I Thank You (1941) Poster

(1941)

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7/10
A lot of fun...
planktonrules30 June 2011
My bet is that if you asked 100 of my fellow Americans who Arthur Askey was, you MIGHT get lucky and find one. He and other British comedians like Will Hay are simply never shown on TV around here and the only reason I discovered them is that I like to download and watch public domain movies--and I have discovered some interesting movies that way. It seems that a lot of the public domain films were made by Gainesborough Pictures--and they made a lot of comedies as well as dramas.

Now I am not saying all these films are brilliant. Askey was often a bit low-brow in his humor--probably because he had his roots in the English stage--sort of like their version of vaudeville. So, for his audiences, Askey and many other comedians went for the cheap laugh--and that's not really a bad thing! Plus, his humor was never as cheap as our Three Stooges! This film must have seemed very near and dear to the hearts of the actors, as it's about a group of stage performers who are out of work and need someone to finance their show. So, Askey and Richard Murdock both approach a rich Lady--who also used to be a performer like them. But, she turns out to want nothing to do with her old job and now she is too sophisticated for such things. So, instead of asking for her financing directly, the decide to go to work for her, as she's advertising for a butler and maid. So you think....how can one of them be a maid?! Well, Askey, in the grand tradition of low-brow entertainment, dresses in drag--and he looks pretty convincing actually! So when exactly will they get around to popping the question? And what will she say? And what hope do they have of convincing anyone they are real servants?! Although this film too much singing, some of the songs were pretty catchy. Plus, I loved Moore Marriott in the he film. While he did a lot of films with Askey and Will Hay, here he is at his funniest. His crazy old coot routine is a hoot--and does a lot to make up for the plot lulls and songs. Well written and funny--this is a fun film even if some of the humor is a bit corny.
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7/10
Ay-Thang-Yew
hitchcockthelegend25 March 2010
I Thank You is produced by Gainsborough Pictures, it's directed by Marcel Varnel and it stars Arthur Askey and Richard "Stinker" Murdoch. Set in London during World War II Blitz period, the story sees Askey & Murdoch as a couple of variety entertainers who find themselves out of work. In desperate need of money to put on a show, the pair dress up as house servants {Murdoch a servant and Askey in drag as a cook} and bluff their way into the home of Lady Randall, an ex-music hall star known to give financial aid to performers in the arts close to her heart. However, chaos reigns.

The diminutive Askey always proved divisive in film form, massively popular as a comedian and music hall performer, his silver screen outings were a very mixed bunch. Some were manic and guilty of letting Askey swamp the movie {he was an acquired taste}, other efforts found the right blend and let other actors impact on said film.I Thank You fits thankfully into the latter category. It is helped enormously by the writing, it's co-written by the two men influential in the best of Will Hay's cinema outings in the late 30s, Val Guest & Marriott Edgar {from a story by Howard Irving Young}. With that in mind, it's no surprise to find Moore Marriott and Graham Moffatt in the cast. Along with Will Hay they formed one of British cinemas greatest comedy acts, but come 1940 Hay had had enough and went solo. Gainsborough put both guys with Askey in the hope of creating a new dream team for the 40s, that was never likely to work in all honesty, but they do have their moments. Such as here, where Marriott completely owns the film as chaos loving old curmudgeon Pop Bennett.

