Yet another modish Hollywood comedy caper which employs a convoluted plot to escalate confusion. Hamburg-based bank security chief Warren Beatty observes various...
Adapted from Ludovic Kennedy’s splendid book and featuring Sir Lord Richard of Attenborough’s best performance. The true story of a man –...
Post-Jaws and Close Encounters, Steven Spielberg emerged fresh from having ‘Wunderkind’ installed as a middle name to tackle a genre for which...
“Gooooot a whale of a tale to tell you lads, a whale of a tale or two-oo…” Kirk ‘snails’ Douglas steals the...
Fresh from his yak-toting cameo in Head, Frank Zappa made this gorggy orgy of groupies, frogs and horses, and suddenly the Monkees...
Fankie and Deano pal about down Galveston way, setting up a riverboat casino and copping off with Ursula Andress and Anita Ekberg...
War – or rather anti-war – propaganda from Powell (this time with Pressburger) and a story of a U-Boat landing in Canada...
Of course, the bonus about “doing” a historical epic about the Boxer rebellion is that practically no-one will question the facts because...
A celebration of London and friendship gets off to a slow, stiff-upper-lipped start
Vincent Price is a disfigured doctor, out to off the surgeons who bungled his late wife's operation in assorted arch manners based...
This is hardly the epitome of Swinging Britain, based as it is on a play from 1923. Carnaby Street military jacket purchasers...
The film of the book of the war! Struggling manfully to match the genius of the book this doesn’t quite make it...
Well, we all know about the on-set woes that dogged this baroque Gilliam escapade – language problems and heat exhaustion in Rome,...
Barry Humphries can be an amazingly subtle comedian when he feels like it. Not so with this creation, an endless fusillade of...
With Robin Askwith’s red-arsed Confessions ruling cinemas nationwide for no readily explained reason, sleaze kingpin Stanley Long got onto the cinematic equivalent...
Black, black, black is the colour of this comedy from Scorsese – his only entry in the list, and one from his...
Americo-Brito-Italian comedy by Neil Simon, wherein Peter Sellers, yet again as a criminal plotting an elaborate robbery, gets to try out endless...
During the shooting for this, Jacqueline Bisset used to spend some time gathering herself before filming to get her character right. This,...
The one with Jack Lemmon, clearly raising the money for that beach house in Malibu, though not a patch on Robert Wagner’s...
Hurray! The most implausible of all the Airport films, and by Jove, that’s saying something. Yes, even more unlikely than George Kennedy...
Ah, yet another slice of ’70s self-indulgence. Paul Mazursky, fresh from Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice success, follows it up...
Still scripted by Speight but with Stubbs and Booth unaccountably replaced by Michael Angelis and Adrienne Posta, this second stab at getting...
Over here, Cecil!
“Yes, I’m mainly known for my roles in films such as Blow Up, but I am also a quite accomplished television director,...
The only one in the series which doesn’t bring to mind a party of sullen Spanish school kids queueing at the Trocadero.
Yes, we know its ‘Alien Cubed’ or whatever, but our database doesn’t allow such superscriptorial folderol to be perpetrated in headers, and...
We’ve always insisted this Jamy Cameron effort was better than the first Riddler Scott number and we’re sticking to our guns. We...
Various old Ealing themes (Passport to Pimlico, Kind Hearts) are tied up in this late-period offering, with an unseaworthy Alec Guinness turning...
Roy Scheider might well be advised to have a nice lie down here, as the all-singing, all-dancing, all-choreographing, all Lenny Bruce-biopic-editing, all-womanising,...
Ingmar Bergman doing funny is like Woody doing serious – he can manage it, but when he tries too hard at it,...
No one likes this film much, but we do, if only because it excitingly ties up two of our filmic obsessions –...
In between The Railway Children and Wombling Free – in quality terms as well as chronologically – Lionel ‘POSH’ Jeffries directed this...
“Never spoof horror,” those in the filmic know (and Steve Coogan’s accountant) always say, “it’s beyond parody already.” Interesting, then, that three...
The curio’s curio, this one. A Rank musical comedy wherein we have to take it on trust that a) Donald Sinden is...
In which Brian ‘Avengers’ Clemens turns in what amounts to a proto-Thriller episode about two girls (Pamela Franklin and Michele Dotrice) on...
Michael Denison and Dulcie Gray – the Leo and Kate of British films, albeit better spoken – star alongside Jack Hawkins in...
Woody’s masterclass in sticking little bits of angst-ridden stand-up routine together and doing little holes round the edges remains quite unlike any...
Eyepatch and cigarette holder-toting widowed matriarch Bette Davis dominates her three meek sons as one of them prepares to marry Sheila Hancock...
Hapless trashmasters Cannon Films fancy some disco musical action, and concoct a trite tale of a Canadian couple who enter the Worldvision...
Yep, it’s a Doris Day film again, of the sort shown on British TV with such frequency as to make British TV’s...
After the immaculate original Charade (OK, ‘original’ isn’t an entirely apposite word, but that non-stop mish-mash of the campier elements of North...
On the tarmac the joke is presented, “Those people down there look small enough to be ants,” the answer is proffered, “They...
‘We’re on our way!’ Dudley Moore does his (in retrospect now rather uncomfortable to watch) millionaire dipso routine once more. Liza Minnelli...
Hooray! Asterix on film; what could be better? Quite a lot, as it turns out, because what all Asterix films miss is...
‘Come to the Asylum… to get killed!’ Robert Powell ignores this wise tagline as a trainee doctor at the titular establishment, asked...
A poor MGM Marx Brothers affair.
Black-and-white quarry-bound Cormania, with the titular monsters rendered in full-size, rather wobbly-pincered, lumbering fibreglass. It’s a thing, isn’t it, the life-size sci-fi...
From the panning on release to the fact that its terrestrial premiere took place on Channel 5, the world clearly had it...
Hooray! An ’80s TV version of Victor Herbert’s whimsical Yuletide operetta, just what we wanted! The version you’re thinking of starred Laurel...
Bob Hope comedy with one hell of a contrived plot. Hope’s a bachelor (of the non-confirmed variety) who makes a living writing...