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School for Scoundrels

School for Scoundrels

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Directors: Hal E. Chester, Cyril Frankel, Robert Hamer
Actors: Ian Carmichael, Terry-thomas, Alastair Sim, Janette Scott, Dennis Price
Studio: Lions Gate
Category: DVD

List Price: $9.98
Buy New: $4.11
You Save: $5.87 (59%)



New (39) Used (11) from $3.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 14105

Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 94
Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: LGED21078D
UPC: 012236210788
EAN: 0012236210788
ASIN: B000MEYKC8

Theatrical Release Date: 1960
Release Date: March 27, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New and Factory Sealed Item Fast Shipping

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 09/09/2008 Run time: 94 minutes Rating: Nr


Customer Reviews:   Read 9 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars In the Dark   September 5, 2008
Much has been written in the reviews about possibly of the best films ever put on screen play and is a remarkable insight into English social standings and one upmanship.

My two lines that stand out to me are "in the dark??????" and have you got a "piece of string" As these were not mentioned in any of the other reviews it was time to add these choice words. To understand more, you have to get the movie :-)

However my favourite all around scene is when the character of Paulfrey comes back to the car garage where he purchased his car and gets the two shyster salesman to buy back the heap of junk they sold him, well this part takes the biscuit as we say in the UK.

I dedicate this review and the film to all those who at one time have been down-trodden or have received the "sticky end of the lolipop" - This ones for you!!!!!!!!



5 out of 5 stars School for Scoundrels   June 2, 2008
As a young man in England, I saw this movie in the early sixties and it made such an impression on me, that I simply had to own it, 45 years later.
A British classic comedy, not overdone and not to be outdone.



4 out of 5 stars School for Comedy   May 17, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Directed by Robert Hamer. With (a very young and handsome) Ian Carmichael, (a terribly nasty - and funny) Terry-Thomas, and (a manic) Alastair Sim. I've seen this movie so many times... from the time I was a child and didn't understand it all until now and understand it all too well... I've loved it every time. No -- no laugh 'til you cry. No embarrass your fellow human sight jokes. No punching and violence like the Three Stooges. No Obscenities. No Chases. No Belittling. Just humor. Soft, enjoyable fun. A story about an underdog who wins by winning. Yes, a happy ending! And (I'm sorry) it may even make you think (or maybe give you a few pointers on Lifemanship)!


5 out of 5 stars Hard Cheese, Old Man!   April 21, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

One of my all time favorite comedies. I first saw this, upon the recommendation of my late friend Larry Strayer, on late night television way back in my college years.

Ian Carmichael plays the nice boy who always loses, Terry-Thomas plays the sophisticated upper class cad who tries to steal his girl away from him, Alastair Sims plays the worldly professor of the School of Lifesmanship, Janette Scott is the girl they are fighting over, and Dennis Price plays the crooked used car dealer. This is another ensemble of brilliant actors in the era of British comedies.

The story telling in this movie is also superb. Carmichael goes to the School for Scoundrels in despair and emerges self assured and confident. Terry-Thomas is transformed from the gloating winner to the sore loser. Carmichael also turns the table on Dennis Price.

The sub plot over the Carmichael's purchase and return of an overpriced junk car would stand on its own as a short film. Terry-Thomas exclaims on first seeing the car, "...what is that? It looks like a Polish stomach pump."

I bought this new DVD and believe me, its worth it. I had an old VHS version of this movie based on a terrible print. This DVD is based on a very clean print. Highly recommended.



5 out of 5 stars Ian Carmichael at his most innocent; Terry-Thomas as his most unctuous; Alastair Sim at his most Simish   December 23, 2007
"Oh, hard cheese, old man!"

School for Scoundrels, that cheery, malicious comedy of one-upmanship, was based on Stephen Potter's classic of underhanded winning, Gamesmanship - Or How To Win Without Really Cheating, and its follow-up, Lifemanship. (Potter wrote several others, too.) What is lifemanship? "Well, gentlemen," says the avuncular head of school played by Alastair Sim to a new class, "lifemanship is the science of being one up on your opponents at all times. It's the art of making him feel that somewhere, some how, he's become less that you. He who is not one up, is one down."

Getting ready to sign up for the courses is Henry Palfrey (Ian Carmichael), so nice, so pleasant, so helpful that he usually finds himself either ignored, taken advantage of or walked all over. His employees pay him little attention. He meets April Smith (Janette Scott), an attractive young woman, and invites her to dinner, only to see himself turned into the extra man while that bounder, Raymond Delauney (Terry-Thomas) moves in and takes over. He decides to buy a car to impress April and winds up with a moveable piece of smoking, chugging, wheezing metal courtesy of two smarmy used car salesmen, Dunstan (Dennis Price) and Dudley (Peter Jones) Dorchester. And when he agrees to play tennis at the club with Raymond while April watches them...oh, my. Raymond reduces Henry to an impotent lamb in front of April. "Hard cheese," says Raymond sympathetically, every time he maneuvers Henry into looking foolish and losing a point.

The worm strikes back, however, when Henry signs up for courses at Mr. Potter's College of Lifemanship. There Henry learns all the little gambits that will put him one up...the cough just as his opponent begins to strike the ball at snooker, hearing a joke about a cripple then standing and limping out of the room, the spilled drink on the dress that leads to a bit of solicitous dress drying after the girl takes it off, the apparently well-meaning delays that drive a competitor to distraction, and on. With Professor S. Potter's help, Henry becomes a one-upsman to be proud of. He learns to make his employees nervous, how to deal with used car salesmen, ways to innocently seduce young women, and how to deal with Raymond Delauney. The person who has to grind his teeth and hear "Oh, hard cheese" is now Delauney. It's almost as satisfying as eating a double portion of sticky toffee pudding. Henry's final tennis match with that cad Delauney is the funniest, most satisfying game of tennis I've seen since Billie Jean King slowly dismembered Bobby Riggs.

Is there a lesson for us in all this? Yes, but fortunately it's saved for the very last. And that lesson Henry learns while gazing lovingly at April and telling her he loves her. "We're witnessing the birth of a new gambit," Professor Potter says proudly. No, we're witnessing the moment when love, and the person we love, requires sincerity.

All the one-upman gambits are so outrageous and so familiar, and served up with such good-natured manipulation, that all we can do is sit back and smile. School for Scandal is a witty, almost innocent and sweet-natured movie with a fine, dry script, credited to Patricia Moyes and the producer, Hal Chester. In fact it was written by Peter Ustinov and the blacklisted American writer, Frank Tarloff. Robert Hamer, the director of Kind Hearts and Coronets, is credited with directing. When Hamer, an alcoholic, fell off the wagon half way through, however, the producer immediately fired him, brought in another director, Cyril Frank, and the two of them finished the movie unbilled.

In addition to the script, of course, what makes this movie so funny and memorable are the performances. Terry-Thomas was never better as the unctuous cad who finally gets his. Ian Carmichael plays another innocent with great ineffectual likeability, and then comes through for us. And Alastair Sim as Professor S. Potter is a joy. Watching Professor Potter introduce Henry Palfrey to one-upmanship during their first meeting is to watch one of the cleverest examples of Sim's timing and expression you'd ever hope to see. The only sad spot is seeing Dennis Price in a decidedly secondary role and not looking all that healthy.

For many of us, this is a movie to watch while taking notes.

The DVD has no extras. The black and white picture looks just fine.


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