Film Review
For what was to be the first entry in one of the most successful and
longest running films series of all time,
Carry On Sergeant feels like a
miracle of understatement. Lacking the bawdy humour and camp
excesses that would become the most characteristic features of the
series, and with most of the familiar faces conspicuous by their
absence, it is barely recognisable as a
Carry On film. But how many
adults resemble the new-born babies they once were? The
transition from this innocuous but charming debut feature to the classic
Carry On film (as we now understand
the term) would take over five years and ten films. Sid James
would not make his entrance until the fourth film in the series, and
Barbara Windsor would not appear until the glorious ninth (
Carry On Spying).
This first
Carry On film
wasn't even an original work, but an adaptation of a play by R.F.
Delderfield (the author of such well-known novels as
A Horseman Riding By and
To Serve Them All My Days).
It was made on a budget of £75,000, which was miniscule even for
a low-budget British film at the time. Yet the film proved to be
a phenomenal box office success, the third highest grossing British
film of the year. After this auspicious start, it was perhaps
inevitable that the
Carry On
film would become a mainstay of British cinema, although no one could
possibly have foreseen the series' longevity.
Carry On Sergeant was
conceived as a one-off, a shameless attempt to cash in on the success
of a popular BBC television sitcom called
The Army Game (1957-1961).
Two of the stars of this series, William Hartnell and Charles Hawtrey,
were drafted in to play similar roles in the film. At this point
in his career, Hartnell was renowned for playing tough authority
figures and rogues and so he was a perfect casting choice. In
fact, he effectively reprises the part he had played so successfully in
Carol Reed's 1944 film,
The Way Ahead. The actor
would later go on to find lasting fame as the original
Doctor Who in the mid-1960s.
Meanwhile, Hawtrey would become one of the most familiar and best-loved
stars of the
Carry On films,
appearing in 23 of the original 29 films and the two TV Christmas
films, all the time battling the alcoholism and poor self-esteem that
would ultimately destroy him.
As well as Hawtrey,
Carry On Sergeant
introduces two actors who would become stalwarts of the
Carry On series, Kenneth Williams
and Kenneth Connor. Williams' star was already in the ascendant,
thanks to his recent contributions to the popular BBC radio series
Hancock's Half Hour, and Connor
finally had his big break after working in film and television for
almost a decade. Several members of the large ensemble cast would
appear in a number of the early
Carry
On films - Bill Owen (now immortalised as Compo in
Last of the Summer Wine), Terence
Longdon, Eric Barker and Shirley Eaton (better known as the woman who
got the all-over gold spray treatment in the classic Bond movie
Goldfinger). Bob Monkhouse
would have a long career on television, best known for hosting popular
game shows such as
The Golden Shot and
Celebrity Squares.
If this film lacked anything, it certainly wasn't talent.
In common with all of the early
Carry
Ons,
Carry On Sergeant
dispenses with a strong central storyline and instead consists of a series of
highly amusing vignettes within a loose narrative framework. There is
little evidence of the cheeky innuendo that would become a trademark of
the series in later years; instead, the comedy relies on slapstick and
inoffensive wordplay. In common with much British comedy of the
time, there is an obvious anti-authoritarian slant. This is a reflection of the
them-and-us class mentality
that still prevailed in Britain and also a reaction to the privations that
most ordinary folk had endured over the past decade (the British have a
long and proud tradition of utterly loathing the ones in charge and
blaming them for everything); this would be a recurring theme in the
early
Carry Ons.
Producer Peter Rogers and director Gerald Thomas were taken completely
by surprise when
Carry On Sergeant
proved to be a hit but they wasted no time making a follow-up in the
same comic vein. That film,
Carry On Nurse, proved to be an
even bigger success and ensured that the
Carry On film would become nothing
less than a Great British institution. Who'd have thought that
the series would run to 29 films over two decades, and continue to
entertain millions more than forty years after it began? Even the
critics, formerly dismissive of the
Carry
Ons, have revised their assessment of the films and now regard
them in a favourable light. What an amazing carry on!
© James Travers 2009
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Next Gerald Thomas film:
Carry on Nurse (1959)