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Not Only But Always

  • TV Movie
  • 2004
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
414
YOUR RATING
Not Only But Always (2004)
BiographyDrama

This affectionate documentary examines the turbulent partnership of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, the double act that re-defined the comedy genre. It follows their beginnings in London's West... Read allThis affectionate documentary examines the turbulent partnership of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, the double act that re-defined the comedy genre. It follows their beginnings in London's West End through their rise to stardom which won them accolades but forced a wedge between the... Read allThis affectionate documentary examines the turbulent partnership of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, the double act that re-defined the comedy genre. It follows their beginnings in London's West End through their rise to stardom which won them accolades but forced a wedge between them.

  • Director
    • Terry Johnson
  • Writer
    • Terry Johnson
  • Stars
    • Rhys Ifans
    • Aidan McArdle
    • Jodie Rimmer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    414
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Terry Johnson
    • Writer
      • Terry Johnson
    • Stars
      • Rhys Ifans
      • Aidan McArdle
      • Jodie Rimmer
    • 17User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Photos1

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    Top cast45

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    Rhys Ifans
    Rhys Ifans
    • Peter Cook
    Aidan McArdle
    Aidan McArdle
    • Dudley Moore
    Jodie Rimmer
    Jodie Rimmer
    • Wendy Snowden
    Camilla Power
    Camilla Power
    • Judy Huxtable
    Daphne Cheung
    • Lin Chong
    Jonathan Aris
    Jonathan Aris
    • Jonathan Miller
    Louise Wallace
    • Sparkly Top Woman
    Alan Cox
    Alan Cox
    • Alan Bennett
    Josephine Davison
    Josephine Davison
    • Eleanor Bron
    Richard Durden
    Richard Durden
    • Proctor
    Robin Soans
    Robin Soans
    • Mr. Boylett
    Charmaine Guest
    Charmaine Guest
    • Violin Girl
    Brett O'Gorman
    • David Frost
    Joanna Morrison
    Joanna Morrison
    • Dawn
    Derek Payne
    Derek Payne
    • Audience Member
    David Aston
    David Aston
    • Upper Class Man
    John Leigh
    John Leigh
    • Joe McGrath
    Owen Black
    Owen Black
    • Michael Peacock
    • Director
      • Terry Johnson
    • Writer
      • Terry Johnson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.3414
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    Featured reviews

    8annieoz

    Peter Cook was really Withnail?

    Looking extraordinarily like Withnail at his most dissolute, Rhys Ifans gives a pretty good shot at Peter Cook. And the others do their own impressions of the fab four - Miller, Bennett, Moore & Cook - convincingly as well. Miller is very much hand and arm movements, Bennett is a genuine look-alike and the Dudley Moore is remarkable.

    Two queries: Why didn't they give him blue contact lenses when one of Cook's most striking features was his very beautiful blue eyes.

    Secondly, why didn't they mention the film he made after Bedazzled? It wasn't a popular success which may have contributed to his sense of malaise as Dudley rose to the top.

    And a possible goof: Wendy claims she wasn't invited to the funeral (seen off by the fierce wife #3). But there she is in the church. Just a bit of dramatic telescoping or insufficient research?
    7monkofmagnesia

    Not Only Good But Also Lacking....

    This biopic assumes the audience knows the story already, so it doesn't elaborate on certain aspects of the story. If you did not know that, later in his life, Peter Cook was pretending to be Sven, a man who lives in a lighthouse, and was calling a late night radio show, you would not understand the scene early in the movie. Certain things in Peter Cook's life aren't mentioned at all, like his brief success in American television with the show "The Two of Us." Nevertheless, as biopics go, this is one of the best. Great acting! Rhys Ifans captures Peter Cooks mannerisms and that unique look he had in his eyes. Aidan McArdle captures Moore's voice, but he is not doing an impression. He is great in the role. The movie does not, to me, explain any of Cook's motives. If you did not know anything of his life and just saw this, you would think he was just an arrogant twit, in love with himself, who enjoyed nothing more than putting down Dudley. Still I would recommend renting the DVD and watching it twice. The second time you watch it, watch it with the commentary on.
    karldinnel

    Finally something on screen from Ifans that I like

    I only caught the last hour of this due to having to work late last night (boo hoo!), but both Rhys Ifans and Aidan McArdle were fantastic.

