Heavens Above!
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Heavens Above! | |
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original film poster |
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Directed by | John Boulting Roy Boulting |
Produced by | John Boulting Roy Boulting |
Written by | Frank Harvey Jr. |
Starring | Peter Sellers Bernard Miles Cecil Parker |
Music by | Richard Rodney Bennett |
Cinematography | Mutz Greenbaum |
Distributed by | British Lion Films Romulus |
Release date(s) | 1963 |
Running time | 113 min. |
Country | UK |
Language | English |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Heavens Above! is a 1963 black-and-white British satirical comedy starring Peter Sellers, directed by John and Roy Boulting, who also co-wrote along with Frank Harvey, from an idea by Malcolm Muggeridge. It is in much the same vein as earlier collaborations between Sellers, Harvey and the Boultings, Private's Progress and I'm All Right Jack.
The plot features Sellers as a humble, caring vicar accidentally assigned to the comfortable country village of Orbiston Parva, in place of Ian Carmichael's upper-class cleric, with whom he shares a name. His belief in charity and forgiveness set him at odds with the selfish locals, whose assertions that they are good, Christian people are belied by their behaviour and ideas. He creates social ructions by hiring a new churchwarden, giving away food, taking in a homeless lower class family, and opposing the building of a new factory in the village. However, all his good works lead to trouble.
Like the other Boulting/Sellers films, Heavens Above! satirises contemporary attitudes and cautiously espouses a socialist ethos, while also showing the possible deleterious side-effects of such ideas, and the all-too-human tendency to take advantage of naive generosity.
The cast includes Cecil Parker as Seller's Archdeacon, William Hartnell as a town councillor, Roy Kinnear, Irene Handl, Eric Sykes, Joan Hickson and Steve Marriott[1]. Sellers' performance is generally held to be outstanding, in a meatier, more dramatic role than most he had previously taken on, but many find the ending a little ill-fitting and silly.[citation needed]
The film is also notable for its use of profanity, very daring for 1963; Sykes' character at one stage utters the line, "What if it pisses it with rain?".
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A9370415 Steve Marriott appeared in Heavens Above!