Go Kart Go (1964) Poster

(1964)

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6/10
A very young Dennis waterman plays by the rules
malcolmgsw15 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Back in the 50s and 60s part of The Eady Levy,being a proportion of the cost of a seat went to the Children's Film Foundation.This made films for the Saturday morning children's shows that took place in all circuit cinemas.The films would always feature children as the main characters with a smattering of familiar faces in the adult roles.In this film Dennis Waterman plays the head of a gang of boys and girls who are trying to win a Go kart race.However their main rivals will stoop to underhand tactics to prevent Waterman winning.Of course Waterman wins out.Ably abetted by such familiar actors as Cardew Robinson and Wilfred Brambell.Waterman would of course be involved in genuine car chases in the ground breaking "Sweeny" only a few years after this.
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7/10
Terrific!
nigel_hawkes17 January 2022
Another lovely CFF film made back in that age of innocence (OK-we know it wasn't really) where kids played in the street, had huts or camps, were endlessly inventive and "can do"-here they have engineering skills in building a go kart to beat the bullies, and can go to the local breakers' yard, climb all over piles of scrap, and charm the owner-here it's Old Steptoe in a bit part!

Parents are largely peripheral and forgiving; the bullies (usually dressed in black, or leather, or scruffy) generate brief worry and outrage at their cheating, but there's no vicious violence, and they always get their comeuppance at the end-nothing like a jolly good dunking!

The characters' names in this are terrific and reminiscent of the "Beano"...Jimpy, Square Head, Squirt, Stiggy, Spuggy, Slab, Basher....

Not a hint of imposed PC, gender equality, diversity etc.-no need, all get on together in this microcosm of life then in a gentler age.

Made in 1963/4 this was the tail end of the modest B&W CFF films-the later colour ones didn't have that same essential innocence; but this may be a generational view.

Thanks again to UK's Talking Pictures channel for showing these little gems.
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6/10
Go Kart Go
Prismark1020 March 2021
Clips from this Children's Film Foundation movie is regularly used in shows that look back at Dennis Waterman's career.

A young Dennis Waterman plays Jimpy whose gang builds speedy Go Kart out of a lawnmower and some junk they have brought from a scrapyard owned by Wilfrid Brambell.

Their rival is the slightly older Harry Haggerty (Frazer Hines) who recognises that his go kart is no match when it comes to the need for speed.

So Harry's gang indulges in a spot of sabotage as well as shunting any one who dares pass him off the track.

A simple story with lots of hijinks. The go kart goes on the loose on the village streets causing chaos.

The main stars are the two child actors, Waterman and Hines who would sustain a long television career.

A fun family movie, a bit simplistic and moralistic but it still stands up well today.
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7/10
CFF do it again
Leofwine_draca12 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
GO KART GO is yet another racing-themed Children's Film Foundation movie and quite enjoyable, perhaps because it's so dated so that you get a real picture postcard view of mid-1960s life for kids. Dennis Waterman and Frazer Hines star, playing rival racers, and are supported by the likes of John Moulder-Brown alongside adults Wilfred Brambell and Graham Stark in cameo appearances. It's light and breezy stuff with lots of well-filmed racing action to enjoy, plus all the usual hijinks and pratfalls involving getting one over on the local bullies. There's a particularly engaging little girl who refuses to conform to gender stereotypes and as such is a real breath of fresh air. The highlight is a great chase scene where a lawnmower goes out of control, ably combining good FX with funny jokes.
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6/10
Good Childrens' Film Foundation Movie
boblipton4 July 2023
Dennis Waterman leads a gang of kids who are go-kart crazy, and build their own vehicle; after it fails, their parents pay for a professionally built one. However, Frazer Hines and his crew want to win by fair means or foul, leading to an exciting finale.

Despite my usual low opinion of the Childrens' Film Foundation movies, this one is pretty go, with some moments of actual suspense, as when Waterman is racing around the track with an axle that has been sawed halfway through, and another when the final lug hasn't been tightened on the replacement axle. While the gang of kids who collect around Waterman seem a bit wide-ranging in age, they're actually pretty good actors; and while John Coquillon's camerawork isn't particularly beautiful, given the environments offered, including a junkyard, it's always competent and spot-on.
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8/10
Speed Crazy
richardchatten18 November 2020
Cameraman Johnny Coquillon limbered up for the four films he later shot for Sam Peckinpah with this semi-remake of 'The Wild One' with go karts rather than motorbikes, filmed round and about Harrow about a million years ago when Dennis Waterman and Frazer Hines were both teenagers and Waterman still had a full head of hair.

There's more emphasis on slapstick than usual, and unusually for a CFF production the plot doesn't involve a gang of crooks; although the film's villain gets the usual ritual dunking at the conclusion. The conflict is instead supplied by initial parental scepticism ("Buy you a go kart and the washing machine not paid for yet?"), but that's swiftly overcome and everyone goes home happy. Except the defeated rival, of course.
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9/10
Familiar Territory
TondaCoolwal1 March 2021
At its heart, a remake of 1958's Soapbox Derby, this film nevertheless is more exciting due to the motorized karts whizzing around the circuit. Kids' TV favourites Dennis Waterman and Frazer Hines, play members of rival gangs who race one another on the track in what were called Go-Karts at the time. These miniature, skeletal racing cars were powered by lawn mower engines but, due to some nifty track-level camerawork, they appear to get along at a fair lick. Needless to say, dirty doings abound as the baddie Cravens sabotage the goodie Damsons (where do they get these names from?) kart causing the wheel to come off. But, some quick thinking on the part of Damsons' fixer "Square-Head" Hedley, and some co-operation from scrapyard owner Wilfred Brambell, ensure that our Dennis crosses the line first with naughty Frazer deservedly ending up in the duckpond. As usual there is a sprinkling of well-known adult character actors including Graham Stark, Cardew Robinson and Harry Locke. And, coincidentally, Damsons' gang member "Patchy" is played by child actress Pauline Challoner whose sister Carla played a similar role in the aforementioned Soapbox Derby. Great nostalgia film for old codgers who probably watched it nearly 60 years ago at a Saturday morning matinee.
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9/10
'Go Kart Go' (1964) is a smashing lark, and you'd be rotten egg to miss it!
Weirdling_Wolf2 August 2021
'Go Kart Go' (1964) is simply smashing, fast-moving, rough n' tumble, marvellously madcap kids comedy over the remarkably intense rivalry between two opposing Go Kart teams that culminates somewhat calamitously in a no less smashing whizz-bang conclusion where wholesome flaxen-haired hero 'Jimpy' (Denis Waterman) stoically takes on the conspicuously dastardly Harry Haggertty (Frazier Hines) in a terrifically thrilling, lemonade-spilling, axle-spinning climax of Daredevil Go Karting and delightfully disarming 'pluckiness' that makes 'Go Kart Go' one of the more niftily nostalgic, riotously rose-tinted examples of the ceaselessly edifying coda of 'good forever trounces evil' so beloved of the greatly admired Children's Film Foundation. With an exemplary supporting cast of expert comedy wags including the estimable pratfall-ready talents of Wilfrid Brambell, Graham Stark, Cardew Robinson, and a pacey, finger-poppingly rocking score by film & TV music legend Ron Goodwin, you'd be a rotten egg to miss out on these wizard larks!
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9/10
Another great CFF Film.
plan9911 March 2021
A mechanised version of Soapbox Derby made a few years earlier also by CFF. Slightly older child actors to appeal to an older audience with groovy twangy guitar pop music added to appeal to the older teenager. Great fun especially the runaway lawn mower incident.
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