ABSTRACT

British comedy cinema has been a mainstay of domestic production since the beginning of the last Century and arguably the most popular and important genre in British film history.

This edited volume will offer the first comprehensive account of the rich and popular history of British comedy cinema from silent slapstick and satire to contemporary romantic comedy. Using a loosely chronological approach, essays cover successive decades of the 20th and 21st Century with a combination of case studies on key personalities, production cycles and studio output along with fresh approaches to issues of class and gender representation. It will present new research on familiar comedy cycles such as the Ealing Comedies and Carry On films as well as the largely undocumented silent period along with the rise of television spin offs from the 1970s and the development of animated comedy from 1915 to the present.

Films covered include: St Trinians, A Fish Called Wanda, Brassed Off, Local Hero, The Full Monty, Four Lions and In the Loop.

Contributors: Melanie Bell, Alan Burton, James Chapman, Richard Dacre, Ian Hunter, James Leggott, Sharon Lockyer, Andy Medhurst, Lawrence Napper, Tim O’Sullivan, Laraine Porter, Justin Smith, Sarah Street, Peter Waymark, Paul Wells

chapter 1|17 pages

British comedy cinema

Sex, class and very naughty boys

chapter 2|20 pages

From slapstick to satire

British comedy cinema before 1930

chapter 3|13 pages

‘No limit’

British class and comedy of the 1930s

chapter 4|15 pages

‘Northern films for Northern people’

The story of the Mancunian Film Company

chapter 5|11 pages

Ealing comedies 1947–57

‘The bizarre British, faced with another perfectly extraordinary situation'

chapter 6|12 pages

‘From adolescence into maturity'

The film comedy of the Boulting brothers

chapter 9|12 pages

‘Gird your armour on'

The genteel subversion of the St. Trinian's films

chapter 10|13 pages

Norman Wisdom

Rank Studios and the rise of the Super Chump

chapter 11|13 pages

‘From telly laughs to belly laughs'

The rise and fall of the sitcom spin-off

chapter 12|17 pages

From window cleaner to potato man

Confessions of a working-class stereotype

chapter 13|13 pages

Making Ben-Hur look like an epic

Monty Python at the movies

chapter 14|12 pages

Travels in Curtisland

Richard Curtis and British comedy cinema

chapter 15|13 pages

‘The sight of 40-year-old genitalia too disgusting, is it?'

Wit, whimsy and wishful thinking in British animation, 1900–present