This Won't Hurt a Bit (1993) Poster

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A very funny caper film
Dunks31 January 2001
Caveat: this film is not recommended for anyone contemplating a visit to the dentist!

This pacy, funny, sweet, very offbeat black comedy is a hidden gem. It probably only lasted days at the cinema (I found it on cable) but is definitely worth seeing if you like your comedy left-field, like "Office Space" or "The Magic Christian".

Greig Pickhaver (a legend to most Aussies for his satirical TV and radio persona, H.G. Nelson) is great as the barking-mad-but-cunning Gordon Fairweather. A failed dental student, Gordon neatly sidesteps his lack of qual's by heading to London, and setting out his shingle there. This supposed loser finds the goose that lays golden eggs when he discovers a way to swindle the National Health -- bigtime. His hilariously slipshod "treatment" of his patients will make you cringe as much as you laugh (that tooth thing never fails!)

Jaqueline McKenzie gives a brilliant and very different performance as his endearingly daggy English girlfriend, showing again what a talented and versatile actress she is. Great supporting cast too, including Alwyn Kurts in one of his last roles.

8/10
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5/10
Hurt a bit at first, but got better towards the end
PeterM2716 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
There are a lot of laughs in this film about a man who uses the few skills he learnt in his unfinished dental degree to exact a kind of revenge on the English for their legacy of colonialism in Australia.

Greg Pickhaver plays the dentist Gordon Fairweather, but the bulk of the film consists of accounts of his practices and deeds told by other characters who encountered him - his patients, his teachers, and his girlfriend's family.

Jacqueline McKenzie plays a naïve young Portsmouth girl with a pronounced lisp, who becomes first his dental nurse and later his fiancé.

The film slumps at various times in the first half, but it picks up in the second half when Fairweather's peculiar psychology and motives are revealed by his teachers, as well as by the UK government officials who launch a belated investigation into his malpractice, causing him to flee to Hong Kong, where the film begins.
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A good laugh for Australian dentists of the 1950s
Will-1315 October 1999
This Wont Hurt a Bit is a good laugh for Australian dentists who worked in the UK in the 1950s gold rush of the National Health Scheme (NHS). Some of the scenes may appear unreal, but not if you have any experience of the NHS.
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