Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Up the Creek (1958 film)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.4
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6.4
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Val Guest

Produced by
  
Henry Halstead

Duration
  

Language
  
English

6.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy

Cinematography
  
Arthur Grant, Moray Grant

Country
  
United Kingdom

Up the Creek (1958 film) movie poster

Release date
  
13 May 1958 London UK

Writer
  
Val Guest, Len Heath, John Warren

Cast
  
David Tomlinson
(Lt. Fairweather),
Peter Sellers
(CPO Doherty),
Wilfrid Hyde-White
(Admiral Foley),
Vera Day
(Lily),
Lionel Jeffries
(Steady Barker)

Similar movies
  
Related Val Guest movies

Tagline
  
The greatest belly laugh of them all.

Up the creek 1958


Up the Creek is a 1958 British comedy film written and directed by Val Guest which starred David Tomlinson, Peter Sellers, Wilfrid Hyde-White, David Lodge and Lionel Jeffries.

Contents

Up the Creek (1958 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart48322p48322d

Further up the creek 1958


Plot

Up the Creek (1958 film) Up the Creek 1958 film Alchetron the free social encyclopedia

Lieutenant Humphrey Fairweather, a well-meaning but accident-prone naval officer with a passion for rockets, is posted where he can (so the navy hopes) cause no further damage. He is given command of a mothballed Royal Navy vessel, HMS Berkeley, which has had no Commanding Officer for several years. She is moored at a wharf on the Suffolk coast near the (fictional) village of Meadows End.

Up the Creek (1958 film) DOCS JOURNEY INTO HAMMER FILMS 32 UP THE CREEK 1958 Horror

He discovers that the ship is woefully under strength and is forced to contend with the schemes of his bosun, Chief Petty Officer Dogerty (Sellers). He and the crew are running several profitable businesses, including a same-day laundry, selling naval rum and cigarettes to the local pub, the Pig and Whistle, and making pies and pastries for sale to the villagers. They also keep pigs and hens.

After the naive Fairweather is innocently drawn into the enterprises, he is politely blackmailed into covering for them. But when an Admiral makes a surprise inspection, the story eventually comes out. Whilst angrily haranguing them, Admiral Foley accidentally launches Fairweather's experimental rocket, and the ship is sunk.

Because of Fairweather's impeccable connections at the Admiralty, and because the Berkeley was Admiral Foley's first command, Fairwather is not court-martialed. Instead, he is promoted to Lt-Commander and posted to Woomera to continue his rocketry research, accompanied by Susanne, the attractive French girl he has met at the pub. The ship's crew are posted to another ship, HMS Incorruptible.

Cast

  • David Tomlinson as Lieutenant Fairweather
  • Peter Sellers as Chief Petty Officer Doherty
  • Wilfrid Hyde-White as Admiral Foley
  • Vera Day as Lily
  • Liliane Sottane as Susanne
  • Tom Gill as Flag Lieutenant
  • Michael Goodliffe as Nelson
  • Reginald Beckwith as Publican of 'Pig and Whistle'
  • Lionel Murton as Perkins
  • John Warren as Cooky
  • Lionel Jeffries as Steady Barker
  • Howard Williams as Bunts
  • Peter Collingwood as Chippie
  • Barry Lowe as Webster
  • Edwin Richfield as Bennett
  • David Lodge as Scouse
  • Production

    Much of the film was shot at Thomas Ward Ship Breakers Grays Essex. The Ship was ex Castle Class Corvette "Berkeley Castle".

    According to an interview with Val Guest (included on the DVD issue of the film), Up the Creek was the first starring film role for Sellers, at the time known only for radio and short television sketches. Guest was only able to obtain his services by also including established comedy film star David Tomlinson.

    A sequel Further Up the Creek was released later in the same year, with Frankie Howerd replacing Peter Sellers.

    Critical reception

  • The New York Times called the film, "an amiable jest that is diverting and spasmodically amusing, if not precisely unuproarious."
  • TV Guide said, "it is a surprise that UP THE CREEK is as fresh and amusing as it is... Sellers, in one of his earliest roles, steals the show."
  • References

    Up the Creek (1958 film) Wikipedia
    Up the Creek (1958 film) IMDb Up the Creek (1958 film) themoviedb.org