Smashing Time
Smashing Time is a 1967 British comedy film starring Rita Tushingham and Lynn Redgrave. It is a satire on the 1960s media-influenced phenomenon of Swinging London. It was written by George Melly and directed by Desmond Davis. The supporting cast includes Ian Carmichael, Michael York, Jeremy Lloyd, Anna Quayle, Irene Handl, Arthur Mullard and Geoffrey Hughes.
Smashing Time | |
---|---|
Directed by | Desmond Davis |
Produced by | Roy Millichip Carlo Ponti |
Written by | George Melly |
Starring | Rita Tushingham Lynn Redgrave Michael York |
Music by | John Addison Skip Bifferty |
Cinematography | Manny Wynn |
Edited by | Barrie Vince |
Production company | Partisan Productions Selmur Pictures (as Selmur Productions) |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $630,000[1] |
Box office | $290,000[1] |
Plot
Brenda (Rita Tushingham) and Yvonne (Lynn Redgrave), two girls from the North of England, arrive in London to seek fame and fortune. However, their image of the city is quickly tarnished when they are robbed of their savings by a tramp. Determined not to let her chance slip, Yvonne visits Carnaby Street in the hope of catching the eye of a trendy photographer, whilst Brenda has to stay behind and do the washing up in a greasy spoon cafe after the girls cannot afford to pay.
Yvonne does get spotted by a trendy photographer, Tom Wabe (Michael York), but is singled out for being poorly dressed. After several unsuccessful job attempts, she accidentally wins the star prize in a television game show and decides to invest the prize money in becoming a pop star. Her single, "I'm So Young", though patently awful, becomes a big hit and she and Brenda drift apart. As Tom Wabe's muse, Brenda goes on to become a top model, while Yvonne's popularity wanes. However, at a glamorous party at the top of the Post Office Tower, the girls realise the shallowness of the media business and decide to return home.
Cast
- Rita Tushingham as Brenda
- Lynn Redgrave as Yvonne
- Michael York as Tom Wabe
- Anna Quayle as Charlotte Brillig
- Irene Handl as Mrs. Gimble
- Ian Carmichael as Bobby Mome-Rath
- Jeremy Lloyd as Jeremy Tove
- Toni Palmer as Toni
- George A. Cooper as Irishman
- Peter Jones as Dominic
- Arthur Mullard as Cafe Boss
- Ronnie Stevens as 1st Waiter
- John Clive as Sweeney Todd Manager
- Mike Lennox as Disc Jockey
- Sydney Bromley as Tramp
- David Lodge as The Caretaker
- Amy Dalby as Demolished Old lady
- Murray Melvin as 1st Exquisite
- Bruce Lacey as Clive Sword
- Cardew Robinson as Custard-Pie Vicar
- Tomorrow as The Snarks
- Paul Danquah as 2nd Exquisite
- Michael Ward as Elderly Shop Owner
- Sam Kydd as Workman
- Geoffrey Hughes as Workman
- Jerold Wells as Workman
- Veronica Carlson as Actress at Party
- Valerie Leon as Tove's Secretary
Production notes
The film reunited Redgrave, Tushingham and director Davis from the 1964 film Girl with Green Eyes. Similarly, Murray Melvin and Paul Danquah, Tushingham's co-stars in A Taste of Honey, appear in cameo roles as boutique shop customers. Geoffrey Hughes, later to become familiar to millions as Eddie Yeats in Coronation Street, appears as a workman. The then-popular BBC series Juke Box Jury is parodied as Hi-Fi Court, and the UK version of the hidden camera series Candid Camera is parodied as You Can't Help Laughing!
Private Eye magazine at the time referred to the Queen and Princess Margaret as, respectively, Brenda and Yvonne. Some of the characters' names are borrowed from Lewis Carroll's poetry, chiefly the nonsense poem Jabberwocky: Charlotte Brillig, Tom Wabe, Mrs Gimble, Bobby Mome-Rath, Jeremy Tove, Toni Mimsy, and The Snarks (the rock band played by Tomorrow). Additionally, the futuristic art exhibition is held at the Jabberwock Gallery.
The film was nominated for a Golden Globe (Best English-Language Foreign Film) in 1968. The theme tune was sung by Tushingham and Redgrave, who also performed several of the numbers in the film. In the 1993 BBC series Hollywood UK, about the British film industry in the 1960s, the actresses appeared in the back of a London taxi singing the theme again.
Reception
The film performed poorly at the box office and ABC recorded a loss of $710,000.[1] The film critic Alexander Walker noted that the film arrived too late to parody 'Swinging London' as the fad was already dead.[2]
References
- "ABC's 5 Years of Film Production Profits & Losses", Variety, 31 May 1973 p 3
- Walker, Alexander (1974) Hollywood England: The British Film Industry in the Sixties, Michael Joseph.