Olivier
    Laurence Olivier
    • Archie Rice
    • (as Lawrence Olivier)
    Brenda de Banzie
    Brenda de Banzie
    • Phoebe Rice
    • (as Brenda De Banzie)
    Roger Livesey
    Roger Livesey
    • Billy Rice
    Joan Plowright
    Joan Plowright
    • Jean Rice
    Alan Bates
    Alan Bates
    • Frank Rice
    Daniel Massey
    Daniel Massey
    • Graham
    Albert Finney
    Albert Finney
    • Mick Rice
    Shirley Anne Field
    Shirley Anne Field
    • Tina Lapford
    • (as Shirley Ann Field)
    Thora Hird
    Thora Hird
    • Ada Lapford
    Miriam Karlin
    Miriam Karlin
    • Soubrette
    Geoffrey Toone
    Geoffrey Toone
    • Harold Hubbard
    MacDonald Hobley
    • McDonald Hobley
    • (as McDonald Hobley)
    Anthony Oliver
    • Interviewer
    Max Bacon
    • Charlie Klein
    George Doonan
    • Eddie Trimmer
    James Culliford
    • Cobber Carson
    Gilbert Davis
    • Brother Bill
    Charles Gray
    Charles Gray
    • Columnist
    • Director
      • Tony Richardson
    • Writers
      • John Osborne
      • Nigel Kneale
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    7.13.9K
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    Featured reviews

    ejpede

    Fascinating, a must-see.

    "The Entertainer" is a fascinating film based on the play by John Osborne ("Look Back in Anger"); Osborne co-wrote the screenplay.

    Olivier plays Archie Rice, a fading entertainer in a fading medium (music halls) in a fading empire (the Suez crisis of 1956 figures into the action).

    Archie's speech to his daughter (Joan Plowright), onstage in an empty theater, about being dead behind his eyes, is especially memorable.

    Along with other fine actors, Alan Bates and Albert Finney as his sons flesh out this film, which is a must-see for fans of any of these actors.
    7christopher-underwood

    the angry middle aged man

    Absorbing, involving, lightening and amusing but then this is adapted from a John Osborne play and even the cinematic opening up and the seeming insensitivity of director Tony Richardson cannot take that away. Instead of a tight and dark tale of a washed up entertainer against the background of a post war, washed up Britain embroiled in a hopeless Suez fiasco, the emphasis is more on family break-up and the last days of Music Hall. Lawrence Olivier is fantastic and Alan Bates excellent in his first film. Albert Finney is effective in an early role but Joan Plowright and Roger Liversey seem out of place in such a film. Opening up the film version, of course, means we get plenty of locations shots of Morecombe and Blackpool but is rather a shame that the full impact of the angry middle aged man and the farewell to old England gets a little lost along the way.
    10barefoot-gal

    An extraordinary film

    It is amazing to me how many critics and reviewers of this film seem to have missed the subtleties in this story, and in Archie's character. Far from living in a world of futile fantasies, I think, Archie's character is much more accurately expressed by the line "The only thing I know how to do is to keep on keeping on." All available options (Canada, failure, escape, or perhaps, suicide) being unthinkable, what choice has he but to chase another hopeless dream of somehow, finally, nailing a successful show? Perhaps I identify with Archie more strongly than many viewers, having myself been at the helm of a sinking ship (a business.)

    One unreasonably scathing critic (did he actually watch this film??) commented on Archie's daughter, Joan's, "blind love" for her father. I think it was not "blind love" at all, but a recognition of the (probably useless) courage Archie has to muster to continue to face each day -- a day likely to hold for him only more demoralizing failure and unceasing accusation and blame. And far from being totally selfish, as some commentators have written, Archie really seems to be the only person in the family able to look beyond the extremely small focus on their own interests: he is, in fact, the only person in the Rice tribe making a real effort, despite the pain, to find a path out of the mess to a place of security for them all.

    Perhaps we have forgotten how dependent families were in that era on the earnings of "the breadwinner," and yet, reviewers seem to have been just as blind as many wives and families of that time to what a man often had to give up in order to be that breadwinner, including, as in Archie's case, any fantasies of greatness or even, finally, his last shreds of self-esteem. Was Archie aware of his utter failure? Oh, I think absolutely so. This is why his admission to his daughter that he was "dead" behind his eyes. All the brightness of hope or illusions of personal excellence have been hammered out of him on the iron-cold anvil of real-world failure. Even so, he found it in him to dredge up the understanding and compassion to alleviate his wife, Phoebe's drunken crash into despair and hostility; and shore up his father's nostalgic dreams. Though, alas, the latter, too, led to yet another "unforgiveable" tragedy (-- or was it?.

    The most exquisite and poignant tragedy of it all is that maybe, just maybe, Archie might have pulled it off, but for the failure of his clueless family to understand him or the grim realities of his doomed profession. Forget metaphors of Imperial England, this tale has surely played itself out millions of times, whenever a new technology has made an old craft obsolete -- as when the printing press replaced scribes, or when electric lights eliminated the town's lamp lighter, or when automated projectors replaced skilled projectionists. Many of the movie's reviewers, in my opinion, are as blind to what is really going on here as is Archie's family. They assume that Archie's failures are the result of his negligence and selfishness, and that his dalliance with the beauty queen is a real romance (and threat to their security), when, in his eyes, it is just another, necessary, desperate and ultimately demeaning business deal. Joan alone, it seems, finally understands -- far too late to avert the inevitable end. Ultimately, every family member's myopic conception of Archie's reality leads them to take the reflexive steps that seal his doom.

