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5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
They've all been a terrible helluva long time gone, 15 September 2007
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Author:
Gary170459 from Derby, UK
This turned out to be George Formby's last feature film, made just
after WW2 had finished and with audiences tastes changing. Although he
was playing a demobbed soldier coming home the atmosphere was still
1939, something it would be impossible to recreate much longer. Even
so, the budget was tighter and some hep jazz music and a seedy outdoor
striptease still crept in, not something to be expected in a Formby
film pre-War.
George and pal Ronald "Fingers" Shiner (he of the proboscis insured for
£20,000) go back to George's rundown pub the Unicorn and try to run it
as a sound business. They find it difficult going what with an erudite
painter as non-paying guest, whilst Shiner never finishes washing and
drying dishes with his lady love, but the main problem is the stiff
rivalry of the Lion pub across the river from them even though
George's childhood sweetheart owns it. Dear old Wally Patch plays one
of the baddies this time trying to close them down with various
machinations. Songs: We've Been A Long Time Gone (on the demob ship),
Christened With A Horseshoe (in the civilian clothes shop), It Could Be
(in the Unicorn), and my favourite You Don't Need A License For That
(during the show). The Alice dream sequence with the Mad March Hare
song was distinctly odd but still pleasant. Some of the outdoor
scenery, shot near Richmond, was nice and languid and which contrasted
well with the rather threadbare interiors displayed. Favourite bit: the
slapstick minute with the punters of both pubs rushing around after
drinking paraffin.
After this there was a gap of seven years before Norman Wisdom took up
this type of film - musical comedy with the ordinary little man
fighting the odds, getting the beautiful girl and by turns hilariously
good and embarrassingly bad. The Americans had Danny Kaye then Jerry
Lewis. Which only proved to me that if it had been handled right Formby
could have carried on making films for a good few years more. Instead
of which for the next 15 years he travelled the world with his wife
Beryl, did stage, panto's and TV, but a series of heart-attacks finally
killed him in 1961 aged just 56. But in any case, imho this was one of
George's better films and a good one to end on.
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
HIS LAST BOW, 5 November 2004
Author:
alicespiral from Blackpool England
For his final movie,Formby owns a pub. He also has as a leading lady the mysterious Rosalind Boulter. Its important to my reckoning as an Alice collector,that towards the end there's a Dream Sequence of an excerpt from Alice In Wonderland. Here George plays the March Hare and not the Mad Hatter as may have been more obvious. Today here in England we get the Formby movies issued and reissued on video but at the moment they appear to have dried up. Though probably not considered one of his best it is in fact a better story than some of the earlier ones like Keep Fit
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