Things Are Looking Up (1935) Poster

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7/10
Hurrah Hurrah Hurrah Hooray Hooray Hooray
Spondonman14 May 2012
A typically nice Cicely Courtneidge film - exuberance and nonsense in varying amounts, amusing and irritating in turn. It was a single song musical - but what a song, one of Noel Gay's finest tunes!

Cicely plays identical twin sisters, the prim one is a girls school mistress, the lively one a circus proprietor - the lively one steps into the breach when the prim one debunks with her lover for Africa. It's occasionally very funny but also very dull at times, with long stretches of childish slapstick. However my favourite bit is the "composing" of the song Things Are Looking Up by Cicely and Bill Gargan which I've seen so often over the years it's now part of me, classic and catchy corn indeed. On a side note the great Max Miller had a few snappy lines but was sadly underused.

I've always enjoyed Cicely's films and music - her careless vitality still appeals to me in today's more colourful and wiser world, this world where imposters can't thrive at girls schools, circus animals are banned, and people spreading positive messages and harmlessness are derided.
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7/10
Delightful British screwball comedy of the thirties
robert-temple-122 December 2007
This is a most entertaining and amusing film, and evocative of simpler times and pleasures. Cicely Courtneidge is infectious in her bonhomie and mad humour, and despite having the broad gestures of a former vaudevillian, she carries the whole thing off wonderfully by sheer force of personality and good fun. Her younger sister is played by a charming young actress named Mary Lawson, who was sadly killed in a German air raid in 1941, depriving the screen of a fine talent. This film also featured Vivien Leigh in her first screen appearance, with one line. This film is set half at the circus (a real one of that time was used for the filming) and half at a girls' boarding school. For once, real schoolgirls actually play many of the girls in the film, and only a few of the leading ones are too old for their parts (Vivien Leigh was 21 playing 15.) This is a madcap comedy, wildly improbable and meant to be so, with a touch of slapstick. Cicely Courtneidge might be described as the female Will Hay, totally oblivious of decorum, with a heart of gold and ready to try to teach advanced geometry (she doesn't know a triangle from a rectangle) if it will save her twin sister her job (the sister has eloped, but no one is meant to know, while her twin waits for her to come back). Cicely plays both sisters, one with a prune in her mouth who teaches school primly, the other an outrageous extrovert who rides bareback, does trapeze acts, and plays tennis at Wimbledon where she breaks a racket and bounces balls off her head. The film is wildly anarchic for its time, unrestrained in its fun, and most refreshing in its innocence.
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6/10
Good One
boblipton16 April 2020
This funny movie is written, performed, pitched and timed like a one-woman show for Cicely Courtneidge, with Max Miller and William Gargan as her stooges. Miss Courtneidge plays twins; one owns a circus and is general dogsbody because there's no money, and the other is a snobby schoolteacher who has just eloped; there's a third sister, so Miss Courtneidge pretends to be Miss Courtneidge as she goes through various big acts.

The general staginess is right in line with director Albert de Courville, who spent most of his career directing stage spectacles. It's not in the least cinematic, but it is a lot of fun.
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Delightful Courtneidge comedy vehicle
arneblaze12 June 2003
This film is a fun romp and a perfect vehicle for Ms. Courtneidge's talents- mugging of the grand school ala Marie Dressler - both coming from the vaudeville training of broad comic gesture and both homely, matronly but lovable.

The title tune is quite infectious and well done. Note the continuity error in the Wimbledon audience. The fellow in the front row bottom right of screen sometimes wears a hat and sometimes not.

Vivien Leigh is most noticeable in three scenes- she is behind the girl in the geometry class who gives Cicely a hard time; she is in front row of third window scene during the title tune production number; she has her one line towards the end in a checkered dress as she tells Courtneidge she won't return to the school if the latter isn't elected headmistress.

Do make an effort to see this- much fun.
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5/10
More Max Less Cis
malcolmgsw17 February 2022
Max Miller has second billing but has far less screen time than Courtneidge. William Gargan has more scenes.

I find Courtneidge rather exhausting to watch. A little of her goes a long way.

