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Very Important Person

 
Movies:

Very Important Person

  • Director: Ken Annakin
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Escape Film
  • Themes: Mistaken Identities, Behind Enemy Lines
  • Main Cast: Leslie Phillips, Stanley Baxter, Eric Sykes
  • Release Year: 1961
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 98 minutes

Plot

Very Important Person is an amusing British comedy set in a German POW camp during World War II. Sir Ernest Pease (James Robertson Justice) is a self-important professor with a bloated ego and a lightning put-down. When he is flown over Germany disguised as a navy officer to check out the effectiveness of one of his radar inventions, his plane is shot down and he lands in the POW camp. All sorts of misunderstandings arise, since the other prisoners suspect him of being a spy. In the meantime, there are the expected clashes of wit between the British prisoners and their dour German captors and the inevitable camp-organized concert. In the midst of these activities, the professor is challenged to find a way to escape. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

Cast

Richard Wattis - Woodcock; Godfrey Winn - Himself, an Interviewer; Colin Gordon - Briggs; Joan Haythorne - Miss Rogers; John Forrest - Grassy Green; Jeremy Lloyd - "Bonzo" Baines; Peter Myers - Shaw; John Ringham - Plum Pouding; John Le Mesurier - Piggott; Norman Bird - Travers; Vincent Ball - Higgins; Ed Devereaux - Webber; Jean Cadell; Joseph Furst; James Robertson Justice - Sir Ernest Pease; Ronald Leigh-Hunt - Clynes; Nancy Nevinson; Brian Oulton - Scientist; Frederick Piper; Steve Plytas; Norman Shelley; Ronnie Stevens - Hankley; Mark Hardy; Heidi Erich - German Fraus; John Huson; Lesley Allen

Credit

Harry Pottle - Art Director, Morris Angel - Costume Designer, Vi Murray - Costume Designer, Ken Annakin - Director, Ralph Sheldon - Editor, Reg Owen - Composer (Music Score), Ernest W. Steward - Cinematographer, Leslie Parkyn - Producer, Julian Wintle - Producer, Alan Maley - Set Designer, Jack Davies - Screenwriter, Henry E. Blyth - Screenwriter, John Foley - Book Author
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WordNet: very important person
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: an important or influential (and often overbearing) person
  Synonyms: VIP, high-up, dignitary, panjandrum, high muckamuck


Wikipedia: Very Important Person (film)
Top
Very Important Person
Directed by Ken Annakin
Produced by Leslie Parkyn
Julian Wintle
Written by Jack Davies
Henry Blyth
John Foley (novel)
Starring James Robertson Justice
Stanley Baxter
Leslie Phillips
Music by Reg Owen
Distributed by Rank
Release date(s) 1961
Running time 98 min.
Country  United Kingdom
Language English

Very Important Person is a 1961 British comedy film, directed by Ken Annakin, and written by Henry Blyth and Jack Davies. In the United States, the film was re-titled A Coming Out Party.

The film contains performances from several well-known British comedy and character actors, including James Robertson Justice, Stanley Baxter as both a dour Scottish prisoner and the camp Kommandant, Eric Sykes as a sports fanatic, John Le Mesurier as the Escape officer, Leslie Phillips, and Richard Wattis as the emotional Entertainments officer, desperately trying to coax quality performances out of would-be entertainers.

Contents

Plot

Sir Ernest Pease (James Robertson Justice) is a brilliant but acerbic scientist working on aircraft research during World War II. He needs to takes a trip on a bomber to observe the results of his work. At first the plan is to fly in an RAF plane disguised as an RAF officer, but when he is told to shave off his beard he refuses and gets to go as a Royal Navy officer, as beards are allowed in the RN.

Because it is vital that nobody knows who he is, Pease goes on the trip as Lieutenant Farrow, a public relations officer.

The bomber is damaged over Germany and he is sucked out of a hole in the side of the airplane but lands safely with the aid of a parachute. He is captured and, after interrogation under his alias of Lieutenant Farrow of the Royal Navy, he is sent to a POW camp, mostly occupied by RAF officers.

His excellent command of the German language causes him to be suspected of being a German agent, but when his real identity and importance becomes known to the Senior British Officer (Norman Bird), orders are given that the men in his hut cooperate to help him escape.

Pease initially views his somewhat happy-go-lucky fellow prisoners, especially Jimmy Cooper (Leslie Phillips), Everett (Stanley Baxter) and "Bonzo" Baines (Jeremy Lloyd) with disdain, but comes to understand and appreciate their optimistic attitudes under the prison system they find themselves in, even if he remains as pompous and arrogant as ever.

Pease/Farrow concocts a plan whereby he is believed to have escaped "through the wire". In fact, he plans to go into hiding and later walk out of the camp, disguised as one of three visiting Swiss Red Cross observers. Crucial to the escape plan is that Everett looks exactly like the camp Commandant (even though he describes him as "hideously ugly"). He must pretend to be the Commandant if Pease/Farrow is to escape.

Whilst the prisoners busy themselves with organising camp concerts and sports, the plan goes ahead. But it nearly comes unstuck at the last moment, when one of the prisoners, "Grassy" Green (John Forrest) is revealed as a real Luftwaffe officer and spy. He is "dealt with", and Pease, Cooper and Baines calmly walk out of the camp and eventually make their way back home.

The escape plan, to walk out of the camp dressed as Red Cross observers, actually happened. It was briefly mentioned in Paul Brickhill's book The Great Escape.

The story is told in flashback when, long after the war, Pease is the subject of a TV show based on This Is Your Life during which he is re-united with the other ex-POWs and even gets to meet the former Commandant, who now runs a holiday camp.

Cast

Quotes

Sir Ernest Pease to the others in his hut:

"Cooking requires no intelligence. Were it otherwise women would be no good at it."

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Very Important Person (film)" Read more