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The Huggetts Abroad

  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
262
YOUR RATING
The Huggetts Abroad (1949)
Comedy

A family makes a lengthy and fraught journey to South Africa by truck after their son-in-law gets a job in the country.A family makes a lengthy and fraught journey to South Africa by truck after their son-in-law gets a job in the country.A family makes a lengthy and fraught journey to South Africa by truck after their son-in-law gets a job in the country.

  • Director
    • Ken Annakin
  • Writers
    • Keith Campbell
    • Gerard Bryant
    • Ted Willis
  • Stars
    • Jack Warner
    • Kathleen Harrison
    • Dinah Sheridan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    262
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ken Annakin
    • Writers
      • Keith Campbell
      • Gerard Bryant
      • Ted Willis
    • Stars
      • Jack Warner
      • Kathleen Harrison
      • Dinah Sheridan
    • 11User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos16

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    Top cast35

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    Jack Warner
    Jack Warner
    • The Huggett Family - Father
    Kathleen Harrison
    Kathleen Harrison
    • The Huggett Family - Mother
    Dinah Sheridan
    Dinah Sheridan
    • The Huggett Family - Jane
    Susan Shaw
    Susan Shaw
    • The Huggett Family - Susan
    Petula Clark
    Petula Clark
    • The Huggett Family - Pet
    Jimmy Hanley
    Jimmy Hanley
    • Jimmy
    Peter Hammond
    Peter Hammond
    • Peter
    Amy Veness
    Amy Veness
    • Grandma
    Hugh McDermott
    Hugh McDermott
    • Bob McCoy
    John Blythe
    John Blythe
    • Gowan
    Everley Gregg
    Everley Gregg
    • Miss Phipps
    Esma Cannon
    Esma Cannon
    • Brown Owl
    Brian Oulton
    Brian Oulton
    • Travel Clerk
    Olaf Pooley
    Olaf Pooley
    • Straker
    Martin Miller
    Martin Miller
    • Customs Official
    Meinhart Maur
    • Jeweller
    Philo Hauser
    • Egyptian
    Peter Illing
    Peter Illing
    • Algerian Detective
    • Director
      • Ken Annakin
    • Writers
      • Keith Campbell
      • Gerard Bryant
      • Ted Willis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    5.7262
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    Featured reviews

    5CinemaSerf

    The Huggetts Abroad

    Easily the most far-fetched outing for our stoical post-war British family, this one sees them embark on a trans-African trip after "Father" (Jack Warner) loses his job and "Jimmy" (Jimmy Hanley) manages to get himself one - in Johannesburg. Needless to say, they haven't two farthings to rub together, and when poor old daughter "Jane" (Dinah Sheridan) can't get a visa to accompany her husband the whole family (with varying degrees of willingness) decide to decamp - by truck - and drive the 4,000-odd miles. Luckily (or not) they have the slightly iffy character of "Bob" (Hugh McDermott) to help (?) them so off they go. It's preposterous, from start to finish - even if back then, Britain still controlled great chunks of Africa. The comedy is absurd and the normally reliable leadership of Warner and on-screen wife Kathleen Harrison is subsumed into an almost episodic lesson in rather poorly written and executed slapstick. The charm and cheeriness of these films was always their selling point. This has neither, really, and at 90 minutes is far too long, too.
    3chrisandsere

    Rather slow nostalgia trip

    If you remember the Huggets then probably this film is for you. It follows the family attempting to escape from austerity England to South Africa, and getting caught up in some diamond smuggling along the way.

    The plot is paper thin (so much so that it almost disappears at one point), and the direction moves in fits and starts, but if you're feeling nostalgic for the days when we believed in the stereotypes for foreigners because we had no experience to teach us better, then you'll like this. Interestingly enough, the only out and out baddie in the film is another Englishman - even the Canadian diamond smuggler is a lovable rogue.

