Film Review
Adapted from a stage play entitled
Lights Out at Eleven by Armitage Owen,
Save a Little Sunshine is a
chirpy little comedy whose main attraction is the pairing of two of
Britain's comedy legends, Tommy Trinder and Max Wall.
Sadly, whilst this amazing duo provide most of the laughs, they are not the
focus of the film. That honour goes to Dave Willis, a small time
comic actor who is totally forgotten today and whose attempts to raise
a laugh look like a cowardly dentist pulling teeth from a tiger.
Looking like a poor man's Charlie Chaplin, Willis's grimaces and
pratfalls soon become tiresome, and there is not much cheer to be found
in the rest of the film's lacklustre cast. Even Trinder is barely
recognisable as the grumpy straight man to Wall's elastic clown.
The musical numbers are even more excruciating than the comedy,
although Patricia Kirkwood's starlet presence somehow makes them
bearable. The only reason for watching this film today is to
appreciate the magical chemistry between Tommy Trinder and Max Wall,
two of the funniest men to step onto a soundstage.
Willis and Kirkwood appeared together in another film, the slightly
more watchable
Me and My Pal (1939).
If you want to see Tommy Trinder at his best, you should dispense
with this mediocre fare and dive straight into
Sailors Three (1940)
or
Champagne Charlie (1944).
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Having pocketed a generous reward for recovering a lost valuable
fossil, Dave Smalley is persuaded to invest his windfall in the guest
house where he is staying. He soon grows tired of being a general
dogsbody and takes over the management of the guest house.
Supported by one of his more sympathetic guests, he embarks on a series
of renovations to turn it into an upmarket hotel. His landlady
and business partner is unimpressed and sets out to thwart Dave's plans
by buying the lease of the hotel...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.