    Shakespeare would have been completely a home with this tragic tale, and I think it was not such a great leap away from Hamlet for Olivier.

    The story is richly-detailed, unexpected and though-provoking. And Olivier is superb. A stunning performance from beginning to tragically inevitable end.
    9AlsExGal

    How could anyone be anything but enthralled by this?

    As an American, getting a peek at post-War Britain in decline, a look at Olivier as a most interesting character in the person of never-was vaudevillian Archie Rice, and a look at several British players (Joan Plowright, Anthony Bates, and Albert Finney) very early in their careers is priceless.

    Archie Rice is a despicable character, and the drama centers on his problems of having all of his financial issues - including some long overdue tax debt - come to a head just as he can finally get no more work as a vaudevillian even in the bad music halls. He has a way out - one of his relatives will pay off his debts if he'll accept his drunken wife's nephew's offer to run a motel in Canada. But like any Briton who can remember England's finer days he's just not about to cut and run, and even though I can despise the lying, the cheating on his used up wife, his odd ideas about parenting, and his willingness to use his own father, I can't help but admire his "pioneer spirit" to use an American term. He'd rather fail on his own terms than succeed on someone else's.

    Joan Plowright is the other lead, and she plays Archie's daughter, Jean. She shows some pioneer spirit herself. She shares some characteristics with dad - she's a painter who can't paint, Archie's a vaudevillian who can't entertain. Unlike dad, she owns up to her shortcomings and wants to make a contribution anyways by teaching art to poor slum kids. She has a way out of Britain just like dad does. Her fiancé has been offered a job opportunity in Africa, and he encourages her to leave her dead country behind, but she just isn't ready to give up on England or her family just yet. The two have a falling out and Jean goes to visit her dysfunctional family, in which she finds comfort.

    I just don't get people who say that they don't like this one because it's boring, depressing, ugly. Every minute of this film held my interest and stayed with me long after I'd watched it. I think you need to have lived awhile, to have had disappointments, and to have dealt with those disappointments in ways you may not be proud of to really appreciate this film.
    10nuntukamen

    some folks should just stick to Disney

    One of the best British films of the sixties, The Entertainer was written as an allegory of Britain's fall from grace by the leading fist-shaker of England's band of Angry Young Men who stormed the London stage with revolutionary new ideas and content, John Osborne. While Look Back In Anger is a more decorated play, this film adaption by Osborne and Nigel Kneale carried the flag of teeth-crunching kicks that the gang of young playwrights hoped to startle the daylights out of England with. Reading the other viewer comments, it is obvious most folks were looking for a Disney story with a Shakespearean performance by Lawrence Olivier. A happier ending? Great Britain forgot to supply one, Andy up there in the mountains somewhere, and the seedy digs were meant to be depressingly seedy, as was the dwindling talent of the family, and its reliance in the end on the grand old name and the grand old accomplishments of the past, as Archie Rice gave his best in replacing his revered father, Billy. Note his offkey performance in singing early on and then the eloquent on key final rendition of "Why Should I Care" as the final performance ends not with a curtain call, but with the hook, as the theater management (those other nations running the world today) angrily demand that Archie get off the stage because he is through, finished, washed up, fired, kaputsky, so long and goodbye. From the direction of Tony Richardson to the selection of grand old places along the sea that Britain once ruled with absolute certainty, everything and every moment of this film are topnotch. The aforementioned slandered scene with Roger Livesey as the Grandfather, Billy Rice, and Brenda de Banzie as Phoebe Rice, involving a misunderstanding over a piece of cake, is one of the most moving and depressingly realistic family arguments ever written. It may not be Olivier's greatest performance ever, but for certain it is the best one ever filmed. It also features the film debut of two actors who would establish themselves among the very best performers Great Britain has offered us, Alan Bates and Albert Finney, along with the introduction of Joan Plowright. As for the unkind comment about Olivier marrying Joan Plowright and this somehow having an ironic similarity to the theme of Archie and his young women; they married in 1961 and REMAINED together until Olivier's death in 1989, which is completely the opposite of the point made in the story. Well anyone is allowed to be in error, but this great film has to rank with our own country's Night of the Hunter as one of the most misunderstood films of all time. Don't miss it,ever, and MGM Vintage Classics has issued an excellent DVD edition.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      According to the April 21, 1958, edition of Time Magazine, as an addendum to its cover story on Sir Alec Guinness, in 1957, Sir Laurence Olivier turned down a Hollywood offer of two hundred fifty thousand dollars for one movie. Instead of making the movie and pocketing the cash, Olivier preferred to take on the role of Archie Rice in this movie (a role written specifically for him) at the Princely sum of forty-five pounds sterling per week.
    • Goofs
      When Jean is with her grandfather on the promenade; some of the background people in the crowd are either looking at the camera or reacting out of character to the film shooting of the principal actors.
    • Quotes

      Archie Rice: Look at these eyes. I'm dead - behind these eyes. I'm dead.

    • Connections
      Featured in V.I.P.-Schaukel: Episode #7.1 (1977)
    • Soundtracks
      Why Should I Care?
      (uncredited)

      Music by John Addison

      Lyrics by John Osborne

      Performed by Laurence Olivier

      Played occasionally in the score

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 2, 1960 (Denmark)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El cómico
    • Filming locations
      • Blackpool, Lancashire, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Woodfall Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £247,716 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 36 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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    Laurence Olivier and Shirley Anne Field in Le cabotin (1960)
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