A Home of Your Own explained

A Home of Your Own
Director:Jay Lewis
Producer:Bob Kellett
Starring:Ronnie Barker
Bernard Cribbins
Richard Briers
Cinematography:Denys Coop
Editing:Al Gell
Music:Ron Goodwin
Runtime:45 minutes
Studio:Dormar Productions
Distributor:British Lion
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

A Home of Your Own is a 1965 British comedy film directed by Jay Lewis and starring Ronnie Barker, Richard Briers, Peter Butterworth and Bernard Cribbins.[1] It was written by Lewis and Johnny Whyte.

Plot

The story is a brick-by-brick account of the building of a young couple's dream house. From the day when the site is first selected, to the day – several years and children later – when the couple finally move in, the story is a noisy but wordless comedy of errors, as the incompetent labourers struggle to complete the house. In this satirical look at British builders, many cups of tea are made, windows are broken and the same section of road is dug up over and over again by the water board, the electricity board and the gas board.

Cast

Also starring

Production

In the 2006 interview included on the DVD's box set release, producer Bob Kellett said the film's idea was not his own, but came from a comic idea to "de-prestige" a building company's vainglorious promotional film he and the writers had watched.

Release

The film was released on 28 January 1965 at the Odeon Leicester Square together with A Shot in the Dark (1964).[2]

Reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The aural accompaniment to this little comedy consists of music and incoherent noises instead of dialogue: grunts of command from one man to another, or pitiful, faint cries from the discomfited architect, finally winched into the air in his sports car after suffering considerable embarrassment on previous visits due to his ignorance of working procedure. The really happy thing about the film, however is the way it looks: the semi-circle of old car seats formed for the first teabreak in the workmen's first few minutes on the site; the arrival of large groups of men from the gas or water boards whose usefulness appears to depend on one man (the hole-digger or the water-diviner) completing his job first; the inevitable explosion when a pipe-smoking observer tosses a match on to the newly exposed, and damaged, gas pipe; the great hills of freshly dug earth among which the water board contingent eventually walk behind the man with the dowsing-rod; the shoddy cement block that cracks every time the most artistic of the workers is half-way through an inscription, finally painstakingly chiselled out only to shock the Mayoral party by its omission of the "I" in "public subscription". Evocatively photographed by Denys Coop, this is a bright, if unpretentious, piece of film-making, which it is heartening to be able to call our own."[3]

Home media

The film was released on Blu-ray in 2021 as part of Futtocks End and Other Short Stories, an anthology of short films produced by Kellet, also including San Ferry Ann (1965) and Vive le Sport (1969).

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A Home of Your Own . 14 July 2024 . British Film Institute Collections Search.
  2. News: Evening Standard. 27 January 1965. 15. A Shot in the Dark (advert).
  3. 1 January 1965 . A Home of Your Own . . 32 . 372 . 44 . ProQuest.