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IMDbPro

Carry on Henry

  • 1971
  • GP
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Carry on Henry (1971)
After having just wed Marie of Normandy, Henry VIII's eager to consummate their marriage. Unfortunately, she's always eating garlic, and refuses to stop. Deciding to get rid of her, Henry must find some way of doing it without provoking war with Marie's cousin, the King of France.
Play trailer2:40
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23 Photos
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Henry VIII marries Marie of Normandy but struggles with her garlic consumption. He seeks to annul the marriage without angering her cousin, the French king, by finding legal grounds for the ... Read allHenry VIII marries Marie of Normandy but struggles with her garlic consumption. He seeks to annul the marriage without angering her cousin, the French king, by finding legal grounds for the annulment to avoid political conflict.Henry VIII marries Marie of Normandy but struggles with her garlic consumption. He seeks to annul the marriage without angering her cousin, the French king, by finding legal grounds for the annulment to avoid political conflict.

  • Director
    • Gerald Thomas
  • Writer
    • Talbot Rothwell
  • Stars
    • Sidney James
    • Kenneth Williams
    • Charles Hawtrey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gerald Thomas
    • Writer
      • Talbot Rothwell
    • Stars
      • Sidney James
      • Kenneth Williams
      • Charles Hawtrey
    • 36User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 2:40
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    Photos23

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    Top cast63

    Edit
    Sidney James
    Sidney James
    • King Henry VIII
    Kenneth Williams
    Kenneth Williams
    • Thomas Cromwell
    Charles Hawtrey
    Charles Hawtrey
    • Sir Roger de Lodgerley
    Joan Sims
    Joan Sims
    • Queen Marie
    Terry Scott
    Terry Scott
    • Cardinal Wolsey
    Barbara Windsor
    Barbara Windsor
    • Bettina
    Kenneth Connor
    Kenneth Connor
    • Lord Hampton of Wick
    Julian Holloway
    Julian Holloway
    • Sir Thomas
    Peter Gilmore
    Peter Gilmore
    • King Francis of France
    Julian Orchard
    Julian Orchard
    • Duc de Poncenay
    Gertan Klauber
    Gertan Klauber
    • Bidet
    David Davenport
    • Major Domo
    Margaret Nolan
    Margaret Nolan
    • Buxom Lass
    William Mervyn
    William Mervyn
    • Physician
    Norman Chappell
    Norman Chappell
    • First Plotter
    Derek Francis
    • Farmer
    Bill Maynard
    Bill Maynard
    • Guy Fawkes
    Douglas Ridley
    • Second Plotter
    • Director
      • Gerald Thomas
    • Writer
      • Talbot Rothwell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    6.23.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6CinemaSerf

    Carry on Henry

    ..or "Carry on History"? Henry VIII (Sid James) manages to squeeze in two extra wives into this daft historical romp that sees Cardinal Wolsey (Terry Scott) and Lord Chancellor Cromwell (Kenneth Williams) having to run the gauntlet of the King's pleasure as he marries "Marie" (Joan Sims) then decides he needs to divorce her for "nonconsumption" so he can marry the playful young "Bettina" (Barbara Windsor). It's off with their heads a-plenty as the lustful king plays politics and romance much to the chagrin of his officials, and I thought - in quite an entertaining fashion. The script is riddled with double-entendres, but they are actually quite a bit cleverer this time and Williams, James and the often underused Charles Hawtrey (poor old "Sir Roger") deliver this film well enough. This was certainly one of my favourites from this gang - it looks good and maybe Guy Faulkes should have watched it first?
    7Who_remembers_Dogtanian

    The tenth best Carry On film

    RANKING: Just in the top ten but lacks some of the originality and sparkle the better ones have. Unlike the ones which followed, this one had actually had a budget and looks pretty polished.

    TYPICAL: Perhaps this one is too typical. It's one of the later historical pictures and it does feel a little like they're doing the same thing as before but this time with different costumes on.....but the same old thing is still funny! Sid James is fabulous as King Henry - giving possibly one of the greatest portrayals of Henry in movie history (who are we to know?). Whether or not this is a classic Carry On, it's certainly classic Sid James.

    Apart from Jim Dale, who'd left the team by now, virtually everyone else is in this all playing their expected roles. As for the story - it's pretty weak but because they all seem to be enjoying themselves, we do too.