There's some nice tunes in the piece too. Askey sings "Hello To The Sun" & "Half Of Everything Is Yours" while the closing "Waiting At The Church" sung by Lily Morris {Lady Randall} is a bona fide classic. It's a fun frolic time of a movie, whippy one liners are cloaked in farcical set pieces, all guided by the assured hands of director Varnel. One of the better offerings in Askey's canon, and essential for those who wish to view the brilliant talent of Moore Marriott. 7/10
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7/10
A fun movie with great novelty songs
Paularoc21 June 2012
Set in London early in World War II, this silly yet charming film is about a group of vaudeville entertainers who are hoping to persuade one time backer Lady Randall to fund a new show – something she is disinclined to do. In an effort to speak to her privately about this, Arthur and Stinker apply for – and get – jobs in Lady Randall's house as a butler and a cook. As the cook, Arthur dresses in drag and actually is quite funny in that disguise. Of course, neither Arthur or Stinker can cook and there is an amusing routine with the cook in the house next door. Moore Marriott plays Lady Randall's nutty father. His batty old man routine got pretty boring and was my least favorite part of the movie. Given the general acclaim other reviewers hold him in, I may need to view more Marriott films to test my initial impression. What I particularly liked about the movie were the novelty songs such as "Oh Johnny Teach Me to Dance", "Hello to the Sun", "Waiting at the Church" and "Let's Get Hold of Hitler". In addition to Askey, the other performers evidently were also former Music Hall entertainers. I liked this one and will likely watch it again.
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7/10
Vaudeville Fun
Naneaux25 January 2014
If you ever wondered what British music hall or American vaudeville was all about, this is a pretty good representation of the styles of humor and performance from those circles. The plot is so old, it creaks; jokes are corny and people break into song all the time, but everyone is so committed to what they're doing, you're completely entertained. You'll remember Arthur Askey's delivery of the line "I thank you" for a long time.

The vaudeville team of Forsythe, Seamon & Farrell get some nice showcasing here. While Charles Forsythe and Eleanor Farrell can sing and deliver a punchline, Addie Seamon plays "Peaches", a Gracie Allen ditz who can dance up a storm. You won't forget her.

Great fun for a Saturday afternoon.
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4/10
Little to be thankful for
eddie-8316 July 2002
`Big-hearted Arthur Askey' was a major British star of cinema, TV, and even, much earlier, Music Hall. On the evidence of `I Thank You' (a catch-phrase pronounced Aye Theng Yew) he was a comical little man with great timing but I just couldn't get a laugh out of this movie. And its not simply a case of what made people smile more than fifty years ago not being relevant today. A couple of nights previously I had watched an even older film, `Nothing Sacred' and found it absolutely hilarious.

`I Thank You' was made & set during the Second World War. It opens & closes in the London Underground where the population went to escape the German air raids, includes a couple of novelty songs plus performances from Richard `Stinker' Murdoch who became a top radio script-writer and Kathleen Harrison who always seemed to play a maid until she had great success in the fifties in The Huggetts series of films.

It's hard to recommend `I Thank You' which is often frantic and farcical; the best I can say is that it is mercifully short at seventy-odd minutes.
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4/10
I Thank You review
JoeytheBrit14 May 2020
More low-brow humour featuring Arthur Askey in women's clothing. I Thank You is clearly trying to emulate similar 'zany' American movies of the era, but tries far too hard with woefully threadbare material. Even Will Hay's regular foils Graham Moffatt and Moore Marriott fail to lift the quality of the humour.
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9/10
Great Askey comedy!
calvertfan11 July 2002
Arthur Askey's name is pretty much a seal of greatness, and this movie is no exception. If you don't mind his usual corny jokes, you're in for a dream ride with this one. Rivalling Askey in the comedic department is a young, unnamed girl who may well have been the English Gracie Allen with her charming voice and illogical logic. Sadly though, her character was never named, and she does not appear in any credits list for the film.

Askey and co. need a backer for their show, and the usual brass, Lady Randall, won't comply - so they set out for her house to pretend to be the new hired help, and end up getting a lot more than they bargained for! A great movie with a laugh around every corner.
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9/10
Londoners in the blitz!
JohnHowardReid4 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Copyright 1941 by Gaumont-British Picture Corporation, Ltd. Never theatrically released in the U.S. Released in the U.K. through General Film Distributors: November 1941. Australian release through G-B-D: 13 January 1944 (sic). 7,510 feet. 83 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Posing as a footman and cook, two actors hope to persuade a wealthy socialite to back a show.

