Here Comes the Sun (1946) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Lovable Knockabout Nonsense With Flanagan And Allen
stryker-57 January 1999
This may not be the most substantial film ever made. Indeed, in one sense it isn't a 'film' at all, being a loosely-linked collection of Flanagan & Allen stage routines, rather than a work conceived for the cinema. But for all that, it is a hugely enjoyable jumble of nonsense.

Charlie Wallace, a golden-hearted businessman, dies and leaves a will. His evil business partner, James Bradshaw, produces a phoney will which enables him to inherit all the goodies, including a newspaper company. The paper's horse racing tipster, "Corona" Flanagan, smells a rat and resolves to find the original will.

The film is fascinating because it captures a moribund art form and records it forever - the variety music hall act. Flanagan, the comic in his trade mark battered boater, and Allen, the handsome straight man, are supported by deliciously old-fashioned "turns" like Peter The Boy Soloist and the Iris Kirkwhite Dancers. There are liberal sprinklings of Flanagan & Allen patter routines. These may jar somewhat on the modern ear, with their rhythmic repetitions and stilted construction, but they should be seen as the swan-song of a venerable tradition. No fewer than seven stage routines can be discerned, embedded in the film's notional plot.

The name of Bud Flanagan will forever be associated with tuneful, sentimental songs, and this film contains four excellent numbers: Flanagan's own compositions "Linger A While" and "You'll Never Miss Your Mother", and Ivor Mendelssohn's "Tomorrow Is A Beautiful Day" and the theme song, "Here Comes The Sun".

No matter that the storyline is rudimentary and the acting unrealistic - "Here Comes The Sun" is a delightful glimpse into a form of entertainment that was dying even as it was being filmed.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
The last feature of Flanagan and Allen
malcolmgsw21 December 2019
This was their last feature film together apart from a song together in life is a circus.This film has some very funny sequences especially in the court scenes,and was a good note to go out on.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Great Fun with an All-Stir Cast
richardchatten18 October 2019
The vagaries of film history are once again demonstrated by the obscurity in which this little classic languishes.

The last film made as a team by Flanagan & Allen before ill health forced the latter's retirement (not that you'd know it to look at him, since Chesney Allen looks as strong as a horse and went on to long outlive every other member of The Crazy Gang). It's directed with enormous vigour & pace by John Baxter, and is obviously following in the footsteps of the patter, wisecracks and breaches of the fourth wall in 'Hellzapoppin' and the 'Road' comedies (with even a spot of backslang thrown in for good measure) which it deserves to be as fondly remembered as. But isn't.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed