Sir Henry at Rawlinson End (film)

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Sir Henry at Rawlinson End

Sir Henry at Rawlinson End DVD
Directed by Steve Roberts
Produced by Tony Stratton-Smith
Written by Vivian Stanshall and Steve Roberts
Narrated by Vivian Stanshall
Starring Trevor Howard
Patrick Magee
Denise Coffey
J. G. Devlin
Harry Fowler
Sheila Reid
Jeremy Child
Liz Smith
Music by Vivian Stanshall
Cinematography Martin Bell
Editing by Chris Rose
Distributed by Digital Classics DVD
Release date(s) 1980
Running time 73 min.
Country U.K.
Language English
Official website
IMDb profile

Sir Henry at Rawlinson End is a 1980 British film based on the eponymous character created by Vivian Stanshall. It starred Trevor Howard as Sir Henry and Stanshall himself as Henry's brother Hubert. Unusually, the film was released in sepia-toned monochrome. After a long wait, while the film obtained cult status, Sir Henry at Rawlinson End was finally released on DVD in 2006. The bonuses include a rather drunken (as is fitting) commentary track with the director, Steve Roberts, as well as Sheila Reid (Aunt Florrie) and Jeremy Child (Peregrine Maynard), as well as a picture gallery, character listing, family tree, English subtitles etc...

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[edit] Synopsis

As complex as the mind of its creator, Vivian Stanshall, the plot of Sir Henry at Rawlinson End revolves around attempts to exorcise the ghost of Humbert, the brother of Sir Henry (Trevor Howard). Humbert was accidentally killed in a drunken duck-shooting incident whilst escaping from an illicit tryst. Amongst the eccentric family members, mad friends and grudgingly loyal servants involved are the eternally knitting Aunt Florrie, the tapeworm obsessed Mrs. E, Lady Phillipa of Staines (Liz Smith), who enjoys the odd 'small' sherry and the ever-present Old Scrotum, Sir Henry's wrinkled retainer.

Adding to the poetic shambles are the hapless Germans, long post-war, who populate the fearsome PoW camp that Sir Henry set up in the gardens of his estate, and his younger brother Hubert who fishes for hairdressers in a pond. Furnished with a stuffed mechanical bulldog, a champion billiard-playing horse and a marriage bed cruelly divided by sandbags and barbed wire, Rawlinson End is an endlessly mad, hilarious outpost of an England as it could have been...

[edit] Quotes from the film

"Generally speaking, if I've eaten something I don't want to see it again"

"I never met a man I didn't mutilate"

"If I had all the money I've spent on drink, I'd spend it on drink"

"If a thing is worth doing, it's worth forcing someone else to do it"

"My dear Henry, if filthy fingers were trumps, what a splendid hand you'd have"

"If I want your opinion I'll thrash it out of you"

"I don't know what I want, but I want it now"

"How dare you belch in front of my wife" " Sorry old man, I didn't know it was her turn"

[edit] Cast

[edit] Press

'It's impossible to do justice to the film's arrant and quite unique lunacy' - The Financial Times

'Sir Henry is a comic masterpiece' NME

'This extraordinary film is one of the most haphazard British comedies I've seen. It is also a long time since I've laughed so much...a cult in the making' The Guardian

'You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll jab your eyes with fingers still trembling from the trauma of being made a child again. You'll jab your eyes just to check you've just seen what you think you've seen.... Sir Henry is a film to be experienced as closely and seriously and often as possible, a work of art that should sink under the skin and into the bones and do its good work like vitamins and (Captain Beefheart's) Trout Mask Replica. I can't recommend it {Sir Henry} highly enough so I won't even start. It's out there if you want it. And in here (tap skull and chest) whether you want it or not, Englander pig dog. A talking picture. And what could be more wonderful than that?' Plan B

'It wouldn't be a million miles wide of the mark to call 'Sir Henry at Rawlinson End' a missing link between Monty Python and 'Withnail & I', but as the brainchild of Vivian Stanshall - pack leader of the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band - it has a place in the pantheon of sophisticated English silliness all of tis own.' ***** Time Out

'Although it truly is in the grand wazoo of weird, the film remains surprisingly unknown and unscreened since its release in 1980. I remember a grainy VHS furtively passed around at school, and even this clear as a bell DVD version feels a bit naughty... The movie equivallent of cheese before bed, this film guarantees nightmares, but in a good way' The Big Issue

[edit] External links

[edit] Cover