VIEWER'S GUIDE: Despite some reservations (a rebellious old man, a female impersonation, gratuitous destruction, insobriety, willful deception), this film's depiction of the high spirits of Londoners during the Blitz is suitable for all but younger children.

COMMENT: This frantic farce is nothing if not enthusiastically played. The live-wire Askey and his partners Marriott and Moffatt are in particularly fine form, and there's an equally spirited performance from Kathleen Harrison as well. As if these were not high-jinks enough, Forsythe, Seamon and Farrell join the fray. Miss Forsythe is a first-class Gracie Allen impersonator who can dance up a storm. The songs are infectious too.

Varnel has directed at a crackerjack pace, making full use of the movie's exceptionally extensive production values. Sets and lighting are most attractive, film editing is both fast and smooth, the comedy is perfectly timed, the music score appropriately zippy. One's only complaint is that the showgirls' costumes are somewhat dowdy. But it is wartime after all. And as remarked earlier, the movie is a tribute to the stamina and lightheartedness of people in the line of fire, who can not only joke about rationing and food shortages, but find entertainment in underground bomb shelters and a communal feeling in adversity (this last theme being worked out both in the particular - the projected show's financial crisis - and in the general).
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8/10
"There was I,waiting at the church".......
ianlouisiana17 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
The old Music Hall stars knew something about community spirit. There was always a singalong section with hugely enthusiastic audience participation be it "Daisy,Daisy" or "My old man said follow the van"with its cockney undertones of a couple moving one step ahead of the bailiffs. Doing a moonlight,they called it. In the rough working class areas where Music Hall flourished best there was a feeling that performer and audience had a common bond. So in the much mooted " Spirit of the blitz" Miss Lily Morris a superstar of the gaslight age owns - as they say nowadays - that audience in the London Underground bomb shelter. In the wireless programme "Bandwaggon" Mr A.Askey and Mr R.Murdoch did their bit for the BBC from a putative hut on the roof of Broadcasting House. They were extremely popular and teamed up often during and after the war. Here they play "Resting" entertainers desperate to put a show on and not particularly bothered about how they achieve it. This is an excuse for Mr Askey to do his "Charley's Aunt" routine which was a showstopper on stages round the country. He and Mr Murdoch con their way into the employ of a retired Music Hall star and former "angel" and persuade her to help them out. Nothing much for sophisticates here. But as a prime example of how the English liked to present themselves as a "We never closed" society in a time of total war when there was serious doubt as to whether the country would survive the German onslaught "There was I,waiting at the church" is one of the very best films arising from the early years of the conflict.
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8/10
Just saw it again
marktayloruk16 December 2019
Really enjoyed it. Cheap, cheerful, entertaining so the highbrow can get stuffed!
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10/10
A laugh a minute!
panden112 April 2003
A tremendously funny film, with quick one liners a plenty.

Interspersed with some very catchy tunes, over acting, and a story line silly enough to follow. One of my all time favorite, British films. Sit back and have a laugh.
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8/10
A comedy of chaos set during the London Blitz of WW II
SimonJack17 February 2020
"I Thank You" is the best of the films that Arthur Askey made. With his friends Moore and Graham Moffatt and Richard Murdoch, Askey romps and stomps his way through mayhem with many laughs and chuckles. They are joined by some talented performers of the day that add a musical production touch to this comedy.

The plot is a fairly simple one, but the hilarious chaos of many scenes makes one wonder if it was all scripted that way, or if the leads were just ad-libbing as they went along. It is clear that they were enjoying the making of this film.

No doubt this and other comedies of the period did a lot to ease tensions during the war. Farce of this type probably helped many in England keep the proverbial British stiff upper lip during the German bombing of London. The closing scene of the troupe entertaining Londoners in a bomb shelter was a fitting tribute to the English and to the entertainers who did their part for the war effort.

This is a fun film that rivals the best of the raucous movies of the Marx Brothers and Three Stooges in America.
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