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Jazz Boat (1960)

User reviews

Jazz Boat

9 reviews
6/10

All Aboard

This film was made on the cusp of a cultural revolution.Particularly in relation to music.At the time this film was made rock and roll was king.There were the mods and the rockers who would go down to Brighton and have a pitched battle.Ted Heath and his orchestra feature in the film.Dance bands which had held sway for over 30 years were fading away as we're the dance halls they played in.Much of the fashions shown and music heard in this film would very shortly disappear.The film is a crime drama with comedy and music.The Jazz boat of the title only appears in the last half hour of the film.Anthony Newley is rather good in the lead role and Bernie Winters is quite funny.Lionel Jefferies plays archetypal role but David Lodge is almost unrecognizable.
  • malcolmgsw
  • Jan 24, 2016
  • Permalink
5/10

And All That Jazz

Anthony Newley is a young electrician. He's an honest, beaten-down guy, except when he and his friends get on the Jazz Boat, an excursion liner for people who like to party. Then he and his pals like to talk a tough game. It's all for a laugh until Anne Aubrey walks onto the scene. She thinks he's a top safecracker, so she take him to see her boss, and he's caught in the middle of a nightmare.

It looks like a kitchen-sink sort of effort, with big-band numbers, Newley singing a ballad in character, shifting venues, Lionel Jeffreys in a straight turn as a violence-prone street cop, dance numbers that suggest WEST SIDE STORY, subplots that suggest film noir and AIP teenage-rebellion films .... and maybe that's the point: confusion. Newley wants more, but he doesn't know how to get it. He's a quiet nebbish, and his intended witticisms alway fall flat.

Maybe that was the intention, but the pace of the movie and the attention to the different points makes the forest invisible for the trees. It winds up being a scattergun effort, amusing, engaging perhaps, but never compelling.
  • boblipton
  • Mar 28, 2019
  • Permalink

..and then The Merseybeat arrived...

1960? Really? The plot, such as it was is a childish take on an Ealing Comedy and is basically a vehicle for Anthony Newley to hone his light comedy acting chops. It's a real time capsule. The "kids" all look about 25 and it's clear that the producers consider "jazz" something those crazy kids will groove to. Ted Heath's Band (England's answer to the American Big Bands of Glen Miller, Woody Herman, Tommy Dorsey and others)seems to be mostly decorative with Ted himself seen in several shots. Costuming is another eyeopener, the non-acting extras are basically in baggy jeans or corduroys, Aran sweaters (men)and twin sets paired with flared skirts with voluminous slips beneath (ladies) - very student style then - I suspect they were recruited from the many jazz clubs around London at the time. In contrast Newley and the bad guys chasing him wear sharp, tight fitting suits and Aubrey and Blair are in cocktail dresses (why?). David Lodge is almost unrecognizable with a full beard and glasses (at first I thought he was supposed to be a rabbi...). James Booth is an early incarnation of his stereotype Cockney villain and Bernie Winters is the comic foil as the traditional "sidekick" that in US films always went to Phil Silvers, sadly Winters lacks both the talent and charm of Silvers managing instead to irritate and bore in equal measure. The film has value as a peep into the world of popular music and youth fashion, the music and the clothes were what their PARENTS had liked. In less than two years the whole music and clothing world was thrown into turmoil with the arrival of The Beatles and all the beat groups that followed them. Swinging London was about to erupt and all the conventions that this film displays were swept away.
  • Zipper69
  • Nov 8, 2011
  • Permalink
10/10

Ah, the past

I remember this film with lots of love. Yet I never see it on TV. Is it lost forever? I gotta find me someone to love sang Tone on the shore of the Thames. Spider played by actor James Booth, (under rated?) Whom I associate with as a London lad and the ever lovable Bernie Winters.

There is a spiteful regress within British entertainment establishment that Tony Newley has never been fully appreciated. He hit the heights in Vagas, wrote some of the classic popular songs and had a long lived and loved life, yet always the depressed clown. Only John Ross has done anything for him in this last 20 years by a radio show on BBC2.

Last time I saw him, Newley, was at the Hackney Theatre, or was it Highbury, well, somewhere, and he was in great voice. 1990?

If anyone knows how I can get Jazz Boat on tape or DVD please write.
  • jcba17406@blueyonder.co.uk
  • May 31, 2007
  • Permalink

Thoroughly enjoyable comedy-thriller

I was very young when I saw this film, but remember laughing most of the time, on the edge of my seat the rest. I really cared what happened to the main character (Newley) - Spider certainly terrified me! James Booth a very under-rated actor. Lionel Jefferies was his usual exasperated self, Bernie Winters the comic relief. Why don't we see this film on tv??? A very good example of British early-sixties light comedy.
  • mariannefrances
  • Feb 9, 2004
  • Permalink
9/10

Mr Newley was generally a giant amongst pigmies.......

  • ianlouisiana
  • Feb 28, 2018
  • Permalink

Light musical comedy.

Dated but extremely enjoyable light pop vehicle for Anthony Newley, who since "Idle On Parade" had become a big name not only in acting but in the pop charts too. Newley stars with his good friend Bernie Winters, pretending to be a big time crook to impress him. Bernie in turn tells "The Gang" who want "in" with Newley, who has nick named himself as "the Cat". Also stars Ted Heath and his music and the lovely Anne Aubrey, who's short cinematic career showed more promise than she was allowed to provide! Dance sequences choreographed by Lionel Blair (with sister Joyce in the cast too!) Sheer delight! Enjoy and wallow in nostalgia!
  • musical-2
  • Apr 17, 1999
  • Permalink
8/10

Spider's Web

Forty years ago Halliwell declared this bizarre retread of 'Brighton Rock' with songs "Very dated", but it now looks pretty cool again (particularly Diane Aubrey in her high-necked sweater and leather jeans).

We consider the late fifties & early sixties a more innocent era, yet when James Booth brandishes a razor at copper Lionel Jeffries, he responds with a broken bottle; and in 1960 this only carried an 'A' certificate!
  • richardchatten
  • Jan 19, 2020
  • Permalink
9/10

Beautiful Anne Aubrey Simply Oozed Sex Appeal as "The Doll"!!!

  • kidboots
  • Mar 18, 2012
  • Permalink

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