In order to cut costs and conduct practice sessions, a group of students studying at an elite music school decide to stay together. Soon, one of them finds himself in trouble.In order to cut costs and conduct practice sessions, a group of students studying at an elite music school decide to stay together. Soon, one of them finds himself in trouble.In order to cut costs and conduct practice sessions, a group of students studying at an elite music school decide to stay together. Soon, one of them finds himself in trouble.
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Did you know
- TriviaThe conductor's joke about the girl's harp sounding like skeletons making love on a tin roof is actually a paraphrase of a quip from famed British conductor Thomas Beecham, who described the sound of the harpsichord (NOT harp) as being like "skeletons copulating on a tin roof."
- GoofsWhen Mervyn (Leslie Phillips) writes his tune, he is drunk and the story about it gets sent to a music paper, gets printed and published and sent to the shops, and gets read all before his hangover from that time wears off.
- Quotes
Sir Benjamin Boyd: Madam, must you make that noise?
Jill Clemons: Yes, Sir Benjamin.
Sir Benjamin Boyd: Is there some defect in your instrument?
Jill Clemons: Oh no, Sir Benjamin.
Sir Benjamin Boyd: It would appear to sound like two skeletons making love on a tin roof.
Jill Clemons: I'm sorry, Sir Benjamin, I had an accident on the way here.
Taxi Driver: [arriving] I'll say she had an accident. Cost me a fare that has. And what I say is, what about my flippin' bumper?
Sir Benjamin Boyd: And who the devil may you be, sir?
Taxi Driver: I just want to exchange addresses with the young lady.
Sir Benjamin Boyd: Although you might find it hard to believe, this is a concert hall and not a marriage bureau.
Jill Clemons: I'm sorry, Sir Benjamin, it's my fault. I backed into him.
Sir Benjamin Boyd: Madam, tacit if you please. And you sir, shut your cake hole. If you wish to interview the young lady, I must ask you to wait outside. And I may add that if her driving is on a par with her musicianship, you may think yourself extremely fortunate to be alive.
[to the orchestra]
Sir Benjamin Boyd: Now gentlemen, we shall take the final section. From bar 224 if you please.
With an impressive sounding Carry-On cast featuring quite a few famous names from British comedy I was quite looking forward to this being a gently amusing little piece. Sadly I was fooled and this film turned out to be as weak and unfunny as you can imagine. The plot sees some of the oldest students I've seen sharing a flat; from here the plot has a few adventures, before splitting to be about Hughes' drunken mistakes and Malcolm's attempts to win a conducting prize. None of it really engages and, more importantly, none of it is ever really funny.
It's a shame cause you can see what they are trying to do, but none of it works and the talented cast are left high and dry without anything that is more than sporadically funny. Phillips does his usual stuff but he isn't that good; Fraser is cast as a dream girl but I have never found her looks to be worthy of that sort of role. The rest of the students seem quite bland and unmemorable - making it hard to care. Justice is OK and has good screen presence and the support cast includes cameos from James, Williams and Dale but they don't do much.
Overall this is a pretty big disappointment. The plot doesn't engage but that wouldn't matter if I'd laughed at least once or twice - but I didn't. A talented cast may draw viewers to this film but I can guarantee that they won't be enough to keep you watching. A real shame - puts paid to the idea that British comedy of the period could do no wrong.
- bob the moo
- Feb 28, 2004
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Details
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1