Film Review
With
Heavens Above! the
brothers John and Roy Boulting completed a series of successful social
satires that have proven to be their most enduring works, their appeal
lying less in their actual content and more in what they have to say
about post-war British society. For all their burlesque whimsy
and casual reliance on cheap, unsubtle humour, the Boultings' comedies
are among the most revealing British films of their era and are, when
you examine them closely, surprisingly grim, as they mostly revolve
around a woolly-minded idealist who is thwarted lock, stock and barrel
from improving the world which he is apparently so eager to
change. Whether it is the legal profession (
Brothers in Law, 1957), the
education system (
Lucky Jim, 1957),
worker-employer relations (
I'm All Right Jack, 1959) or
the religious sphere (
Heavens Above!,
1963), human nature and vested interests can always be relied upon to
prevent any change to the status quo. The Boultings liked nothing better than to show us a
fleeting glimpse of Utopia then smash it to pieces before our eyes.
Heavens Above! is perhaps the
most extreme instance of this. It is the bleakest of the
Boultings' comedies, with a veritable gallery of rogues and hypocrites
ranged to defeat the noble aims of a well-meaning but laughably naive
vicar. The film is politically ambiguous but has a slight
right-leaning slant as it appears fixated in highlighting the
limitations of socialism. Capitalism may have its faults but it
is shown to be a far more viable (indeed fairer) system than a Utopian
'give away' alternative, which is too readily exploited by the greedy
and unscrupulous. The homeless family that lives off state
handouts without any awareness of their social obligations provides a
crude but salutary reminder of the fundamental flaw in the Welfare
State, namely that it can engender a class of irresponsible scroungers
and tax dodgers. Equally contemptible is that larger
section of society that is quick to 'grab something for nothing',
regardless of the consequences - the same 'jam today' brigade that
figured so heavily in Thatcher's Britain of the 1980s, profiting from
policies that would ultimately do more social harm than good (the
sell-off of council houses and state-owned industries).
Heavens Above! is a grimly
prescient film, anticipating many of the social problems that would
come to the fore over the following three decades, but it is also a
charming comedy featuring a glittering ensemble of Britain's finest
character and comedic actors. As the Reverend Smallwood, Peter
Sellers avoids the kind of irksome, shallow caricature he would
gravitate towards in later years and turns in a convincing and poignant
portrayal of a good man tragically wedded to a fool's errand.
Sellers' performance is by far the most impressive aspect of this film
and should be regarded as one of the actor's finest. The film's
extraordinary roll call includes Cecil Parker, Bernard Miles, William
Hartnell, Eric Sykes, Irene Handl and Roy Kinnear, Eric Barker and Joan
Hickson - a veritable
Who's Who
of British acting talent that helps to make
Heavens Above! one of the Boulting
brothers' most memorable and likeable films.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
It is thanks to a minor clerical error that the Reverend John
Smallwood, a naive prison chaplain, is appointed vicar of Orbiston
Parva. Upon his arrival in this backwater English country town,
Reverend Smallwood immediately causes ructions, first by making a West
Indian dustman his warden, then by inviting a family of homeless
benefits scroungers to stay at the vicarage. Lady Despard, the
majority shareholder in a company founded by her husband which is the
town's biggest employer, is persuaded by Smallwood to give away her
fortune to those who are in much greater need. To that end, the
wealthy widow sells her shares in the company (causing a collapse in
the share price that leads to redundancies) and freely gives away the
produce from her farm (driving local firms to the wall as their
customers desert them). When Lady Despard's son and heir returns
to find his father's company on the brink of ruin he coerces his mother
into abandoning her charitable folly. As Orbiston Parva slides
towards anarchy, the church officials mull over what to do with
Reverend Smallwood. If there was ever a time for Divine
intervention, this was it...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.