| I'm Not Feeling Myself Tonight | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Directed by | Joseph McGrath |
| Written by | David McGillivray Laurence Barnett |
| Produced by | Laurence Barnett Malcolm Fancey John Lindsay |
| Starring | Barry Andrews James Booth Sally Faulkner |
| Cinematography | Kenneth Higgins |
| Edited by | Jim Atkinson John W. Carr |
| Music by | Cy Payne |
Production company | Antler Film Productions |
| Distributed by | New Realm Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 84 minutes |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Language | English |
I'm Not Feeling Myself Tonight is a 1976 British sexploitation comedy film directed by Joseph McGrath and starring Barry Andrews, James Booth and Sally Faulkner. [1] It was written by David McGillivray and Laurence Barnett.
Jon Pigeon and Keith Furey, odd job man at a sex research institute, invent an electronic aphrodisiac. Their invention is stolen, and they attempt to retrieve it.
The film was shot at Twickenham Studios.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Yet another reworking of the male chauvinist's dream theme – the surefire aphrodisiac – lifted to a degree by an unusual hint of sophistication in the script, a decent caricature of a Teddy-rocker by Billy Hamon, and one modestly funny running gag in which a M*A*S*H-like tannoy periodically bleats out inane announcements in the background ('Coitus has started in Room 26 – please do not interrupt us!'). For the rest, however, the British sex-comedy formula is rigidly and tiresomely adhered to, complete with continuous sexual innuendo, pop-eyed double-takes, bouncing breasts and unconsummated couplings. In other words, the usual compendium of Anglo-Saxon hang-ups played for laughs – and losing." [2]
Kim Newman wrote in Empire , "I'm Not Feeing Myself Tonight has a classic fnarr-fnarr title and the worst male and female fashions of 1975 (no wonder characters are always trying to take their clothes off), and mixes excruciating comedy with a vaguely offensive plot about a raygun which turns repressed Britons into sex maniacs." [3]