Film Review
By the time
Carry On Doctor
went into production, there was a general feeling that the
Carry On series had run its
course. The change of distributor, from Anglo-Amalgamated to
Rank, had not proven successful, as the sudden drop in box office
takings for the latest two films -
Don't
Lose Your Head (1966) and
Follow
that Camel (1967) - had shown. The reason for the sudden
decline in the popularity of the films was attributed in part to the
fact that the
Carry On prefix
could not be used in the titles of the films distributed by Rank.
(The mis-casting of Phil Silvers in the most recent film also did not
help.)
Concerned that the fifteenth
Carry On
film might well be the last, producer Peter Rogers and director Gerald
Thomas decided to draw on one of the series' biggest successes,
Carry On Nurse (1959).
Over the past decade, Gerald Thomas's brother Ralph had been making
a series of very popular film comedies based on Richard Gordon's
Doctor novels. The wards of a
busy NHS hospital seemed to be the natural setting for a
Carry On film, particularly as the
distance from the operating theatre to the lavatory is such a short
one. Having successfully renegotiated the use of the
Carry On prefix in the film's
title, Peter Rogers and his team managed to give the series a new lease
of life, ensuring that it would run for another decade.
Carry On Doctor was a major
box office hit and remains one of the most popular films in the
series. It marked a return to the format of the early
Carry Ons, dispensing with the
central storyline and offering instead a series of short vignettes
hanging off a thin narrative thread. The humour consists of the
usual mix of slapstick, wordplay and innuendo, with popular comedian
Frankie Howerd lending his support to an almost complete ensemble of
the
Carry On regulars.
Barbara Windsor makes a welcome return, her second
Carry On after her debut in
Carry On Spying (1964) and
Hattie Jacques once again reprises the role for which she is best
remembered, the intimidating hospital matron. There are also
several cameo appearances from faces that would be familiar to
television audiences in the UK - these include Dandy Nichols, the
long-suffering wife of Alf Garnett in the long-running sitcom
Till Death Us Do Part, Brian Wilde
of
Porridge and
Last of the Summer Wine fame and
Peter Gilmore, the star of the prestigious 1970s BBC drama
The Onedin Line.
Carry On Doctor is pretty well
a close re-run of
Carry On Nurse,
except that the jokes are somewhat more risqué and the slapstick
sequences more elaborate (and a lot funnier). Whilst far from
being his best work, Talbot Rothwell turns in another gag-laden script
that somehow keeps the laughs coming, even though a fair number of the
jokes are puerile and predictable. This is possibly the point at
which the cheap lavatorial humour began to take over, to the detriment
of the series.
The film is perhaps best remembered for the scene in which Kenneth
Williams finds himself on the receiving end of Hattie Jacques's amorous
intentions. "I was once a weak man", protests Williams as Matron
moves in for the kill, to which a smouldering Jacques ripostes: "Once a
week's enough for any man." Greatly encouraged by the success of this film,
the
Carry On team soon
returned with another dose of medical mirth in
Carry on Again Doctor (1969) and
Carry on Matron (1972). Just
what the doctor ordered.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Gerald Thomas film:
Follow That Camel (1967)
Film Synopsis
Immediately after giving a lecture in which he argues that medical
treatment would be unnecessary if everyone thought positively, Francis
Bigger falls off the stage and breaks his coccyx. He is
rushed to hospital and finds himself in a ward that is occupied by some
of the strangest characters he has ever met. The sensitive Mr
Barron is afflicted with all the traumas of his wife's pregnancy;
Charlie Roper is a malingerer who prolongs his stay in hospital to
evade his nagging wife; Ken Biddle was admitted for appendicitis but is
now recovering from a fractured leg after falling off the operating
table. Patrolling the wards and corridors of the hospital (like a
squad of S.S. guards), Matron is a formidable figure who divides her
time between taunting the patients and haranguing the accident-prone Dr
Kilmore. Yet beneath the rough, unsympathetic and generally
terrifying exterior there beats a tender heart, for Matron is in love,
madly in love - with the eminent registrar, Dr Tinkle. Unaware
that he is the object of such ardent affection, Dr Tinkle discovers he has
another admirer, in the shape of busty Sandra, a former patient of his
who has just started working as a student nurse at the hospital.
Convinced that Tinkle saved her life, Sandra is determined to repay him
in the only way she knows. Fearful of a scandal, Tinkle rejects
her advances. When he sees the young nurse climb onto the roof of
the hospital, Kilmore is convinced that she intends to kill herself and
hurries after her. The rescue attempt ends disastrously and
Kilmore, his reputation in tatters, is dismissed, thanks to the
conniving of Tinkle and Matron. When they hear of this, the
patients decide to rebel en masse in an attempt to get Dr Kilmore
reinstated. It is high time that the arrogant Dr Tinkle had a
taste of his own medicine...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.