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IMDbPro

Steptoe and Son Ride Again

  • 1973
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Diana Dors in Steptoe and Son Ride Again (1973)
Father and son London junk dealers must buy a replacement horse for them to stay in business. Instead they buy a greyhound, confident they will earn a fortune on the race track.
Play trailer3:28
1 Video
22 Photos
ComedySport

Father and son London junk dealers must buy a replacement horse for them to stay in business. Instead they buy a greyhound, confident they will earn a fortune on the race track.Father and son London junk dealers must buy a replacement horse for them to stay in business. Instead they buy a greyhound, confident they will earn a fortune on the race track.Father and son London junk dealers must buy a replacement horse for them to stay in business. Instead they buy a greyhound, confident they will earn a fortune on the race track.

  • Director
    • Peter Sykes
  • Writers
    • Ray Galton
    • Alan Simpson
  • Stars
    • Wilfrid Brambell
    • Harry H. Corbett
    • Diana Dors
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Sykes
    • Writers
      • Ray Galton
      • Alan Simpson
    • Stars
      • Wilfrid Brambell
      • Harry H. Corbett
      • Diana Dors
    • 20User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:28
    Official Trailer

    Photos22

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    Top Cast40

    Edit
    Wilfrid Brambell
    Wilfrid Brambell
    • Albert Steptoe
    Harry H. Corbett
    Harry H. Corbett
    • Harold Steptoe
    Diana Dors
    Diana Dors
    • Woman in Flat
    Milo O'Shea
    Milo O'Shea
    • Doctor Popplewell
    Neil McCarthy
    Neil McCarthy
    • Lennie
    Bill Maynard
    Bill Maynard
    • George
    George Tovey
    • Percy
    Sam Kydd
    Sam Kydd
    • Claude
    Yootha Joyce
    Yootha Joyce
    • Freda - Lennie's Wife
    Olga Lowe
    • Percy's Wife
    Joyce Hemson
    Joyce Hemson
    • Claude's Wife
    Henry Woolf
    Henry Woolf
    • Frankie Barrow
    Geoffrey Bayldon
    Geoffrey Bayldon
    • Vicar
    Frank Thornton
    Frank Thornton
    • Mr. Russell
    Richard Davies
    Richard Davies
    • Butcher
    Eamonn Boyce
    • Barrow's Crony
    Hilda Barry
    • Woman with Carrot
    Joan Ingram
    Joan Ingram
    • Lady in Butcher's Shop
    • Director
      • Peter Sykes
    • Writers
      • Ray Galton
      • Alan Simpson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.71.5K
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    Featured reviews

    6Popey-6

    Macabre oddity

    Albert and Harold Steptoe return to the big screen in another adventure that could well have spanned a shorter television episode. As always Harold needs money and his decision to claim the life insurance of his father before he has died leads to a very odd and surreal set of events. Odd to say the least, the finale includes a series of macabre but funny misadventures such as being trapped inside a coffin? Top marks for humour with the training of the greyhound in earlier scenes but woeful for the scenes with Diana Dors and also wooden the rag and bone fraternity. Another 1970s transition that does not quite make it. The British series was far more carefully written and beautifully acted by the two main players and is consequently highly recommended.
    8flicker1966

    A worthy sequel to both the series and the earlier film

    I watched it again last night as it was broadcast on BBC2. I hadn't seen it for quite a while although the earlier film was on a few months ago. They never fail to make me laugh. Whether some of the comedy is lost in time and translation - both the series and the films possess a good deal of London humour, west London in particular - I don't know but there are a good many gems to be found in the film.

    Diana Dors' character makes only a brief appearance near the start of the film. It's when she pulls Harold onto her bed after offering him both her dead husband's clothes (and then herself!), that it's revealed that her old man is only freshly deceased beside them! The return trip from York put paid to poor old Hercules the horse. Two hundred miles and three days on the road would tire any horse so a replacement is needed. Unfortunately Harold gets conned at Southall (horse) market and Frankie Barrett - brilliantly played with menace by Henry Woolfe - fleeces him for his cash and sells him a blind greyhound instead! Barrett fleeces him again later in the film but I won't spoil it. Let's just say his embezzlement became more ambitious!

    Look out for the location shots of White City stadium. It was one of the biggest stadiums in the UK, was built for the London Olympics of 1908 and hosted all manner of sports including speedway, greyhounds and rugby league (in the 1930s, being the home of the short-lived London Highfield) before being torn down in the mid-1980s. The site is now occupied by the massive extension to BBC Television Centre. The local tube station is still called White City.
    8Captain_Couth

    The last of the Steptoe and Son films.

