The Cherry Picker | |
---|---|
Directed by | Peter Curran |
Screenplay by | Peter Curran |
Based on | the novel Pick Up Sticks by Mickey Phillips |
Produced by | Peter Curran |
Starring | Lulu Bob Sherman Terry-Thomas Wilfrid Hyde-White Spike Milligan |
Edited by | Jack Knight |
Music by | Bill McGuffie |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Cherry Picker(also known as The Quiet Life), is a 1972 British drama film directed by Peter Curran and starring Lulu, Bob Sherman, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Spike Milligan, Patrick Cargill, Jack Hulbert, Fiona Curzon, Terry-Thomas and Robert Hutton. [1] [2] The screenplay was by Curran based on the 1968 novel Pick Up Sticks by Mickey Phillips.
As of August 2014, the film was missing from the BFI National Archive; although inferior quality copies are still in circulation, including YouTube, [3] it is listed as one of the British Film Institute's "75 Most Wanted" lost films [4] due to the loss of the original print.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The title sequence for The Cherry Picker features a Pirelli calendar, with exquisite semi-nudes in Degas-like attitudes. What follows unfortunately fails to come near the sybaritic elegance we associate with that august institution dedicated to the leisure pursuits of big businessmen. Presumably aiming at satire of similarly institutionalised Playboy attitudes towards sex and role-playing, the film dithers over an inadequately scripted and crudely shot narrative that might charitably be described as 'rambling' or 'picaresque'." [6]
Wilfrid Hyde-White was an English actor. Described by Philip French as a "classic British film archetype", Hyde-White often portrayed droll and urbane upper-class characters. He had an extensive stage and screen career in both the United Kingdom and the United States, and portrayed over 160 film and television roles between 1935 and 1987. He was twice nominated for a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play, in 1957 for The Reluctant Debutante and in 1973 for The Jockey Club Stakes.
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