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| name          = Not Now, Comrade
| name          = Not Now, Comrade
| image          = Not Now, Comrade (1976).jpg
| image          = Not Now, Comrade (1976).jpg
| caption        = British quad poster
| caption        = British poster
| director      = [[Ray Cooney]]<br />[[Harold Snoad]]
| director      = [[Ray Cooney]]<br />[[Harold Snoad]]
| based_on      = "Chase Me, Comrade" (play) by Ray Cooney
| based_on      = "Chase Me, Comrade" (play) by Ray Cooney

Revision as of 07:05, 17 September 2024

Not Now, Comrade
Not Now, Comrade (1976).jpg
British poster
Directed byRay Cooney
Harold Snoad
Written byRay Cooney
Based on"Chase Me, Comrade" (play) by Ray Cooney
Produced byMartin C. Schute
StarringLeslie Phillips
Roy Kinnear
Windsor Davies
Don Estelle
Michelle Dotrice
Ray Cooney
June Whitfield
Carol Hawkins
Lewis Fiander
Ian Lavender
CinematographyJack Hildyard
Edited byPeter Thornton
Music byHarry Robinson
Production
company
Not Now Films (Independent)
Distributed byEMI (UK)
Release date
  • 1976 (1976)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Not Now, Comrade is a 1976 British comedy film directed by Ray Cooney and Harold Snoad and starring Leslie Phillips, Windsor Davies, Don Estelle and Ian Lavender.[1] It was shot at Elstree studios as the sequel to Not Now, Darling (1973), and was the second in an intended series of "Not Now" films, with Not Now, Prime Minister pencilled in as a follow-up. But box office returns for this film, unlike those of its predecessor, were disappointing.[2][3] It was the only feature film directed by Snoad.

Plot

Russian ballet dancer Rudi Petrovyan wants to defect. Unable to reach the British embassy and pursued by the KGB, he hides out with, and falls for, stripper Barbara Wilcox. But Rudi's planned escape in the boot of a Triumph backfires when he climbs into the wrong car, and he ends up in the country home of unsuspecting naval Commander Rimmington.

Cast

Stage origins

Cooney's 1964 play Chase Me, Comrade was based on the 1961 defection of Rudolf Nureyev. First appearing in 1964 at the Theatre Royal, Windsor, Cooney himself played Gerry Buss.[4] The play became a Whitehall farce running for 765 performances between 1964 and 1966. It was televised by the BBC's Laughter from the Whitehall in August 1964[5] and again in December 1967.[6] In 1966 Cooney published a novelisation of the play. In 1981 Dutch television transmitted a version of the play called Een Kus van een Rus.[7]

Songs

Don Estelle sings "Not Now" (lyric: Sammy Cahn, music: Walter Ridley).

Critical reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Barbara removes her clothes and enthusiastically twirls her tasselled breasts; the ballet dancers posing for photographers in front of the Albert Hall spontaneously break into dance; Rudi mistakenly leaps into Rimmington's car; Barbara buttons up her blouse while angrily driving after him round Hyde Park. Having provided this obligatory glimpse of a semi-nude woman, Not Now, Comrade settles into the familiar round of harmless double entendres buried in the ramifications of a mistaken-identity plot played by the familiar troupers of British farce – Roy Kinnear, the gardener perpetually on the point of repressed sexual combustion; Leslie Phillips, still the self-regarding gay blade, here complete with naval beard and yellow Bentley; June Whitfield, Nancy's homely Mum; Windsor Davies, the doubting hob-nailed Constable, and Don Estelle, arbitrarily brought on in the last reel to partner him in yet another re-run of their Indian Army routine. Master of ceremonies Ray Cooney delivers the film's most embarrassing lines (the drunken Laver indulges in cloying baby-talk) and co-directs the mirthless proceedings at great speed but in a style derived from the dated traditions of the Whitehall Theatre."[8]

The British Comedy Guide called the film "a really delightful forgotten gem of British cinema comedy".[9]

The Radio Times called it a "horrid comedy of errors," adding "for the sake of a hard-working cast, let's draw a discreet Iron Curtain over the whole charade."[10]

Time Out said it was "from the darkest days of British cinema, a farrago which began life as Cooney's Whitehall farce, Chase Me, Comrade."[11]

References

  1. ^ "Not Now, Comrade". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  2. ^ "Not now Comrade". Archived from the original on 8 November 2014. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  3. ^ "Networkonair > Features > Not Now Comrade". Networkonair.com.
  4. ^ "Chase Me Comrade". Ray-cooney-3. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  5. ^ "Chase Me Comrade!". IMDb.com. 28 August 1964. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  6. ^ "Chase Me Comrade · British Universities Film & Video Council". Bufvc.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  7. ^ "Een kus van een rus". IMDb.com. 3 March 1981. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  8. ^ "Not Now Comrade". Monthly Film Bulletin. 44 (516): 48. 1977 – via ProQuest.
  9. ^ "Not Now, Comrade". Comedy.co.uk.
  10. ^ David Parkinson. "Not Now, Comrade". RadioTimes.
  11. ^ "Not Now, Comrade". Time Out London. Archived from the original on 8 November 2014. Retrieved 8 November 2014.

External links