Film Review
With its well-honed satirical swipe at press intrusion and the cult of
celebrity, this classic British comedy has somehow managed to remain
topical since the day it was first released, and never more so than
today. A superlative cast comprising the cream of British comedy
and an unflaggingly funny screenplay from Michael Pertwee makes this
one of the most enjoyable and memorable of 1950s British film
comedies. It was directed by Mario Zampi, who not only co-founded
the production company Two Cities Films but also helmed many a classic
comedy, including
Laughter in Paradise (1951) and
Too Many Crooks (1959).
Although Terry-Thomas gets top-billing and is superb, as ever, as the
loveable upper-crust cad, it is Peter Sellers who steals the film as
the obnoxious quick-change artiste Sonny MacGregor. At the time,
Sellers was best known for his work on the BBC radio series
The Goon Show, and this was one of
the films that set him on the road to international stardom as a film
actor. This kind of unhinged black comedy is where Peter Sellers
is at his best, perfectly cast as the bungling anti-hero who is both sinister
and excruciatingly funny.
Peggy Mount and Joan Sims also deserve
a mention: with their inordinate flair for comedy, these two marvellous performers
provide the biggest laughs and could almost have carried the film by
themselves. Add the impeccable Dennis Price and stunning Shirley
Eaton to the mix and how could
The
Naked Truth fail to be anything less than a fun-filled classic?
They don't make them like they used to.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Nigel Dennis is the proprietor of the magazine
The Naked Truth in which he exposes
the sordid private lives of well-known celebrities. Before he
prints these damaging exposés he offers his victims a chance to
save their reputations: if they pay him a large sum of money, the
article will be withdrawn. Tight-fisted television host Sonny
MacGregor has no intention of handing over a bean to Dennis and decides
to murder him. Instead, he almost kills another of Dennis's
victims, the disreputable Lord Henry Mayley. The latter narrowly
escapes death a second time when the eccentric writer Flora Ransom,
mistaking him for Dennis, tries to drown him, with the assistance of
her daughter. Realising that they have a common interest,
Mayley, MacGregor, Ransom and a model named Melissa Right join forces
and plan to kill their troublesome blackmailer. Unfortunately,
Nigel Dennis appears to have a charmed life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.