    I remember Peter Cook from my youth and I thought it uncanny how Ifans reproduced the frustrated genius of the man. As for the production as a whole, it was a very insightful look into how Cook had difficulty coping with Moore's success away from him, and his own problems with matching his earlier career later on in life. (Personally I think he was extremely bright, but was handicapped by idleness.)

    Now, I've seen a number of films that have featured Ifans. Perhaps I have been unlucky and only caught the bad ones, but this has to be the first I've seen him in that I've enjoyed. The films incidentally were: Love, Honour and Obey (where he was quite good as a bad-tempered gangster, but the film itself was pretty dire), Twin Town (awful), 51st State (a nightmare) and Notting Hill (sugary nonsense where Ifans was playing a sort of "Uncle Tom" slob of a Welshman to Hugh Grant's sophisticated Englishman - why does scriptwriter Richard "Blackadder" Curtis laugh at the Welsh so much?).

    But until last night, the best thing I've seen Ifans in was on stage - in Accidental Death of an Anarchist (admittedly Dario Fo's play is one that an actor can have a lot of fun with) at the Donmar Warehouse a few years ago. Hopefully, he will be more discerning choosing his parts in future. If he does then I reckon he could be a future Guinness (but please don't get involved with Star Wars).
    10maxjenner-1

    Brilliant study of comic genius

    Brilliant study of comic genius Peter Cook and his relationship with Dudley Moore.

    Hilarious, disturbing and genuinely moving.

    The performance from Rhys Ifans is one of the greatest ever given to celluloid and should clean up at the awards. At times it is difficult to remember that I was watching a drama and not a documentary - so credible is Ifans. I have never seen an actor give as convincing a performance where I actually believed I was watching Peter Cook rather than an actor playing him.

    Likewise, Aidan McCardle is also very strong as Dudley Moore.

    Terry Johnston's script and direction blends light and shade and is always imaginative.

    An absolute gem of a movie.

    10 out of 10
    8houndtang75

    Superb central performance

    After a slightly shaky start this dramatisation of the life of Peter Cook, centring on his relationship with his sometime comic partner Dudley Moore, became thoroughly engrossing. Credit must go to Rhys Ifans, an actor who I previously only knew as the irritating Welsh hippie type in Notting Hill, who caught the look, voice and mannerisms of Peter Cook perfectly. Aidan McArdle was also excellent as Dudley Moore, an amiable type who was put through hell by the self-loathing Cook. Terry Johnson's script was also very good; although some telescoping of incidents occurred, this can be excused in the name of dramatic license. In all an interesting look at a man with undoubted intelligence and talent who always wanted something more but was never sure what it was he was looking for.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Many who knew the real Peter Cook and Dudley Moore objected to the way their long partnership was depicted in this heavily-fictionalized TV movie. Alan Bennett pointed out with considerable acerbity that Dudley Moore, far from being victimized by his university peers because of his working-class origins, was, in fact, enormously envied by them, partly because he was already a success in show business whilst still an undergraduate, and more especially because of his phenomenally active sex-life.
    • Goofs
      The film states that Cook and Moore's movie Bedazzled (1967) went into production in 1969. In fact, it was released two years earlier.
    • Quotes

      [Peter discovers Dudley shagging a young woman in his dressing room when he should be getting ready to go on stage]

      Peter Cook: If you *do* decide to come on stage, Dudley, make sure you take her off your penis first.

    • Connections
      References Not Only... But Also (1965)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 30, 2004 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • ノット・オンリー・バット・オールウェイズ
    • Filming locations
      • Auckland, New Zealand
    • Production company
      • Company Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo

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