The film seems to use some of Will Hays classroom gags but to lesser effect.
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10/10
Lots of fun - and don't miss Vivien Leigh!
calvertfan26 June 2002
If you keep your eyes peeled, you can't miss spotting Miss Leigh in this, one of her very first roles. She even had one line of dialogue - "If you are not made headmistress, I shan't come back next term." Contrary to many sources, this line was NOT cut from the final print, as I just heard and saw it with my own eyes.

Things Are Looking Up is a delightful romp with non-stop laughs. Cicely Courtneidge is Cicely Fytte, a circus-owner, and also her identical twin sister Bertha Fytte, a strict schoolmistress. When Bertha runs away to elope with "the Big Black Fox", their younger sister Mary summons Cicely to help out - in effect, taking Bertha's place as teacher. Now Cicely doesn't know geometry, nor does she play tennis, but she manages to wade through everything in her own unique way. Don't eat anything during the Wimbledon scene, unless you want to end up wearing it!

An easy 10/10 and definitely worth it for other Vivien Leigh fans!
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9/10
Take a bow, Suzanne Lenglen!
JohnHowardReid9 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Cicely Courtneidge (Cicely Fytte/Bertha Fytte), William Gargan (Van Gaard), Max Miller (Joey), Mary Lawson (Mary Fytte), Mark Lester (chairman, board of trustees), Henrietta Watson (headmistress McTavish), Cicely Oates (Miss Crabbe), Judy Kelly (Opal), Dick Henderson (the potential buyer), Dickie Henderson (buyer's son), Charles Mortimer (Harry), Hay Plumb (tennis umpire), Suzanne Lenglen (Marthe Bombarde, the tennis champion), Danny Green (Big Black Fox), Wyn Weaver (trustee), Alma Taylor (schoolmistress), Vivien Leigh (spokesperson for group of schoolgirl well-wishers).

Director: ALBERT DE COURVILLE. Screenplay: Stafford Dickens, Con West. Story: Albert de Courville, Daisy Fisher. Photography: Charles Van Enger, Glen MacWilliams. Film editor: R.E. Dearing. Art director: Alex Vetchinsky. Music director: Louis Levy. Title song by Noel Gay (music) and Clifford Grey (lyrics). Sound recording: A. O'Donoghue. Associate producer: Herbert Mason. Producer: Michael Balcon.

A Gaumont-British Picture. Not copyrighted in the U.S.A. No recorded U.S. theatrical release. U.K. release through Gaumont British: January 1935. Australian release: 3 July 1935. 78 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Twin sister (owner of a struggling circus) takes the place of a schoolmistress who has eloped with a no-good wrestler.

PRINCIPAL MIRACLE: As in Soldiers of the King" (1933), Miss Courtneidge has a dual role, this time as twin sisters. However, there is only one special effect (using a split screen) in which both sisters confront each other.

COMMENT: Aside from Miss Courtneidge, this well-produced film's principal interest lies in Vivien Leigh, here making her movie debut. Although twenty-one years old at the time, Miss Leigh plays a schoolgirl. Keen-eyed fans will have no trouble spotting her in the background of three or four scenes before she comes to the fore near the climax and speaks her one line of dialogue about not wanting to come back to the school next year if Miss Fytts is not given the job of headmistress.

The main schoolgirl (and Miss Courtneidge's potential nemesis) is superbly played by Australia's Judy Kelly (who, despite many important roles in British films) is completely forgotten today, even in her homeland. Although the same age as Miss Leigh, Judy Kelly was then already an important star.

Miss Courtneidge revels in her dual role which finds her in typically fine form and allows her to play engagingly well with other members of the cast, particularly William Gargan (here essaying the romantic lead. Incidentally, his name ks pronounced "Garrigan"). The couple reprise the film's one production number, the delightful "Things Are Looking Up", for a felicitous fade-out.

Mark Lester makes the best of his amusing lines as the crusty colonel, while Max Miller, I'm glad to say, is happily confined to a very small part.

One of only five films featuring tennis champion Suzanne Lenglen!. A pity! Miss Lenglen can act as well as she can play.
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