School for Scoundrels

1960 "Learn to gain weight by LOSING scruples!"
School for Scoundrels
7.3| 1h34m| en| More Info
Released: 11 July 1960 Released
Producted By: Associated British Picture Corporation
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Hapless Henry Palfrey is patronised by his self-important chief clerk at work, ignored by restaurant waiters, conned by shady second-hand car salesmen, and, worst of all, endlessly wrong-footed by unspeakably rotten cad Raymond Delauney who has set his cap at April, new love of Palfrey's life. In desperation Henry enrolls at the College of Lifemanship to learn how to best such bounders and win the girl.

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Leofwine_draca SCHOOL FOR SCOUNDRELS is a likeable enough British comedy of 1960 that very much acts as a showcase for the talents of the comedy actors involved. Ian Carmichael takes the lead role and plays his usual upper-class twit character and perfectly suited to it he is too. Alastair Sim has a smaller role but it's also one which has been crafted to his best talents. Best of the lot is the excellent Terry-Thomas playing the ultimate cad character as he's absolutely hilarious. The first half of the film sees Carmichael being put upon in a number of funny set-pieces while the second half follows his meted-out revenge. Dennis Price and Peter Jones bag the funniest moments as the unscrupulous car dealers while Janette Scott is the perfect object of affection.
mark.waltz Act One: The Sap. Act Two: The Zapped.That is the format of this British comedy about a milquetoast who gets his game together and takes charge of his life-personal and professionally, with the help of the titled school, located where, as you follow the pointing signs, take you across the railroad tracks and hidden far from society. It seems he has lost his girl, has been ripped off by an automobile sales company and beaten at tennis by the gap-tooth lothario who stole his girl. He finds revenge is not only sweet but funny as he turns his life around and makes the move to win back everything he has lost (including his dignity) back while teaching those who took advantage a lesson they'll never forget.Watching poor Ian Carmichael get swindled (whether buying the exotic car that resembles "Chity Chitty Bang Bang's" sick uncle or being humiliated at every turn by the droll Terry-Thomas) is hysterical, but seeing him reverse everything to his favor is sweet revenge for everyone who has ever gone through similar situations. When Carmichael gets his revenge (most innocently) on Thomas by turning him into a raging nervous Nancy by delaying their tennis date, Thomas's slow burn is delightful. Carmichael and Thomas play very well off of each other, and the dialog is downright hysterical. The use of British locations add tremendously to the credibility of the plot and make it so much more fun. Add to that the pleasure of Alistair Sim ("A Christmas Carol") as the schoolmaster who teaches Carmichael the art of getting even.
Enoch Sneed While it is usually sent to the second division of Alastair Sim films (behind such classics as "The Green Man", "Scrooge", and "Green for Danger") this is one of my favourites.Although the credits say the film is based on 'novels' by Stephen Potter, they are really spoof 'self-help' manuals on how to get ahead in life. For example, if you are at a party where someone is talking to an admiring group about a country you have never visited (and don't even know) listen quietly until they give an opinion such as: "Left-wing politics are on the rise in Turkmenistan" and say "Yes, but not in the South." This is the 'Canterbury Block', which gives everyone the impression you are more of an expert than the speaker.In this film Ian Carmichael attends Potter's College of Lifemanship to learn how to overcome those who belittle and take advantage of him (and to win the girl of his dreams). His principal rival is Terry-Thomas with his snazzy Italian sports-car and constant refrain of "Hard cheese!" at tennis (you will want to knock his head off!). Sim acts first as Carmichael's tutor, then assists him in his 'oneupmanship' ploys. There is a great support cast, too: Dennis Price and Peter Jones as shady car dealers, Hugh Paddick and Hattie Jacques as college tutors, and Edward Chapman as the office manager from hell.Another reason for my affection for this film is that I saw it as a boy with my dad and we both laughed our heads off (especially at Sim's closing speech). We didn't have a close relationship and these moments were few and far between, but I always remember this when I watch "School for Scoundrels".
