From collectibles to cars, buy and sell all kinds of items on eBay
home | pay | site map
Shop for itemsSell your itemTrack your eBay activitiesLearn, connect, and stay informed-for business and for funGet help, find answers and contact Customer SupportAdvanced Search
Home > Listing Index > Movies > The Punch and Judy Man

Movies - The Punch and Judy Man


The Punch and Judy Man is a British comedy film from 1962
. It was Tony Hancock
's second film in a starring role, following 1961's The Rebel
.

Plot

Based on his childhood memories of Bournemouth, where he grew up, the film is set in the early 1950's in the sleepy seaside town of Piltdown. Hancock plays Wally Pinner, the dilapidated Punch and Judy Man. Wally and the other beach entertainers, The Sandman (played by John Le Mesurier
) who makes sand sculptures, and Neville the photographer, (played by Mario Fabrizi
) are socially unacceptable to the towns snobbish elite.

Wallys wife, Delia, played by Sylvia Syms
, runs an antique shop below their flat, and is socially ambitious. To achieve this she needs to have Wally invited to entertain at the official reception for Lady Jane Caterham (Barbara Murray), who is to switch on the towns illuminations, and at the Mayoress's suggestion the Reception Committee invite Wally to entertain.

The Dinner degenerates into a food fight when one of the drunken guests heckles Punch, and when Lady Jane rounds on Wally, Delia floors her with a punch. Her dreams of social acceptance gone forever, Wally and Delia retire, wiser and closer.

Background

The film is a gentle but bitter-sweet comedy, and provides some considerable insight into Hancock himself. The screenplay by Hancock and Philip Oakes appears to be based partly on Hancock's own life and marriage. In one scene, Wally and Delia have breakfast in almost total silence, and the scene demonstrates that Wally and Delia are married from habit, and no longer have anything in common. The scene is often considered to be an observation on Hancock's marriage at the time.

In another scene, Wally retreats from the rain into an ice cream parlour with a small boy, played by Sylvia Syms nephew, Nicholas Webb. The scene was done in several takes and in between in take Hancock would rinse his mouth with vodka to remove the taste of the ice cream.

Several actors fom Hancock's successful television series, Hancock's Half Hour, also appear in supporting roles. John Le Mesurier
gives a gem of a performance as a gentleman sculptor, who has found a shabby-genteel niche in life, while Hugh Lloyd
, Mario Fabrizi
and Hattie Jacques
also appear. The pace of the film is accidental, but superbly understated, due to director Jeremy Summers imperfect sense of comedy timing.

Visually, The Punch and Judy Man is reminiscent of Jacques Tati
's film 'Monsieur Hulot's Holiday
' as they are both shot in monochrome and show a sleepy seaside town in the early 1950's. Both have a unique style of visual humour, and both are an historian's delight in being comments on the society of the time. Michael Palin
created a film thirty years later called 'A Private Function', with a similar theme of social acceptance in a small seaside town.

The film itself was shot on location in Bognor Regis, and when the producers asked for some local people to take parts as extras, over 2000 people turned up. Many parts of the town are immortalised in the film, from the Pier and the Town Hall, alongside other areas such as Spencer Street, Belmont Street, and York Road, beside the Esplanade and Royal Hotel, where in fact the film crew stayed. Tony Hancock himself resided at the Royal Norfolk Hotel during filming.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for The Punch and Judy Man ]



Some related entries: The End of Suburbia | City of the Dead | Michael Wilson | Boys Beware | Gung Ho | Endless Love | Ultraman Neos | Devil's Gate | 1999 in home video | Is This Goodbye, Charlie Brown? | Morgan Gold

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article The Punch and Judy Man; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

Searches on eBay


eBay Pulse | eBay Reviews | eBay Stores | Half.com | Kijiji | PayPal | Popular Searches | ProStores | Rent.com | Shopping.com
Australia | Austria | Belgium | China | France | Germany | India | Italy | Spain | United Kingdom

About eBay | Announcements | Security Center | Policies | Site Map | Help