Dennis Heymer is working as a waiter when he first meets Frankie Howerd, who is famous but is not having the best period of his career. At first their interactions are little more than homosexual trysts followed by awkwardness and Dennis heading home but with persistence Dennis manages to form a sort of relationship with Howerd. A difficult character to love, this film follows the intimate and professional relationship between the two through personal tragedy and a revival of Howerd's career.
I didn't do it on purpose but my brief plot summary points to the problem with this film in the way that it seems to be more about Dennis than Frankie Howerd and indeed that is how the film seems to play out. Rather than just using Dennis as a narrative device (a "way in" to the character of Howerd) the film puts him as the main character and so for much of it we are following his story rather than Howerd's or, where Howerd does something we get the event not as something that happened but as how it emotionally impacted on Dennis. In terms of general story-telling this is all well and good and I was reasonably interested by it, however in a film that was meant to be about Frankie Howerd it only serves to annoy and detract.
It was a real shame because the other "Curse of Comedy" films had been pretty good and focused on the subjects so I'm not sure why this one managed to miss the mark so badly. In terms of general impression Wailliams does pretty well as Howerd but he falls down in key areas. The main failing I do not think is really his because it is with the character and the material and focus is not there in the making to help him with this. The secondary failing is that Wailliams' Howerd is not funny and I say this as a fan of the great man. Spall's performance is better but again this may be because the material offered him more to work with. The supporting cast is solid but they cannot make up for the material and focus of delivery.
I was looking forward to Rather You Than Me because I had just watched the really good "Curse of Steptoe" and do like Howerd and I was disappointed that this film seemed more interested in Dennis, leaving Frankie Howerd a secondary character in a film that was meant to be about him.