It's often said of films with medical themes by the team of producer Peter Rogers and director Gerald Thomas that they're "Carry On's in all but name". Well this is a 'Doctor' film in name only.
Like countless British films of the fifties - when foreign travel it was considered incredibly glamorous - it provides a talky and mainly studio-bound economy class trip to an adjacent set peopled with worldly supposedly foreign trollopes. It's sole claim to fame today is the presence of an unrecognisably young Brigitte Bardot in what remained a very rare English-speaking role; whose French accent ironically sounds just as phoney as that adopted by the other young woman in the film.
Like countless British films of the fifties - when foreign travel it was considered incredibly glamorous - it provides a talky and mainly studio-bound economy class trip to an adjacent set peopled with worldly supposedly foreign trollopes. It's sole claim to fame today is the presence of an unrecognisably young Brigitte Bardot in what remained a very rare English-speaking role; whose French accent ironically sounds just as phoney as that adopted by the other young woman in the film.