• Source: In the Doghouse (film)
    • In the Doghouse, also known as Vet in the Doghouse, is a 1962 British black-and-white comedy film directed by Darcy Conyers and starring Leslie Phillips and Peggy Cummins. The film was based on the 1961 novel It's a Vet's Life by Alex Duncan.
      The title refers to the British expression of a person being "in the doghouse" when a person is ostracised usually relating to a husband for domestic bad behaviour, and usually used in the third person e.g. "he is in the doghouse because... "


      Plot


      Jimmy Fox-Upton is an accident prone and less than brilliant veterinary student in his final year of college having already failed his finals 4 times. He unexpectedly passes and his good heart outweighs any academic shortcomings. He takes over an old practice, keeping a chimpanzee in the surgery, and becomes rivals with fellow student Skeffington who opens a swanky practice around the corner. They try to sabotage the shipment of horses overseas, but end up tied in the back of a lorry with the horses. Jimmy's chimpanzee unties them. After their escapades get in the newspapers, Jimmy is called to Buckingham Palace to treat the corgis.


      Cast


      Leslie Phillips as Jimmy Fox-Upton
      Peggy Cummins as Sally Huxley
      Hattie Jacques as Josephine Gudgeon
      James Booth as Bob Skeffington
      Dick Bentley as Mr. Peddle
      Colin Gordon as Dean
      Joan Heal as Mrs. Peddle
      Esma Cannon as Mrs. Raikes
      Fenella Fielding as Miss Fordyce
      Richard Goolden as Mr. Ribart
      Joan Hickson as Miss Gibbs
      Vida Hope as Mrs. Crabtree
      Jacqueline Jones as Rita
      Peggy Thorpe-Bates as Mrs. Muswell
      Harry Locke as Sid West
      Patsy Rowlands as barmaid
      Kynaston Reeves as Colonel
      Joan Young as middle-aged woman
      Judith Furse as massage woman
      Lance Percival as policeman (uncredited)
      George A. Cooper examiner


      Critical reception


      The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Not content with gaining easy laughs by its parade of routine animal jokes, centred round an amiable booby of a vet, this wobbly farce makes a pitch for tears too by dragging in a whimsical toddler and a dear old lady with a dying spaniel. Its story gives the impression of being slapped together for shooting, then severely cut for distribution. But one role that deserves expansion is that given to Fenella Fielding who appears only briefly, exchanging glad-eyes with a lion and outsexing the blonde vamps who undulate through the poodles' beauty parlour run by a villainous vet. This character is played by James Booth in a horsewhip-and-brimstone style of comedy more suited to melodrama or the Demon King in pantomime."
      The Radio Times wrote "...makes a fine comic vehicle for Leslie Phillips, who has to resort to his trademark charm to atone for his misadventures as he begins life as a qualified vet (after spending years trying to pass his final exams. However, he also gets to reveal an unexpected action-man side as he thwarts a horse-smuggling ring. ... Despite booming support from Hattie Jacques, this patchy film is perhaps most significant for bringing down the curtain on the career of Peggy Cummins, who made her first film in 1940 at the age of 15."
      Leslie Halliwell said: "Easy-going farce with animal interest and a great many familiar faces."


      References




      External links


      In the Doghouse at IMDb
      In the Doghouse at BFI

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: