Rhubarb (1969 film)
Rhubarb | |
---|---|
Directed by | Eric Sykes |
Produced by | Jon Penington |
Written by | Eric Sykes |
Starring |
Harry Secombe Eric Sykes |
Music by | Brian Fahey |
Cinematography | Arthur Wooster |
Edited by | Anthony Sloman (as Anthony B. Sloman) |
Production company |
Avalon Productions Ltd |
Distributed by | Warner-Pathé (UK) |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 37 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Rhubarb was a 1969 British short film written and directed by Eric Sykes, starring Sykes and Harry Secombe.[1] The dialogue consisted entirely of repetitions of the word "rhubarb", all the characters last names were "Rhubarb", and even the licence plates on vehicles were "RHU BAR B". A baby "spoke" by holding a sign with the word "Rhubarb" written on it.
Rhubarb is a radio idiom for unintelligible background speech. Typically extras would mutter the word over and over to provide ambience for a crowd or party scene. In The Goon Show the cast was usually only the three principals, who would pretend to try to sound like a larger group by repeating "rhubarb" very quickly but clearly, with outbreaks of "Custard!" for good measure. Sykes was a close collaborator and friend of the Goons. He remade the piece in 1980 for Thames Television, as Rhubarb Rhubarb.
Plot
A Police Inspector and a vicar play a round of golf. The Police Inspector has a Constable help him to cheat by removing his golf ball from awkward situations, and the vicar ultimately requests divine intervention.
Cast
- Harry Secombe ... Vicar Rhubarb
- Eric Sykes ... Police Inspector Rhubarb
- Jimmy Edwards ... Police Constable Rhubarb
- Kenneth Connor ... Mr Rhubarb
- Ann Lancaster ... Mrs Rhubarb
- Hattie Jacques ... Nurse Rhubarb
- Anastasia Penington ... Baby Rhubarb
- Graham Stark ... Golfer Rhubarb
- Sheree Winton ... Lady Pupil Rhubarb
- Gordon Rollings ... Artist Rhubarb
- Johnny Speight ... Gents Rhubarb
See also
- Walla
- Rhubarb Rhubarb, the 1980 remake of Rhubarb.
- Other Eric Sykes short silent films in similar style: The Plank (1967), The Plank (1979 remake of the 1967 film), It's Your Move (1982), Mr. H Is Late (1988) and The Big Freeze (1993).
Critical reception
Allmovie wrote, "sight gags and pantomime dominate this engaging 37 minute feature." [2]
External links
- Rhubarb at the Internet Movie Database
- Rhubarb at the BFI website