Film Review
When you consider the enormous impact that Tony Hancock had in Britain
as a comic performer on radio and television from the mid-1950s to the
early 1960s it comes as no surprise that he should have ended up
appearing in films. What is more surprising is how brief and
desultory Hancock's film career was, thanks mainly to the comedian's
obsessive pickiness over his scripts. Of the four films that
Hancock appeared in only two place him centre stage and make full use
of his comedic talents:
The Rebel
(1961) and
The Punch and Judy Man
(1963). The former of these was scripted by the legendary comedy
writing team of Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, who supplied the scripts
for every episode of Hancock's signature series (on radio and
television),
Hancock's Half Hour.
The film was directed by Robert Day, who had previously helmed the
classic comedy
Two Way Stretch (1960) and the
first in a series of Tarzan films beginning with
Tarzan the Magnificent (1960).
The Rebel is a humorous and
pretty merciless assault on the pretensions of the artistic set of the
1960s. In his series, Hancock was often set up to play the phoney
intellectual, parodying a glib, self-loving and culturally inadequate
stratum of society with hilarious results.
The Rebel takes its cue from
Somerset Maugham's
The Moon and
Sixpence, with Hancock giving up an unfulfilled office job in
London to indulge his artistic leanings in gay Paris, happily oblivious
to the fact that his only talent is an unerring capacity for convincing
his fellow artists that he is a genius. The casting of George
Sanders as the art dealer who 'discovers' Hancock is a nice touch -
Sanders had already played the lead in the definitive screen adaptation
of
The Moon and Sixpence.
Whilst much of the humour is broad and repetitive (definitely not up to
Galton and Simpson's usual standard), the satire is spot on and
Hancock's presence ensures that most of the gags hit home.
Existentialists portrayed as weird, over-made-up Goths get more than
their fair share of ribbing, but most of the film's bile appears to be
directed at those for whom art is just another fashionable commodity,
to be traded in and salivated over according to prevailing
tastes. There is an undercurrent of self-mockery in the film,
deriving possibly from Hancock's own chronic lack of confidence in his
abilities as a comedian. Shortly after the film was made, Hancock
ended his long-term collaboration with Galton and Simpson and would
begin a tragic decline into obscurity that ended in suicide in
1968.
The Rebel may not
be the greatest thing to which Tony Hancock lent his formidable talents
but it is an enjoyable romp that has withstood the test of time
remarkably well - and a rare treat to see the 'lad himself' in full
colour and looking startlingly rejuvenated. It should have been
the start of a whole new career, and could well have been if the film
hadn't bombed at the American box office.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
Tired of the unending monotony of his life as a lowly office clerk,
Anthony Hancock Esq. sets out for Paris to make a name for himself as
an artist. Despite his complete lack of talent, Hancock has no
difficulty persuading one struggling young painter, Paul Ashby, that he
is a genius. Paul invites Hancock to share his studio apartment
and within no time Hancock has become the darling of the bohemian set,
impressing everyone with his revolutionary notions about art.
Believing that he has no future as an artist, Paul gives up and returns
to England, just before Hancock is visited by an influential art
dealer, Sir Charles Brewer. The latter mistakes Paul's paintings
for Hancock's and, excited by his discovery, arranges to sell them to a
shipping magnate. As the money starts rolling in, Hancock can
hardly believe his good fortune, but when Sir Charles asks him to
provide further paintings for an exhibition in London he finds himself
in a terrible quandary. Is the world ready for his infantile
school of art?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.