Lady Booby alias "Belle" (Ann-Margret), the lively wife of the fat landed squire Sir Thomas Booby (Peter Bull), has a lusty eye on the attractive, intelligent villager Joseph Andrews (Peter ... Read allLady Booby alias "Belle" (Ann-Margret), the lively wife of the fat landed squire Sir Thomas Booby (Peter Bull), has a lusty eye on the attractive, intelligent villager Joseph Andrews (Peter Firth), a Latin pupil and protégé of Parson Adams (Sir Michael Hordern), and makes him the... Read allLady Booby alias "Belle" (Ann-Margret), the lively wife of the fat landed squire Sir Thomas Booby (Peter Bull), has a lusty eye on the attractive, intelligent villager Joseph Andrews (Peter Firth), a Latin pupil and protégé of Parson Adams (Sir Michael Hordern), and makes him their footman. Joseph's heart belongs to a country girl, foundling Fanny Goodwill (Natalie Og... Read all
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 2 nominations total
Featured reviews
Peter Firth's been brought up by pious pastor Michael Hordern who is a throwback to the Puritans of the last century. He's definitely out of place in mid 18th century Great Britain, the age of Walpole and the first two Hanoverian Georges were ones in which they believed in let the good times roll. Peter's spotted by Ann-Margret wife of fat nobleman Peter Bull who thinks he'd make an excellent footman and of course she has other things in mind. Especially after Bull expires in an old Roman bath that the gentry of Hanoverian Great Britain have revived the custom of.
Firth's got every woman in the cast chasing him, but he wants to stay virtuous and save himself for his true love Natalie Ogle. That proves close to impossible, in the meantime everyone is envying his good luck with the ladies.
Tony Richardson who directed Tom Jones fourteen years earlier to an Academy Award for Best Picture brings the same eye for detail to the sets and costuming and atmosphere of the same era that Henry Fielding was writing about. The two in the cast I love are Beryl Reid with that wonderful Dickensian name of Mrs. Slipslop and Ann-Margret as Lady Booby who does more than hold her own with the British cast. Bridging the two Fielding/Richardson collaborations is Hugh Griffith who returns briefly in this film in his role as Squire Western from Tom Jones.
Joseph Andrews for reasons I can't explain is unjustly overlooked and critics seem to say Richardson was just trying to recreate Tom Jones again. Considering it's the same source that gave us Tom Jones that charge is ridiculous. Joseph Andrews has enough merit to stand on its own and should be seen and recognized for the fine film it is.
Richardson once again brings humour to history (the traffic jam of horse-drawn carriages is neat and funny). Even the demise of Ann-Margaret's elderly gouty husband ("taking the waters" at Bath in England) combines beauty with dark humour.
One curious inexplicable failing are the opening titles - firstly in the dreadfully monotonous and repetitive song sung in thoroughly undistinguished fashion by Jim Dale and the flat, lifeless and pointless visuals appearing behind the titles. Those who have seen the dazzling title sequence to his "Charge of the Light Brigade" will be especially struck by difference. In this latter case the titles had been farmed out to an animator who regarded it as his best - and hardest - work. What a shame Richardson did not do the same here.
Overall a classic even if flawed.
Full of wigs, gout and heaving bosoms, this attempt by director Richardson to do Tom Jones again, has its charms, but ultimately the sum of its parts, often fun as they are, do not make for a full and compelling romp. There is a wonderful display of British character actors on show here which helps, but in the end it is all rather a mess and a bit of a disappointment.
Did you know
- TriviaMaking this film some 14 years after Tom Jones : Entre l'alcôve et la potence (1963), Tony Richardson was persuaded to hire Hugh Griffith, who had scored a great personal success (and an Oscar nomination) in the earlier film, to play a brief cameo. In the intervening years, however, Griffith's legendary fondness for alcohol had degenerated into a chronic condition which would kill him in 1980, and Richardson was, he later wrote, shocked by his appearance and condition. Without alcohol, Griffith could not perform at all; but if he had even a small amount, he became incoherent, slurred and unpredictable. Compromising, Richardson fed him a tablespoon of brandy before each take, which he estimated was just about as much as Griffith could safely take.
- GoofsSome stonework at the Roman baths is clearly stained with coal soot from the Industrial Revolution. This would not have been present in 1742 but was still common on old British buildings in 1977.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 68th Annual Academy Awards (1996)
- How long is Joseph Andrews?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Die Abenteuer des Joseph Andrews
- Filming locations
- Castle Combe, Chippenham, Wiltshire, England, UK(The pedlar meets the gypsy)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $839,865
- Gross worldwide
- $839,865
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1