To the PS Faithful,
Here is the splendid article reflecting the hard work of
PSAS Member Laura Camuti!
Best,
Jason
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2009/jul/26/goons-film-sellers-milligan-secombe
Peter Sellers called it
"a terrifyingly bad film" and his promised percentage of the takings
was little more than £33. But
Tomorrow, an audience at the
British Film Institute will watch Sellers and his two co-stars, Harry Secombe,
as a gormless pools winner, and Spike Milligan, as his best friend, clown
around in an amiable seaside crime caper.
Shortly after, all three
entertainers went on to transform British comedy with the Goon Show.
The BFI regards the
restoration as a significant one, a "missing link in British comedy
history". The institute's curator, Vic Pratt, said: "You are able to
see them at the beginning of their careers. The film captures the moment as
they are about to revolutionise comedy with the Goon Show and it's really
important for that reason."
A DVD of the film will be
released next month and while the movie is, as Pratt admits, "a bit rough
around the edges", it is not as bad as Sellers remembered.
Sellers, in particular,
shines in his two roles as an old major and a smooth talking salesman, Arnold P
Fringe. "In Peter Sellers, you see a talent that was fully formed from the
beginning and he clearly knows how to use the camera," said Pratt.
The restoration is about as
close to the original as is possible. It came about after Kate Lees,
granddaughter of Arthur Dent, who ran Adelphi Films, was sorting through
material once stored in the company's production office. Gathering dust were
two reels of rather battered 16mm film labelled
The restoration has been
funded by Laura Camuti, an American and a Sellers fan, who said she had grown
up loving the Pink Panther movies. She said: "I became aware of how much
of his career I didn't know about. I didn't know about the Goon Show, for
example."
She too believes the film is
much better than Sellers thought. "He was often terribly critical of his
own work," she said. "I appreciate that it's nothing like the level
of Dr Strangelove but I really enjoy his performances in this film."
"It's fair to say that
it's a bit rough around the edges," said Pratt. "It's a cheap and
cheerful film that was filmed in just three weeks.
"But it is particularly
interesting because you are seeing most of the Goons just before they made it
big and you see them honing their craft. Spike Milligan isn't playing his
normal role, he's almost the straight man, while Harry Secombe is the central
figure."
Also on the DVD are two
similarly obscure films getting an airing.
Let's Go Crazy, which was
filmed to use up a week of studio time left over from Penny Points to Paradise,
features Sellers in a series of restaurant comedy sketches playing characters
with names such as Crystal Jollibottom and Izzy Gozunk.
Milligan is also included in
the footage, playing an early version of his Eccles character from the Goons.