    Steptoe and Son Ride Again (1973) is the best of the two films featuring the duo of Albert and Harold. Harold is on his rounds one day and runs into a harried housewife and somehow winds up in York. By the time he comes back home, the business work horse is stressed out from the long trip back to Shepard's Bush. Without a horse to pull the carriage, Albert dips into his family savings to buy a "new" one. But Harold feels he's a better business man than his father so he takes it upon himself to buy the animal. Hours later, Harold comes home with something Albert's not quite looking for. Will everything work out? Remember these are the Steptoes!

    Unlike the last film which was like the series, a melodramatic comedy this film is more of a farce. It's highly entertaining and and pretty far out the lengths the Steptoes will go to get themselves out of hock. If you like British comedies or farcical humor then this movies just for you.

    I enjoyed this film a bit more than the first film. They're both funny and pretty amusing. I have to strongly recommend this movie.
    6HenryHextonEsq

    A fair attempt all told, but misguided too much of the time.

    "Steptoe and Son" is one of my favourite of many redoubtable British sitcoms; we used to be, and still are, in the shape of "Phoenix Nights", "The Office" and "I'm Alan Partridge", rather good at this sort of thing. Yet British film comedy; or more specifically attempts to transfer a TV success to film, have largely failed. Often horrendously badly! British film comedy can only really look back to Will Hay (of whom I've never seen any films actually), the Ealing comedies, some late-1950s Sellers pieces, Monty Python, the odd stray triumph, and the fact that it has produced comedic actors great in American films: Stan Laurel, Chaplin, Sellers and others.

    "Steptoe and Son Ride Again" attempts to be closer to the original TV show than the previous "Steptoe and Son" film of 1972, which was quite horribly trite at times. Galton and Simpson script, so there should be no problem there, but there is: pointless bits are included and coincidences are foisted upon the film to make the plot come together. Corbett and Brambell are perfectly in character, but what are they given? A lame duck opening to the film; that takes in a yawn-worthy plot device of a greyhound and a bizarre cameo from a portly, pallidly wasted Diana Dors. Who sanctioned this? We also don't really get to see the actors doing the expertly winding long scenes of Galton and Simpson dialogue, so familiar to fans of the TV series. Perhaps the makers thought they had to, with a film of 'Steptoe', up the ante visually in some way by having more 'action'. Somewhat missing the point about the series.

    Once things get to the actual plot - about the insurance policy on Albert's life and the 'funeral' - the comedy finally breaks out upon the picture, like a supply of embezzled honey to an ailing bee. The lacklustre nature of early sequences is always in mind, however, as is the lack of real cinematic interest, despite the attempts at activity. Milo O'Shea is always a pleasure to see, and the scene with his drunken Doctor is a deftly played delight. The wake is pretty well done, and with Harold leaping through a graveyard, some interesting shots are captured at last, by the director.

    This central plot is frankly not central enough, and the coda ending is really deflating in its unrelated flippancy. With such a blackly humorous, potentially poignant farce of a scenario, an ending of impact and subtle sadness - there has rarely been a sitcom as achingly melancholic as "Steptoe" at its best - would have possibly raised the film to something special - yet we return to the irrelevancies of the early part of the film. What a shame; with this film the makers managed to actually hit upon a good idea, but they squander its attending possibilities... How emblematic is this of the ennui and failure of British film in the 1970s...? Well, at least it has its very good central proposition; which makes up quite a sizeable sequence of very good material, I suppose.

    Rating:- ***/*****
    10Sleepin_Dragon

    The best movie to come from a sitcom.

    Countless comedies from the seventies produced movies, Rising Damp, For the love of Ada, Are you being served? One thing they all had in common, was they were all poor compared to their respective shows. Fortunately the two Steptoe movies were excellent, and this was the best of the two.

    The script is terrific, it's laugh out loud funny, and both characters are totally in character, another flaw with spin off movies. The dialogue is punchy and caustic, but it's the multitude of hilarious moments, that makes this so good, my third choice would be Albert snaring his neighbour, second would be Harold taunting his father with the mannequin's head, but best bit is the coffin scene, who on Earth wouldn't laugh out loud.

    It's a favourite film of mine, that stands the test of time. It's a joy from start to finish. 10/10

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    Related interests

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    Comedy
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    Sport

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      There had been plans for a third Steptoe film, but they were abandoned after this film performed less well at the box office than its predecessor.
    • Goofs
      When Albert visits Harland butchers, the lady in the hat jumps forward in her queue position between exterior and interior shots.
    • Connections
      Featured in Diana Dors: Britain's Blonde Bombshell (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      God Save the Queen
      (uncredited)

      trad.

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 6, 1973 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Sie reiten wieder
    • Filming locations
      • Kensal Green Cemetery, Harrow Road, Kensal Green, London, England, UK(Funeral scene)
    • Production company
      • Associated London Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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