Up Pompeii (film)
Up Pompeii | |
---|---|
Directed by | Bob Kellett |
Written by | Sid Colin |
Based on | an idea by Talbot Rothwell |
Produced by | Ned Sherrin |
Starring | Frankie Howerd Michael Hordern Barbara Murray |
Cinematography | Ian Wilson |
Edited by | Al Gell |
Music by | Carl Davis |
Production companies | Anglo-EMI London Associated Films |
Distributed by | MGM-EMI |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £200,000[1] |
Up Pompeii is a 1971 British sex comedy film directed by Bob Kellett and starring Frankie Howerd and Michael Hordern.[2] It was written by Sid Colin based on an idea by Talbot Rothwell.
It is based on characters that first appeared in the British television sitcom Up Pompeii! (1969–1975).
Plot
[edit]Lurcio becomes the inadvertent possessor of a scroll bearing all the names of the proposed assassins of Nero. The conspirators need to recover the scroll fast, but it has fallen into the hands of Lurcio's master, Ludicrus Sextus, who mistakenly reads the contents of the scroll to the Senate. Farcical attempts are made to retrieve the scroll before Pompeii is eventually consumed by the erupting Vesuvius.
Cast
[edit]- Frankie Howerd as Lurcio
- Michael Hordern as Ludicrus Sextus
- Barbara Murray as Ammonia
- Patrick Cargill as Nero
- Lance Percival as Bilius
- Bill Fraser as Prosperus Maximus
- Julie Ege as Voluptua
- Adrienne Posta as Scrubba
- Bernard Bresslaw as Gorgo (Nero's Champion)
- Madeline Smith as Erotica
- Roy Hudd as Nero's M.C.
- Hugh Paddick as priest
- Royce Mills as Nausius
- Rita Webb as Cassandra
- Lally Bowers as Procuria
- Aubrey Woods as Villanus
- Billy Walker as Prodigious
- Russell Hunter as jailor
- Laraine Humphrys as Flavia
- Kenneth Cranham as 1st Christian
- George Woodbridge as fat bather
- Derek Griffiths as steam slave
- Robert Tayman as Noxius
- Carol Hawkins as Nero's girl
- Candace Glendenning as stone girl
- Ian Trigger as Odius
Production
[edit]Ned Sherrin had produced the successfulcomedies The Virgin Soldiers (1969) and Every Home Should Have One (1970). He and Terry Glinwood formed Virgin Films, which made seven films beginning with this and included its sequels Up the Chastity Belt (1971) and Up the Front (1971), then Rentadick (1972), Girl Stroke Boy (1971), The Alf Garnett Saga (1972) and The National Health (1973).
Franke Howerd's agent Beryl Vertue sold the idea of a film version of Up Pompeii to Nat Cohen. Sherrin wrote Cohen "had spotted the potency of cheap TV spin-offs and was envious of the Boulting brothers’ success with Till Death Us Do Part (1968)." Cohen hired Sherrin to produce.[3]
In May 1970 it was announced the film would be the first in a series of comedies produced by Ned Sherrin for Anglo-EMI, the second of which would be The Last Virgin Left Alive from a script by Eleanor Bron and John Fortune based on the novel Jam Today by Susan Barratt.[4] Anglo-EMI's head Nat Cohen said "I am convinced the key to recapturing large cinema audiences is a good, uproarious comedy."[5] The deal was negotiated by Vertue, a director of London Associated Films Limited with Cohen and Sherrin.[6]
Sherrin felt "Frankie’s unique comic quality had never been captured on the screen. Nor did we, despite the ingenuity of the director, Bob Kellett, really manage to pin it down."[3] Sherrin says this was because Howerd performed best in front of a live audience and struggled without it. "He was often very funny, particularly in the first two films of the series, but still a fraction of his commanding presence on stage."[7]
Talbot Rothwell wrote the scripts to the television series but was busy writing Carry On movies so the screenplay was written by Sid Colin.[citation needed]
The Robert Stigwood Organisation had money in the film.[8] In March 1972 Stigwood would buy out Virgin Films.[9]
Filming took place at MGM-EMI Elstree Film Studios, Borehamwood, in August 1970. Billy Walker the boxer was given his first screen role.[10] The producers were able to use left over sets from Julius Caesar (1970) which had just finished filming.[11]
A version was made for American audiences with six minutes of additional footage including a prologue and epilogue and Lurcio setting the scene.[1]
Reception
[edit]Box office
[edit]The film was the 10th most popular film at the British box office in 1971.[12][13] By June 1972 it had earned EMI a profit of £20,000.[14] It led to two sequels.
