Film Review
The twenty-first entry in the popular
Carry
On series is one of the most visually impressive, with
production values to rival any pukka period drama of the time.
Despite being made on a miniscule budget (around £230
thousand, the largest for any
Carry
On up until this point), it looks stunning, thanks to Alan
Hume's cinematography and Lionel Couch's art direction, not to mention
the costumes, which achieve an authentic recreation of the court of
England's most notorious monarch.
In all other respects,
Carry On Henry
is a typical knockabout
Carry On,
offering the familiar mix of bawdy humour and slapstick that audiences
loved. Screenwriter Talbot Rothwell clearly had great fun
wringing mirth out of historical fact (whilst including a few wicked
anachronisms to irritate the
Guardian-reading
pedants). Regrettably, by this stage Rothwell's jokes were
beginning to lose their shine, not surprising as most of them had been
done to death in the previous
Carry
Ons.
The gags may be dangerously past their sell-by date but the regulars
still manage to get the laughs by the cartload. Sid James will,
for many people, be the definitive Henry VIII - he looks the part and
turns in what is easily one of the best performances of his
career. It is fun watching Kenneth Williams drop in and out of
character, even if he manages to avoid the outrageous camp excesses of
earlier films. Talking of camp, Charles Hawtrey gives another
memorable turn as a Tudor fop, turn being the operative word as here he
plays a lady's man, sparking wonderfully off Joan Sims (who, for once,
gets the full glamour treatment).
Barbara Windsor cites her role as the buxom Bettina as her favourite;
she certainly looks stunning and her on-screen chemistry with Sid James
in this film is electrifying (just a hint of the start of their
off-screen romance). As ever, there are also some magnificent
contributions from the talented supporting cast, notably Terry Scott
and Peter Gilmore.
Carry On
Henry doesn't quite match up to the previous historical
Carry Ons -
Carry on Cleo (1964),
Carry On Up the Khyber (1968) -
but it is nonetheless good clean fun, superbly made and enjoyably performed, avoiding the
tacky vulgarity and silliness that would mar the later entries in the
series.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Gerald Thomas film:
Carry on at Your Convenience (1971)
Film Synopsis
King Henry VIII is having a bad heir day. When his present queen
fails to provide him with a male offspring, he has her beheaded and
takes Marie of Normandy as his new bride. The King's loyal
advisers, Thomas Cromwell and Cardinal Wolsey, are hopeful that
the union will improve relations with France and are therefore
understandably miffed when Henry immediately asks for the marriage to
be dissolved. The cause of the marital rift? Marie likes
garlic, not just in all her meals, but as a prenuptial snack.
Wolsey persuades the fuming King that the Pope is unlikely to grant an
annulment for such a trivial offence but fortunately Sir Roger de
Lodgerley, the royal food taster, provides more reasonable grounds for
divorce when he gets Marie pregnant. When Henry learns that he
will lose a huge dowry provided by the King of France, he suddenly sees
that Marie has one or two good points and decides to keep her on.
But then he meets Bettina, the most beautiful woman he has ever set
eyes on. Marie has got to go...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.