    SEXY LADIES: That essential Carry On ingredient in this is provided by Barbara Windsor who is pretty sweet and cute in this one.
    7crossbow0106

    A Good Carry On Film

    This farce about Henry the VIII is perfect fodder for the Carry On group. This film has the core cast which made the best Carry Ons. It stars the irrepressible Sid James as the king, along with the always fun to watch Kenneth Williams as Cromwell. That duo made the best Carry Ons, they just seemed to always work well together. Add in the always welcome Joan Sims, the always bubbly Barbara Windsor and the also welcome Charles Hawtrey as Sir Roger and you know you're going to enjoy this. There have been better Carry On films, and the film carries the usual sexual innuendos and once in a while too cheap laughs, but with this cast it hardly matters. Seek this out.
    5Hayden-86055

    Decent historical comedy

    Not the best of the carry on films but not the worst either, Sid James and Barbara Windsor still have a lot of chemistry and there's lots of references to the Tudors here (even if some are a bit out of place like Guy Fawkes and the guillotine!) It's not that memorable and I found myself a bit bored whilst watching it, but there's worse films and it's ok.

    5/10: Average.
    alice liddell

    The best ever film about Tudor Britain, entertainment as Shakespeare would have known it.

    For most spoofs, the holy grail is to make so ridiculous the subject of attack that it will be impossible to take it seriously again. AIRPLANE! achieved this with the AIRPORT series, admittedly an easy target. CARRY ON HENRY may not have had quite the same effect - such is the unshakeable British obsession with the past, one of the film's main targets - but it's always nice to see that someone else found A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS and THE LION IN WINTER to be pompous tripe as well.

    HENRY, like CARRY ON UP THE KHYBER, is an example of a modest franchise miraculously finding an appropriate subject and creating a work of art. It may lack the jawdropping Bunuellian genius of KHYBER, but it has its own juicy pleasures. The jokes are franker than were usual at this point, but clever rather than crude, and funny when they were crude.

    This is also the last time the cast would be as brilliant as this - a well-oiled machine perfectly in control of the material. Kenneth Williams is aptly, hilariously Machiavellian; Charles Hawtrey is endearingly inappropriate as the brave knight and lover who undergoes all sorts of horrible tortures for his Queen - the heterosexual potency of these obviously gay stars are an uproarious counterpoint to the macho King's unsuccessful promiscuity. Joan Sims is glorious as ever as the ample, lascivious, French, garlic-obsessed Queen. But it is the godlike Sid James who rightly walks away with the film, cinema's best ever King Henry. The merging of his usual persona - the chuckling lecher who is repeatedly thwarted in his amorous endeavours (itself a remarkable comment of tyranny throughout the ages), married to a sex-mad woman he can't abide - with the portrayal of an historical icon creates satire of great depth.

    Whereas the aforementined, Oscar-garlanded pageants are rigidly respectful of English history, HENRY is breezily sceptical. Rather than search for continuity with the past, or examine various notions of Englishness, HENRY is very modern in its rejection of a certain kind of history, the meticulous reconstruction of a mythic past that can teach us about the present. HENRY knows that the past can only be viewed through the prism of the present, that history is a fluid, ever vanishing, entity, always reinterpreted to each generation's needs. The film quite clearly sets out its stall of bogusnes - it is based on recently discovered documents by William Cobbler - only to show how unreliable our grasp of history is; how it's always told in somebody's vested interests, at the expense of someone else.

    The film therefore prefigures the awesome Monty Python deconstructions of the 70s, with jokes about the Labour government, and with King's wenches who demand payment before favours, and whose fathers complain about taxation. The reduction here of English history to an aristorcratic bedroom farce is a more profound insight than any 'serious' epic has ever managed.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The coat used by Sidney James is the same coat used by Richard Burton in Anne des mille jours (1969).
    • Goofs
      Guy Fawkes was not born until 23 years after Henry VIII died.
    • Quotes

      Cardinal Wolsey: A drink, Ma'am?

      Queen Marie: Thank you.

      Cardinal Wolsey: I can heartily recommend the porter here.

      Queen Marie: Really? Then do send him up to my room later.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits: This film is based on a recently discovered manuscript by one William Cobbler which reveals the fact that Henry VIII did in fact have two more wives. Although it was at first thought that Cromwell originated the story, it is now known to be definitely all Cobbler's........ from beginning to end.
    • Alternate versions
      The scene in the barn where Sidney James has a rough and ready encounter with Margaret Nolan is often trimmed for television screenings.
    • Connections
      Edited into Carry on Laughing: Episode #1.3 (1981)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 4, 1971 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Carry on Henry VIII
    • Filming locations
      • Black Park Country Park, Black Park Road, Wexham, Slough, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(on location)
    • Production companies
      • The Rank Organisation
      • Peter Rogers Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £250,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 29 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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