    The film is made palatable for me, however, by Jack Warner, who despite playing more or less the same character as his subsequent Dixon of Dock Green (and The Blue Lamp) police sergeant, exudes an irresistible avuncular warmth, and Pet Clark, whose bubbly performance helps raise the rest of the family out of the mire that an uninspired screenplay tries to put them. She also gets to sing, though you'd never believe this little girl is the same as she who sang Downtown.
    6richardchatten

    The Huggetts on Safari

    The title of the last gasp of the Huggett series - Gainsborough Pictures itself soon followed later the same year - lead me to expect comic frolics abroad like 'Carry On Abroad', but it turns out to be a fairly rugged adventure film, albeit constructed around the Huggett family, with actual desert footage directed by editor Alan Osbiston surprisingly effectively integrated with studio-shot scenes of the Huggetts themselves. (Did emigrants to South Africa really get there in the late forties by trekking across the Sahara?)

    Esma Cannon, who was murdered in the original 'Holiday Camp', surprisingly pops up briefly in a completely different role in this film as Petula Clark's scoutmistress.
    5bkoganbing

    Johannesburg here we come

    The third film concerning the Huggett family has them in all kinds of problems. Jack Warner has lost his job and his son-in-law can't get passage for his wife Dinah Sheridan and himself to South Africa where a job awaits. So the whole Huggett clan, Warner, Kathleen Harrison, Hanley and Sheridan and the two other daughters Susan Shaw and Petula Clark decide to move bag and baggage to South Africa.

    Here's what I don't get. For some reason they decide that it might be cheaper and faster to go overland from Algiers to Johannesburg and that's over 4000 miles through some nasty country, not all of it a colony of the United Kingdom. It seems so preposterous it's the reason I can't give The Huggetts Abroad a higher rating.

    They also get some assistance from Hugh McDermott who has his own reasons for wanting to get out of Great Britain quickly and quietly.

    With these British city folk in the Sahara desert The Huggetts Abroad is far more serious than the two previous Huggett films. If it weren't for the black and white I'd swear I was watching scenes from Legend Of The Lost.

    Best part of the film is Petula Clark's singing. Before she became an international pop star in the 60s with Downtown she was a Deanna Durbin/Judy Garland like child star in the UK. Voice like Garland's a little Miss Fixit personality like Durbin's. But very pleasing to listen to.

    Huggett Family fans of which there are many should like this one despite the impracticality of the premise.
    6JoeytheBrit

    The Huggetts Abroad review

    The decision to take the Huggetts out of their natural habitat and dump them in the African desert was misguided enough to spell disaster for the series. The usually light-hearted nature of the films is also abandoned for this tale of diamond smuggling in which Pa Huggett and his prospective son-in-law undertake an arduous trek across the desert when supplies run short. It's watchable enough, but lacks the spirit of the other movies in the series.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The last of the Huggett films. A sequel, "Christmas with the Huggetts", was planned but never made.
    • Goofs
      Mrs Huggett who had been soaking wet seconds earlier gets in the house and apart from a few drops on the shoulders of her coat she's bone dry.
    • Crazy credits
      [Following the opening credits, the following disclaimer]: The Huggett Family, which made its screen debut in "Holiday Camp", appears again in this film.

      Since the name of the family was chosen it has been brought to our notice that a Mr. and Mrs. Vane Huggett and their family made a trek across Africa, subsequently returning to England.

      This film does not relate to Mr. and Mrs. Vane Huggett and their family and is not in any way based on their experiences.

      On the contrary, all characters and events are fictitious.

      Any similarity to actual events, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
    • Connections
      Follows Holiday Camp (1947)
    • Soundtracks
      House in the Sky
      Music by Peter Hart

      Lyrics by Jack Fishman

      Sung by Petula Clark (uncredited)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 1949 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Gainsborough Studios, Islington, London, England, UK(studio: made at Gainsborough Studios, London, England.)
    • Production company
      • Gainsborough Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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