Film Review
The seventh of the
Carry On
films marked a significant departure from what preceded it, dispensing
with the episodic format and anti-authoritarian subtext that defined
the early films. The first film in the series to have what may
legitimately be called a plot,
Carry
On Cabby was, like its immediate successor
Carry
On Jack (1963), not conceived as a
Carry On film at all.
Originally entitled
Call Me A Cab,
the title was changed at the last minute when the distributor Anglo
Amalgamated suggested it would be easier to market the film under the
Carry On umbrella.
This is where the legendary screenwriter Talbot Rothwell joined the
team, bringing structure and fresh ideas which the
Carry On films badly needed, as
well as a seemingly inexhaustible supply of gags. Rothwell would
script twenty of the original twenty-nine
Carry On films, including some of
the most highly regarded entries in the series. It is no
coincidence that after his final film,
Carry On Dick (1974), the series
would take a sudden turn for the worse.
Another notable new arrival was composer Eric Rogers. Although he
had worked on the previous three
Carry
Ons as an assistant to Bruce Montgomery, this is Rogers' first
significant input. His score for this film is one of the most
memorable in the series and includes the eminently hummable
Call Me a Cab theme.
What most distinguishes this
Carry On
film from the others is its down-to-Earth realism. The characters
are well-drawn and believable, not the thinly sketched caricatures that
tend to predominate in most of the other
Carry Ons. This is partly
down to Rothwell's script, but just as much credit should be given to
the lead performers, Sid James and Hattie Jacques, who bring an
authenticity to their characters and a genuine poignancy to their
on-screen relationship, things which are far less evident in their
subsequent films.
Interestingly, James and Jacques give almost straight performances
here; the comedy comes from the madness that is dished out by the
supporting artistes. These include: Charles Hawtrey (hilarious as
the bungling Pintpot), Kenneth Connor (please avert your gaze when he
gets into drag), Esma Cannon (a delight in the last of her five
magnificent
Carry On turns)
and Jim Dale (making a terrific
Carry
On debut). Kenneth Williams was originally offered a part
in the film (the role that went to Norman Chappell) but declined
because he was unimpressed by the script (yes, this is the same Kenneth
Williams that agreed to appear in
Carry
On Emmannuelle...).
Carry On Cabby is widely considered the best of the
black-and-white
Carry Ons.
Gerald Thomas's direction is at its most inspired, particularly in the
final sequence where the cab drivers round up the bad guys, a whimsical
homage to the old John Ford westerns. The film's popularity led
the BBC to make
a television series named
Taxi!
(consisting of twenty-six 45 minute
episodes, first broadcast in 1963), with Sid James reprising the role
of the likeable cabby.
Perhaps the main appeal of
Carry On
Cabby is that it takes real situations, which most audiences
could relate to, and gives these a humorous slant (and a few dollops of
overt slapstick). This is the "kitchen sink" of the
Carry Ons, embracing real themes
such as marital breakdown, the failure of a small business and the
conflict between the sexes (highly topical as feminism had begun to
take off). Likewise, the sequence in which Hattie and Liz Fraser
are hi-jacked has a hard edge to it and could almost be slotted into a
contemporary British crime thriller. This is assuredly one of the
few
Carry Ons that would have
stood the test of time had it not belonged to the series.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Gerald Thomas film:
Carry on Jack (1963)
Film Synopsis
Charlie Hawkins is the owner of a successful taxi firm, Speedee
Cabs. His job has become the main passion in his life and,
understandably, his wife Peggy feels neglected. On their wedding
anniversary, Charlie promises to take Peggy out for a night on the
town, but once again he gets distracted and he spends most of the
evening ferrying a pregnant woman and her neurotic husband to and from
hospital. This is the last straw. Determined to teach
Charlie a lesson, Peggy decides to starts up her own rival taxi
business, Glamcabs. With money she had put aside for a
dream cottage, she buys a fleet of brand new cabs and hires the most
glamorous women drivers she can find. Glamcabs proves to be an
instant hit. In no time at all, the enterprising Peggy has stolen
all of her husband's customers. Unaware who is behind Glamcabs,
Charlie makes a last-ditch attempt to sabotage his competitor's cabs,
but even this fails. How will he react when he learns that he has
been ruined by his own beloved wife...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.