A group of inept bank robbers released from prison discover that a police station has been erected over the place where they buried their stolen takings and try to recover it without being c... Read allA group of inept bank robbers released from prison discover that a police station has been erected over the place where they buried their stolen takings and try to recover it without being caught.A group of inept bank robbers released from prison discover that a police station has been erected over the place where they buried their stolen takings and try to recover it without being caught.
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Featured reviews
Carry on with the big job
From the Carry On team a cracking comedy crime caper!
Classic British comedy caper.
This is what REAL comedy is all about and I'm eternally grateful to messrs Thomas,Rothwell and Rogers for providing us with moments like these we can cherish forever.
Apparently money doesn't grow on trees even when it's planted there
Bumbling gang of crooks steal £50,000 in 1950, get caught, hide the loot in a tree, go to jail, get out 15 years later to find the tree now in the backyard of a new police station. And so it goes on – how to get that money out with various ultimately slapstick ideas conjured up by George The Brain (the inimitable Sid James). His over-loyal gang of Sylvia Syms, Dick Emery and Lance Percival back him up through thick and thin, mainly thin – it might have been an interesting plot move for Percival to have to get married as well What a shame Deryck Guyler didn't get some more lines. There's some good mundane and comedic ideas buried in here, I thought the film was pretty cool when I was 11 but that world has long gone. The only 3 women in this were all sex-mad superficial stereotypes. Favourite bits: Sid continually demanding tanners for the telescope; hiding the earth from the digging a la Great Escape, some typically coarse – but side-splitting – solutions to that particular problem! Flat humour for most of the film, just when it seemed to be getting going it was gone – obviously abiding by the maxim to always leave 'em asking for more.
Especially for any Brit over 40 it's easy viewing, an enjoyable familiar farce featuring familiar faces.
An Ealing type of tale from the Carry On team
Did you know
- TriviaMost of the production team had worked on the previous year's 'Carry on Spying' (1964) where the producers had decided that would be the last Carry On film shot on black & white film. Originally, only the beginning of "The Big Job" (the original robbery was set in 1950) was planned to be in black and white and the modern scenes shot in color but when carrying out a pre-production audit of what props and cameras would be available for this film's shoot, it was noted that there was still a lot of unused cans of perfectly good 35mm monochrome film stock available. As there were no major black & white 35mm productions planned for the major UK studios in the near future and as television productions tended to use 16mm film or videotape, the production company was offered the last of the old unused monochrome film stock on the cheap. They duly obliged, which is why this film became a completely black and white production at the last minute and why it was one of the last black and white films shot at Pinewood.
- GoofsIn a scene where the robbers are climbing into the police station back yard, the ladder they are using does not reach the top of the wall. However, when they drop down on the other side, the top of the ladder is at least 2 feet above the wall. Similarly when George first spies the ladder against the girl's window, it reaches above the window ledge, but when the young man climbs it when the couple are eloping, it does not reach to the window.
- Quotes
[under sufference, George has got married to Myrtle; the registrar has just pronounced them husband and wife]
George Brain: [to the registrar] You haven't heard the last of this. I shall appeal.
- Alternate versionsWhen originally released theatrically in the UK, the BBFC made cuts to secure a 'U' rating.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Talkies: Jim Moir (Vic Reeves Takes Over): Part 1 (2017)
- SoundtracksPoliceman's Song
(uncredited)
from "The Pirates of Penzance"
Lyrics by W.S. Gilbert
Music by Arthur Sullivan
Sung by Jim Dale (Harold) and the police choir, and used as a theme during the film.
- How long is The Big Job?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- What a Carry On: The Big Job
- Filming locations
- The Crown pub, High Street, Chalfont St Giles, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(bank robbery at Central & District Bank)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 25m(85 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1