James Hitchcock The English humorist Stephen Potter enjoyed great success in the 1950s with his books "Gamesmanship", which ironically advised sportsmen on "how to win without actually cheating", chiefly by using psychological ploys to unsettle their opponents, and "Lifemanship" and "One-upmanship" which advocated a similar attitude to life in general.It is perhaps surprising that the makers of this film did not use the titles of any of Potter's books for their own title, as at least two of them have passed into the English language. (My Shorter Oxford English Dictionary does contain an entry for "lifemanship", but it is not a word in common use today). The title they actually did use is an obvious reference to Richard Brinsley Sheridan's 18th Century comedy, "The School for Scandal". The central idea is that Potter, not content with merely writing books, has actually opened a College of Lifemanship in Somerset in order to teach his philosophy.The central character of the film is Henry Palfrey, a young man who enrols at the College (a sort of boarding school for adults). Henry is, like many characters played by Ian Carmichael, upper-middle-class and likable but not too bright. (Carmichael was later to become a famous Bertie Wooster on British television). He is ostensibly managing director of his family company, but in reality his job is a mere sinecure, and the firm is actually run by the office manager Gloatbridge, who treats him with patronising condescension. Henry is also patronised by his urbane but caddish acquaintance Raymond Delauney, who thrashes him at tennis and threatens to win over the affections of his pretty girlfriend April. When Henry tries to buy a car to impress April (Delauney drives an expensive Italian sports car), he is cheated by a rascally pair of used-car salesmen who sell him a broken-down wreck for 695 guineas (£729.75- a large amount of money in 1960).Henry therefore enrols in Potter's school where he learns the philosophy and all the tricks of "Lifemanship". The secret, according to Potter, is to be "one-up" on everyone else at all times. ("Just remember, if you're not one-up on the other fellow, then he's one up-on you".) Having completed the course, Henry emerges as brash and self-confident, putting Gloatbridge in his place, persuading the car dealers to buy back the car for more than he originally paid, and avenging himself on Delauney, not only by beating him at tennis but also by making him look a complete idiot in the process. The only questions left to be determined are "Can Henry win the lovely April?" and, more importantly, "Can he do so without becoming as awful and insincere as his rival Delauney?" This story is told in a very loose, episodic manner as a series of jokes and comedy sketches. (The Pythons were later to use a similar technique in some of their films such as "Life of Brian"). Carmichael receives excellent support from a number of other famous British comedy stars, some of them such as John Le Mesurier or Hattie Jacques only playing minor roles. The best supporting performances come from Peter Jones and Dennis Price as the car dealers, Alastair Sim as Potter and Terry-Thomas as Delauney. Like Carmichael, Terry-Thomas tended to specialise in one sort of part, in his case the smooth but lecherous cad. (Interestingly, he was the first choice for the role of Wooster which eventually went to Carmichael. Price played Jeeves in that series).This was, ostensibly, the last film made by Robert Hamer before his tragically early death three years later. I say "ostensibly" because there are reports that Hamer's alcoholism often prevented him from working and many scenes were in fact shot by another director. Hamer was, of course, the director of "Kind Hearts and Coronets", one of the greatest of the famous Ealing comedies. Although "School for Scoundrels" was released in the first year of the new decade, it has the feel of a fifties comedy rather than a sixties one, looking back to the age of Ealing rather than forward to the era of the "Carry Ons"- it is, for example, shot in black-and-white, and the humour lacks the bawdiness which characterises many British comedies from the sixties.The Ealing comedies were, generally, less episodic in format and had a more well-structured plot. Nevertheless, "School for Scoundrels" keeps something of their satirical humour; behind the laughter may have been a concern that the "never-had-it-so-good" Britain of the period was becoming increasingly materialistic and competitive, dominated by the "one-up on the other fellow" ethos of Delauney's real-life counterparts. Although I had never heard of the film until a DVD was recently given away free as part of a newspaper promotion, this must rate as one of the most amusing British comedies of the period. 8/10