Film Review
Yet another great institution - the British Empire no less - gets the
full Will Hay treatment in this raucous comedy, an unbridled parody of
Zoltan Korda's
Sanders of the River
(1935). The natives certainly are restless, and depicted far more
convincingly than in many British films of this period, although much
of the humour would now be considered racist by today's politically
correct standards. When Will Hay slaps white talcum powder over a
Negro baby, he remarks acidly that cocoa might have achieved a better
result - no screenwriter would ever dare write this line
today.
The film's modest budget is belied by its impressive production values
which include an authentic recreation of an African
village. Even the exterior locations, on the River Thames,
are convincing stand-ins for a river setting in darkest Africa.
Marcel Varnel, who directed eight of Will Hay's films, was renowned for
turning out quality productions on a fairly modest budget, and here he
achieves wonders.
Moore Marriott and Graham Moffatt once again find themselves comedy
stooges to Will Hay's overbearing schoolmaster, reforming the comedy
trio that had been so successful in earlier Will Hay films, notably
Oh,
Mr. Porter! (1937). Even when the jokes are banal and
obvious, this comedy group has no difficulty getting the laughs.
The morse code routine is one of their funniest.
Old Bones of the River may not be a
classic and at times it does take itself a little too seriously, but
it has more than its quota of gags. The scene in which Hay and his
friends cunningly repel the attacking natives with tintacks is
priceless.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Professor Benjamin Tibbetts arrives in colonial Africa with grand
ambitions of opening a chain of schools to educate the natives.
When Captain Hamilton, the acting Commissioner, falls ill, Tibbetts has
no choice but to take his place. Foremost of his duties is the
gathering of taxes from the locals, to be paid in rubber or
goats. Not long after he has begun his journey up-river to
start on this errand, Tibbets runs into an ancient paddlesteamer owned
by Harbottle and Albert, a pair of idlers whom the schoolmaster soon
press-gangs into working for him. At one of the native villages,
Tibbetts encounters a tribe that is on the verge of rising up against
the British. The tribal chief Mosambo is about to be deposed by
his brother M'Bapi, who had just returned from Oxford University,
intent on freeing his people from the British imperialists.
Tibbetts soon discovers that a little education can be a dangerous
thing, and that a university degree can be positively lethal...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.