You Must Be Joking! (1965 film)

You Must Be Joking! is a 1965 black and white British comedy film directed by Michael Winner and starring Michael Callan, Lionel Jeffries, and Denholm Elliott.[1] It was written by Alan Hackney, from a story by Winner.

You Must Be Joking!
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMichael Winner
Screenplay byAlan Hackney
Jan Read
from a story by Michael Winner
Produced byCharles H. Schneer
StarringMichael Callan
Lionel Jeffries
Denholm Elliott
CinematographyGeoffrey Unsworth
Edited byBernard Gribble
Music byLaurie Johnson
Production
company
Ameran
Distributed byColumbia Pictures Corporation (UK)
Release date
  • 3 August 1965 (1965-08-03) (London)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The format of the film, four people each doing six tasks linked to a scavenger hunt, allows for 24 otherwise somewhat unconnected comedy vignettes, which jointly create the story line. The items (purportedly representing British identity) include flying ducks for the wall, an English rose, the Spirit of Ecstasy from a Rolls-Royce car, an electric hare from a greyhound race and the Lutine Bell.

Plot

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Major Foskett, a British Army psychologist, assembles four soldiers for a testing task: Sergeant Major McGregor (complete with kilt and bearskin), Captain Tabasco, Sergeant Clegg (a father of nine), Staff Sergeant Mansfield and United States Air Force Lieutenant Morton. They have their initiative tested in a scavenger hunt.

Their first task is to escape a maze. Tabasco orders up a helicopter to take him out and two others take a ride, but Clegg is left in the maze.

They are instructed to obtain six items, supposedly symbols of the British way of life. The reward for the winner is to be fast-tracked for promotion and a ten-day, all-expenses-paid trip around the world for two. Among the feats to be accomplished within 48 hours are escaping from a maze, retrieving a rare rose and the mascot from a Rolls-Royce motorcar, and procurement of a lock of hair and an autograph from a popular French singer. The final challenge involves the famous Lutine bell from the Underwriting Room of Lloyd's of London. MacGregor arrives at the finish line by parachute, Tabasco comes in an ambulance, Clegg digs his way in from below. Morton arrives last (by car), but is declared the winner and resigns.

General Lockwood is arrested for misuse of the requisition system. Foskett is arrested for conspiracy to steal the Lutine Bell.

Cast

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Production

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The film was based on an original story by Michael Winner which was inspired by a real army initiative test where soldiers were asked to get as far away as possible from their camp at Catterick. He hired Alan Hackney, who had written several Boulting Brothers screenplays, to write the script.[2]

While looking for finance, Winner was approached to make a film with the Dave Clark Five, but Winner did not like the idea. Charles H. Schneer liked the Hackney script and agreed to make it under a deal he had with Columbia and Winner says he suggested John Boorman take over the Dave Clark movie. Winner said Columbia insisted that Michael Callan play a lead role. Winner called the actor "a nice fellow who didn't sell the film in America and didn't help it in England either."[3]

Winner hired a cameraman who felt they could not film in the locations that had been chosen, so Winner replaced him with Geoff Unsworth.

Johnny Speight did some uncredited writing on the film.[4]

Critical reception

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Winner says the film received good reviews but was not popular at the box office.[5]

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "In spite of the enormous odds against it, all the old jokes come off again quite well. Highlights are Terry-Thomas, blowing a hunting horn as he pursues escaped contestants with a view to throwing them back into the maze, and becoming hopelessly entangled with a real fox hunt; and Michael Callan madly parodying a television dance routine. Also the new waviness, now bringing its share of frozen shots and speeded-up photography to even as unlikely a subject as this, can be said to enliven the look of things somewhat."[6]

TV Guide called the film: "Lunacy and laughs galore, with director Winner's gimmicky style much in evidence."[7]

Hal Erickson wrote in The New York Times: "Director Michael Winner was still in his 'mad mod' period when he lensed the wacky goings-on of You Must be Joking? His Death Wish pictures of the 1970s were in 1965 as remote as another galaxy."[8]

References

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Note: references 2–5 refer to the "location numbers" used on the Kindle edition of the book Winner Take All: A life of Sorts (Winner, 2004). These numbers are dependent on the zoom factor in effect when viewing the e-book, so are not helpful as general page references. These references should be replaced with page numbers from the paper/PDF edition of the book.

  1. ^ "You Must Be Joking!". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 30 December 2023.
  2. ^ Winner loc 1562 of 5856
  3. ^ Winner loc 1567 of 5856
  4. ^ Winner loc 1573 of 5856
  5. ^ Winner loc 1609 of 5856
  6. ^ "You Must Be Joking!". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 32 (372): 140. 1 January 1965 – via ProQuest.
  7. ^ "You Must Be Joking! Review". Movies.tvguide.com. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
  8. ^ Hal Erickson (2014). "You-Must-Be-Joking- – Trailer – Cast – Showtimes". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved 8 March 2014.

Winner, Michael (2004). Winner Take All: A life of Sorts (Kindle ed.).

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