Critical
[edit]The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Although the screenplay is credited to Sid Colin, Up Pompeii is distinguishable only by its length from the TV comedy series written by Talbot Rothwell. The jokes are not merely similar but in some cases actually the same; and apart from the clumsily staged eruption of Vesuvius and collapse of Pompeii evidence of an attempt to translate television into cinema is slight. However, the cast is more illustrious than usual, and in addition to Frankie Howerd's asides, fans of the series have an extra treat in Patrick Cargill's accomplished portrayal of boredom in the person of the Emperor Nero."[15]
The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 2/5 stars, writing: "Unfortunately, the blatantly obvious Carry On-style formula (the cast even features Carry On regular Bernard Bresslaw) only works sporadically. There's more interest in trying to put names to the plethora of familiar British faces in the cast, among them Patrick Cargill as the Emperor Nero and Michael Hordern as the unfortunate Ludicrus Sextus."[16]
Leslie Halliwell said: "Yawnmaking spinoff of a lively TV comedy series: the jokes just lie there, and die there."[17]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Moody, Paul (19 October 2018). EMI Films and the Limits of British Cinema. Springer. p. 104. ISBN 9783319948034.
- ^ "Up Pompeii". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 2 March 2024.
- ^ a b Sherrin p 202
- ^ "Cinema". Acton Gazette. 14 May 1970. p. 28.
- ^ "Cinema now for Frankie's UP Pompeii". Evening Standard. 1 May 1970. p. 10.
- ^ "Anglo EMI to make new comedy series". Kine Weekly. 2 May 1970. p. 3.
- ^ Sherrin p 203
- ^ City comment: Thanks to the pound Swan, Hunter; Stigwood, Robert. The Guardian, 2 Aug 1972: 16.
- ^ "Stigwood to control virgin films". The Guardian Journal. 23 March 1972. p. 10.
- ^ "Not a wilder lady, but more amorous". Grimsby Evening Telegraph. 30 December 1970. p. 10.
- ^ Sherrin p 204
- ^ Waymark, Peter (30 December 1971). "Richard Burton top draw in British cinemas". The Times. London, England. p. 2.
- ^ Harper, Sue (2011). British Film Culture in the 1970s: The Boundaries of Pleasure: The Boundaries of Pleasure. Edinburgh University Press. p. 269. ISBN 9780748654260.
- ^ Moody, Paul (19 October 2018). EMI Films and the Limits of British Cinema. Springer. p. 83. ISBN 9783319948034.
- ^ "Up Pompeii". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 38 (444): 84. 1 January 1971 – via ProQuest.
- ^ Radio Times Guide to Films (18th ed.). London: Immediate Media Company. 2017. p. 982. ISBN 9780992936440.
- ^ Halliwell, Leslie (1989). Halliwell's Film Guide (7th ed.). London: Paladin. p. 1072. ISBN 0586088946.
Notes
[edit]- Sherrin, Ned (2006). Ned Sherrin : the autobiography. Time Warner. ISBN 9780751534245.
External links
[edit]- Up Pompeii at IMDb
- Up Pompeii at Letterbox DVD
- Up Pompeii at TCMDB
- 1971 films
- 1970s sex comedy films
- 1970s historical comedy films
- British sex comedy films
- British historical comedy films
- Films shot at EMI-Elstree Studios
- Films shot in England
- Films based on television series
- Films directed by Bob Kellett
- Films scored by Carl Davis
- Films set in 1st-century Roman Empire
- Films set in 79 AD
- Pompeii in popular culture
- EMI Films films
- 1971 comedy films
- Films with screenplays by Sid Colin
- Depictions of Nero on film
- Films about assassinations
- 1970s English-language films
- 1970s British films
- English-language historical comedy films
- English-language sex comedy films