How to Get Ahead in Advertising explained

How to Get Ahead in Advertising
Director:Bruce Robinson
Producer:David Wimbury
George Harrison
Denis O'Brien
Ray Cooper
Cinematography:Peter Hannan
Studio:HandMade Films
Country:United Kingdom
Runtime:94 minutes
Language:English, German
Gross:$418,053

How to Get Ahead in Advertising is a 1989 British black comedy fantasy film written and directed by Bruce Robinson, and starring Richard E. Grant and Rachel Ward. The title is a pun and can be literally taken as "How to Get a Head in Advertising."

In the film, an advertising executive has a nervous breakdown and finds himself concerned with the ethics of his profession. As a result, a talking boil grows on his shoulder, a manifestation of the cynical and unscrupulous side of his personality.

Plot

The film is a farce about a mentally unstable advertising executive, Denis Dimbleby Bagley (played by Grant), who suffers a nervous breakdown while making an advert for pimple cream. Rachel Ward plays his long-suffering but sympathetic wife, Julia Bagley. Richard Wilson plays John Bristol, Bagley's boss.

Bagley has a crisis of conscience about the ethics of advertising, which leads to mania. He then develops a boil on his right shoulder that comes to life with a face and voice. The voice of the boil, although uncredited, is that of Bruce Robinson. The boil takes a cynical and unscrupulous view of the advertising profession in contrast to Bagley's new-found ethical concerns. Eventually, Bagley decides to have the boil removed in hospital, but moments before he is taken into the operating room, the boil quickly grows into a replica of Bagley's head (only with a moustache) and covers Bagley's original head, asking doctors to lance it, which is done since nobody has noticed the switch from left to right nor the new moustache.

Bagley, now with the boil head, moustache, and personality (the movie's third personification from Grant after the stressed executive and the raving lunatic) returns home to celebrate his wedding anniversary, with the original head merely resembling a boil on his left shoulder. The "boil" eventually withers but doesn't die, yet Bagley resumes his advertising career rejuvenated and ruthless, although without his wife, who decides to leave his new cruel persona.

Cast

Reception

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 60% based on reviews from 15 critics.[1]

In an interview with Jimmy Kimmel in 2019, Richard E. Grant said that Jim Carrey called him a genius for his work in the film.[2]

The film made £201,972 in the UK.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: How to Get Ahead in Advertising. Rotten Tomatoes. 30 September 2019.
  2. Richard E. Grant on Oscar Nomination, Steve Martin, Star Wars & French Kissing. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211213/bOCcLfr9EtA. 2021-12-13. live. 1:07. Jimmy Kimmel Live!. 8 February 2019. May 30, 2019.
  3. Web site: Back to the Future: The Fall and Rise of the British Film Industry in the 1980s - An Information Briefing. 24. British Film Institute. 2005.