Entertaining Mr Sloane (film)
Entertaining Mr Sloane | |
---|---|
Warner-Pathé (UK) | |
Release date |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £97,000[2] |
Entertaining Mr Sloane is a 1970 British black comedy film directed by Douglas Hickox. The screenplay by Clive Exton is based on the 1964 play of the same title by Joe Orton. This was the second adaptation of the play, the first having been developed for British television and broadcast by ITV on 15 July 1968.[3]
In the film, a lonely woman invites a recent acquaintance to become her lodger and her lover. Her brother likes him as well, and the new arrival plays the siblings against each other. But the lodger is eventually blackmailed into becoming both their prisoner and their shared lover, in a ménage à trois.
Plot
Kath is a lonely middle-aged woman living in the London suburbs with her aging father Kemp, referred to as "DaDa". When she meets Mr. Sloane sunbathing and exercising on a grave in the
Mr. Sloane takes delight in playing brother against sister and tormenting the elderly man. He gets Kath
Cast
- Beryl Reid as Kath
- Peter McEnery as Sloane
- Harry Andrews as Ed
- Alan Webb: Kemp
Production
Douglas Hickox was a TV commercials director who wanted to get into feature films. He and Doug Kentish set up a company called Canterbury Films which mostly made commercials. They had to buy the rights off a German company. Hickox admitted "Orton is not a subject I would have picked" normally but "it was my opportunity."[4]
They spent two years trying to raise finance for what would be Canterbury's first feature. Producer Kentish said casting was "difficult" but they could afford to pay the actors "a little more" as there were only four, and there were only a few locations.[5]
Finance was raised in part from
Filming commenced on 18 August 1969, with three weeks of location work and four weeks in the studio.[7] The film was produced at Intertel Studios in Wembley and on location at Brockley, at East Dulwich, and at the lodge in Camberwell Old Cemetery in Honor Oak. [8][5]
Music
The theme song was sung by Georgie Fame. Fame released it as the B-side of his 1970 single "Somebody Stole My Thunder".
Release
Attended by
Beryl Reid later wrote in her memoirs that "though it wasn’t an immediate success commercially, Entertaining Mr Sloane has become a cult film: everybody tries to get videos of it, which is quite surprising. It has always been my favourite film and certainly it was brilliantly adapted for the screen from Joe Orton’s play by Clive Exton, with Douglas Hickox doing a marvellous job."[9]
Critical reception
The Guardian felt it was "a pretty coarse version of the play which persists in rubbing our noses in what Orton hinted at."[10]
The Los Angeles Times called it "an outrageous, hilarious, pitch black English comedy."[11]
Veteran actor Dudley Sutton originated the role of Sloane in the premiere London and New York stage productions, and was friends with Orton. He was sharply critical of the film version in a 2016 interview with Dr Emma Parker of the University of Leicester, and complained strongly about what he saw as the film's weak presentation of Sloane's character:
"The thing about Sloane is that he's ... lumpen ... he's not a lightweight. When they made that atrocious film ... God rest 'em ... they made Sloane a lightweight, and he isn't like that. Sloane is kind of monosyllabic, and he's heavy, he's lumpen ... leaden ... he's a geez."[14]
DVD release
The film was released on
References
- ^ a b Entertaining Mr Sloane
- ^ Moody, Paul (2018). EMI Films and the Limits of British Cinema. Palgrave MacMillan. p. 87.
- ^ ScreenOnline.org
- ^ Schhh, high camp, and Mr Sloane. The Guardian. 25 February 1970: 8.
- ^ a b Watson, Albert (27 September 1969). "Brash Beryl: Getting away with bad taste". Evening Post. p. 8.
- ^ Walker, Alexander (17 October 1969). "I predict: a slow motion look for British films in 1970". Evening Standard. p. 26.
- ^ Owen, Michael (15 August 1969). "Another bizarre role for Beryl". Evening Standard. p. 15.
- ^ "Intertel Studios". Archived from the original on 26 February 2019.
- ISBN 9780099424208.
- ^ Malcolm, Derek (2 April 1970). "Visconti, warts and all". The Guardian. p. 10 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Thomas, Kevin (28 August 1970). "'Sloane' has comedy accent". Los Angeles Times. p. 81.
- ^ New York Times review
- ^ Time Out London review Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Parker, Emma (8 June 2016). "Entertaining Mr Sloane - Dudley Sutton". YouTube. University of Leicester. Comments about the film at the 1:20 mark.