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Roommates

1961

Comedy / Drama / Music / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Jim Dale Photo
Jim Dale as Bass Trombone
James Robertson Justice Photo
James Robertson Justice as Sir Benjamin Boyd
Jill Ireland Photo
Jill Ireland as Janet
Liz Fraser Photo
Liz Fraser as Miranda Kennaway
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
838.62 MB
1280*772
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 31 min
P/S 2 / 3
1.52 GB
1776*1072
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 31 min
P/S 1 / 3

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by LCShackley8 / 10

Takes one to know one...

I should confess right away that I spent two years as a student in a conservatory, and have spent all my life hanging around with musicians. I'm sure that influenced my positive opinion about this movie, and I can understand why other reviewers who don't share my background don't find it funny.

I knew I was going to enjoy it when the opening credits featured cartoons by the inimitable Gerard Hoffunung. The cast list also promised a host of Britain's most amusing character players. The script and score are by Bruce Montgomery, a fine mystery writer and film composer. And how odd that the opening scene outside the music school used the exact same filming location as was used for the hospital in "Doctor in the House." (Not to mention that the doctor's nemesis also plays the students' nemesis here, too.)

Of course, as others have pointed out, most of the actors are too old for their "student" roles, and the plot is fairly thin (but typical for a sitcom). What's funny for me are all the jokes and situations that any working musician will have had to deal with: overbearing teachers, time-wasting teachers, blabbing conductors, over-confident student hot-shots, conflict between "serious" and "pop" music, etc. If you don't know who Barbirolli and Sargent are, you'll miss a couple of jokes. (And you might not also catch the "skeletons on a tin roof" joke from Sir Thomas Beecham.) There's even a tip of the hat to Victorian novelist Anthony Trollope, if you look carefully at the music school sign.

The 90 minutes breezed by, and the HD version available on Amazon Prime looked pristine on my iPad. Recommended highly for musical people; and fairly highly for fans of mid-century British comedy. Kenneth Williams alone is worth the price of admission.

Reviewed by richardchatten7 / 10

"His Bach is worse than his bite!"

Although largely the work of the 'Carry On' team (it was a pet project of producer Peter Rogers') it actually feels more like one of the 'Doctor' films with bluer jokes - shot like them in pretty colour - and dealing with the travails of a mature-looking bunch of students in the days when students wore jackets & ties and £4 a week seemed a steep rent. And, of course, there's the presence of James Robertson Justice and University College Hospital standing in for the London Academy of Music and the Arts instead of St.Swithin's (while Leslie Phillips later switched to the 'Doctor' series).

This is possibly the only movie on which the composer is also the author of the script, Bruce Montgomery (briefly glimpsed conducting Handel's 'Messiah' in one sequence) being the real name of the eminent crime writer Edmund Crispin whose only screenplay this was.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca5 / 10

Carry On in all but name

RAISING THE WIND is one of a number of British comedies made during the late '50s and early '60s that were basically CARRY ON films in all but name: same ensemble cast members, same directors and writers. This one's about a group of music students and their escapades as they flat share, struggle to earn their keep, and compete for a coveted prize. It's mainly a case of the usual drunken escapades and cameo appearances from amusing stars, while the main players all tackle familiar parts for the most part: Leslie Phillips as the playboy, Kenneth Williams as the stuffy antagonist; only Liz Fraser, playing a bookworm rather than a sexpot, tries something different. It's not bad, but there's no disguising the fact that the jokes are middling rather than hilarious, with a couple of exceptions.

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