Im All Right Jack
Stanley Windrush is an upper-class graduate works in his uncle's company. His uncle wants to use him for his conspiracy, however, everything becomes chaos when his socialist employee Mr. Kite fulfill a plan.
April 7, 1922 in Rochdale, Lancashire, England, UK
1 May 1920, Calcutta, Bengal Presidency, British India
June 5, 1922 in Liverpool, Lancashire [now in Merseyside], England, UK
5 April 1912, Bedford, Bedfordshire, England, UK
1 January 1918, London, England, UK
1 March 1924, Manchester, England, UK
2 September 1925, Peckham, London, England, UK
16 April 1907, Stirling, Scotland, UK
18 May 1904, Nelson, Glamorganshire, Wales, UK
January 21, 1904 in Stepney, London, England, UK
26 January 1919, Hackney, London, England, UK
25 September 1929, Parramatta, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
23 April 1904, Birmingham, England, UK
14 August 1930, Southwark, London, England, UK
28 August 1909, London, England, UK
24 February 1926, Liverpool, England, UK
24 October 1905, Sheffield, Yorkshire, England, UK
11 February 1908, Liverpool, England, UK
9 April 1909, Redruth, Cornwall, England, UK
14 April 1932, Hammersmith, London, England, UK
4 May 1927, Watford, Hertfordshire, England, UK
4 December 1920, Jhansi, United Provinces of Agra and Oudh, British India
19 June 1923, Bishop Middleham, County Durham, England, UK
14 August 1917, Goodmayes, Essex [now in Redbridge, London], England, UK
29 October 1923, Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England, UK
19 August 1921, Rochester, Kent, England, UK
18 June 1902, London, England, UK
August 27, 2003
Splendid Boulting Brothers satire with a great Peter Sellers performance.April 23, 2009
It's a mostly forgotten work today, despite its all right construction and the funny performance by a restrained Sellers.April 05, 2006
...the Boulting brothers' acerbic satire I'm All Right Jack (1959) is a merciless and hilarious dagger thrown at both Labor and Management, two opposing factions each rotten with exclusive self-interest.February 13, 2010
An intermediary work, one foot in Ealing gentility, the other in the abrasion of Anderson, Reisz, et al.