The Knack... and How to Get It

The Knack... and How to Get It
by Richard Lester

The Knack... and How to Get It
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DVD details

Actor: Donal Donnelly, Michael Crawford, Ray Brooks (II), Rita Tushingham, William Dexter
Director: Richard Lester
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono; French (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono; English (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); French (Dubbed), Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Format: Anamorphic, Black & White, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
Picture Format: 1.66:1
Running Time: 85 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2002-09-17
Audience Rating: Unrated
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)

DVD Reviews of The Knack... and How to Get It

DVD Review: Not Bad For What It Is!
Summary: 5 Stars

This movie has ranked number 5 in my top ten favorite movie list! I really enjoy watching it! It nothing like "A Hard Day's Night" or "How I Won the War", but I think it special for what it is! I also enjoyed watching Michael Crawford ("Hello Dolly"/Original Phantom of the Opera) who has ranked number 3 on my top favorite actors list! This movie really is a joy to watch! I odd to know...I'v seen it!

DVD Review: Most of the fizz is flat
Summary: 3 Stars

Forty years on the once scintillating British comedies of Richard Lester have lost a lot of their fizz. Even "A Hard Day's Night," though buoyed by the Beatles and their tunes, seems a little tired and old-fashioned. "The Knack," which Lester did a few years later, uses the same tricks: madcap antics, irreverent humor, verbal nonsense (that somewhat foreshadows Monty Python), quick-cut editing, cute locations and such. Though based on a play, the film is long on style and attitude and short on plot. Nerd (Michael Crawford) envies a stud (Ray Brooks) with a "knack" with the ladies. Along comes Nancy (Rita Tushingham), a sort of everywoman, and the tussle for her begins. Oh, and there's daft painter about, a sort of revisitation of Gulley Jimpson, adding to the chaos. The picture captures the mood of mod '60s London pretty well, and David Watkin's black and white photography and Lester's visuals are striking. And to top it off, there's John Barry's rather famous score for organ and jazz orchestra, probably one of his best. Most of the fizz that's left is there.

DVD Review: The score is very good
Summary: 2 Stars

This movie is of its time and has not aged well. It's a not very vivid portrayal of the swinging sixties in London, with four uninvolving characters spewing bizarre non-sequiturs at one another. Watch it with the subtitles off and you'll think it doesn't make sense; watch it with the subtitles on and you'll realize it's not supposed to make sense. In neither case is it at all funny. The film also betrays its origins as a play; despite the best efforts of the director to open it up - he spends about five wordless minutes showing three of the characters rolling a brass bed through London - it feels stagebound.

What's good about it is the John Barry score. The first dreamlike scene in which the music spirals around and around a bevy of beautiful girls is worth seeing. I also enjoyed the random comments of the disapproving older English observing the wacky doings of the the "mods" and the "rockers," though only one of the characters is a mod; none are rockers. Most importantly, none are interesting.

Avoid the movie; buy the soundtrack. If you want a vivid movie portrayal of London in the 1960's watch Michael Caine's "Alfie".

DVD Review: Lest we forget...
Summary: 3 Stars

... just what it really was like in "The Swinging Sixties" watch this DVD and remember... what? How much fun it was to do really whacky things just for the sake of it. How boring, bigoted and irrelevant the older generation were. How vacuously pretty all the dolly birds looked. How they were simply there as male objects of desire. How chatting them up and getting them into bed as quickly as possible was what relationships were all about. How sexual promiscuity was revered. How rape was actually a bit of a "joke". How snappy cinema-photography, a cool soundtrack and rapid-fire, meaningless dialogue could make a film really "good". And... how dull and pointless all of this could be.

Like a bad dream "The Knack" brings these memories flooding back and makes you really glad that you aren't there anymore. And the scary thing about it all is that it really was like that, so much so that the film, the truly awful world it portrays and the pathetic, soul-less people who populate it were seen, at the time, not as some kind of dark satire (which it wasn't intended to be) but as part of a highly successful, cheekily "hip" comic romp. Hey, you too can hitch-up with some really nutty guys, paint your flat white, get a bigger bed, and then have sex with as many innocent girls as possible. No responsibilities, no emotions, no worries... just lots of fun. Really?

Forty years on the only redeeming features it can lay claim to are the wholly unintentional - the people & situations it portrays are now so alien and even unacceptable (particularly its bizarre and disturbing treatment of "rape for laughs") that it actually holds your attention in a perverse, gob-smackingly "can this really have been considered an important film" kind of way, its numerous shots of London and its streets, shop-fronts, thick winter coats & cars make it an intriguing "timepiece", and... it's the perfect antidote to all the hype & nostalgia about England in the sixties that the passage of time has enshrined. Essential viewing, but for all the wrong reasons.

DVD Review: A Sixties "Arty-Fact"
Summary: 3 Stars

Forty years after its release, it's hard to imagine how new and fresh this film was. Borrowing heavily from the French New Wave in terms of look and feel, the film and its inseperable and sublime John Barry soundtrack are a fascinating snapshot of the so-called swinging sixties in London.

Whilst The Knack has some stunning elements all captured beautifully on the otherwise feature free DVD - the stark black and white photography, the white on white decor of the downstairs flat and the views of London (somehow familiar yet quite alien) the film is not what it was.

Perhaps it's original uniqueness has been copied or pastiched so many times that the film is now a cliche. Scenes of 'wacky' youth leaping around in the street is a bit cringe inducing, while the scenes where Tolen tries to enamour himself of Nancy and the "Rape" last act are downright disturbing.

For fans of the movie's director Dick Lester the Knack is closer to A Hard Day's Night than Help and like those films it has a cool soundtrack.

It's a shame that the DVD didn't have a bit more to offer - there isn't even a trailer - something the soundtrack included when issued as an enhanced CD

Ultimately The Knack is essential viewing for those interested in Sixties London and how young some of the actors look - (check out early performances from Jacqueline Bisset and one time John Barry squeeze Jane Birkin).

Shop around for it and get the best price!!



Description of The Knack... and How to Get It

You either have it or you don't. The knack, that is, of seduction! From the director of the Beatles movies A Hard Day's Night and Help! comes this inventive and hilarious (Time) romp through love and sex in 1960's London. Featuring Richard Lester's frenetic filmmaking stylecareening from slapstick to serious to avant-gardethis genuinely dazzling (Los Angeles Times) film is a mod masterpiece! Cool and sophisticated Tolen (Ray Brooks) has a monopoly on womanizingwith a long line of conquests to prove itwhile the na?ve and awkward Colin (Michael Crawford) desperately wants a piece of it. But when Colin falls for an innocent country girl (Rita Tushingham), it's not long before the self-assured Tolen moves in for the kill. Is all fair in love and war, or can Colin get the knack and beat Tolen at his own game?
Fresh from the playfully exuberant A Hard Day's Night (1964), director Richard Lester applies the same acrobatic, tongue-in-cheek style to this delightfully frivolous take on swinging London and the sexual revolution. Gawky young Michael Crawford is a meek landlord who vies with his ladies-man lodger Ray Brooks for the attentions of spirited funny-face Rita Tushingham, whom he literally picks up while pushing his new brass bed through the streets of London. Lester floats his sweet nothing of a goofy romance with an offbeat sense of humor, a compendium of sight gags and non sequiturs stirred in with devil-may-care spirit, and a pair of winning leads. Crawford's underdog desperation and endearing naivet? makes for an appealingly nerdish hero, but it's Tushingham's kooky charm and deft comic delivery that steal the film. A lovely score by John Barry balances the energy and invention with a tender romanticism. --Sean Axmaker

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