Kath encounters the manipulative Sloane in a cemetery and invites him to be a lodger. Her closeted brother, Ed, forbids it, but Sloane seduces both Kath and Ed. Their father recognizes Sloan... Read allKath encounters the manipulative Sloane in a cemetery and invites him to be a lodger. Her closeted brother, Ed, forbids it, but Sloane seduces both Kath and Ed. Their father recognizes Sloane and threatens to expose his murderous past.Kath encounters the manipulative Sloane in a cemetery and invites him to be a lodger. Her closeted brother, Ed, forbids it, but Sloane seduces both Kath and Ed. Their father recognizes Sloane and threatens to expose his murderous past.
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This adaptation of the brilliant Joe Orton play in an unmitigated disaster. Every joke is overdone to the point of surrealism. The wit is killed dead, and any pretense to psychology is thrown out the window in a late sixties psychedelic mish-mash completely at odds with the stage farce tone of the source material. If people like this movie, it's for the sheer oddness, not because it has any of the qualities evinced by the play. It's like watching a Noel Coward play performed by lunatics in an asylum.
Joe Orton's classic play is bought to the big screen and features just 4 eccentric characters. Young lothario, arch manipulator and potentially murderer. McEnery cons his way into love starved Beryl Reid's house by a graveyard where she lives with her old father, Webb. All is well but McEnery needs his wits about him when Reid's gay businessman brother Harry Andrews arrives.
The script is all in this witty, very dark black comedy, although the performances are spot on with Reid wonderful as the sad, past it sex mad landlady and particularly Andrews in full military swagger preaching morals to McEnery whilst still longing to get into his pants. Hilarious.
The script is all in this witty, very dark black comedy, although the performances are spot on with Reid wonderful as the sad, past it sex mad landlady and particularly Andrews in full military swagger preaching morals to McEnery whilst still longing to get into his pants. Hilarious.
Have watched this film many times and enjoy it just as much as the first time,a mark of a good film.Joe Orton certainly had a strange sense of humour very evident in this black-comedy.A must see if never seen.Perhaps immoral,so what the blazes its entertaining to say the least.Great performances from the cast.
I first saw EMr.S as a teenager who had just come out of the closet. As a child I was a fan of '60s horror films (Carradine, Cushing, et.al.) and black comedies (e.g., "No Way to Treat a Lady") and suspense/murder ("Eye of the Cat" or "Wylie", "What Happened to Aunt Alice?", "Daddy's Gone a Hunting", "Who Killed Teddy Bear?"). EMr.S, at least as I remember it after 20 years, combined those genres. The title character, handsome and bi-sexual, added the homo-eroticism that made for a very happy young gay movie fan indeed. It also led me to learn that the Brits were years ahead of Hollywood in the treatment of gay characters in movies, and I now count "Who Killed Sister George?" and "The Leather Boys" as other personal favorites.
A worthy film adaptation from a farcical play by Joe Orton. Really as fresh as the day it was made and only dated in the most endearing of ways. To be honest I have never seen anything quite like it before or since and over the years it has certainly gained a strong, cult following. The cast including Beryl Reid, Harry Andrews and Mr Sloane himself, played by Peter McEnery, are all on great form. Top Entertainment from start to finish.
Did you know
- TriviaThe car that Harry Andrews drives in the film is a Pontiac Parisienne, formerly owned by Pink Floyd's Syd Barrett and re-sprayed pink for the film. You can see Pontiac on the rear of the car when Sloane drunkenly returns to the house one night and Parisienne on the boot when Andrews removes a shotgun from it.
- GoofsWhen Andrews, Reid and McEnery are laying out the dead guy, the 'deceased's movements clearly indicate that he is at least undead.
- Crazy creditsInstead of "The End" the last title reads "AMEN".
- ConnectionsEdited into Arena: A Genius Like Us: A Portrait of Joe Orton (1982)
- SoundtracksBehold, thou hast made my days
(uncredited)
Based on Psalm 39:5
Music by Orlando Gibbons
(choral music used in the opening of the film)
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- Release date
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- Also known as
- Seid nett zu Mr. Sloane
- Filming locations
- Paddington Fire Station, Harrow Road, London, England, UK(Ed pursuing Kemp)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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