Carry On Doctor
Dir: Gerald Thomas
1968
****
Carry On Doctor is
the fifteenth Carry On film of the series and it represents the first time the
franchise really dodged a bullet. 1966’s Carry On Don’t Lose Your Head and
Carry On Follow That Camel, which was released earlier that year, were the two
biggest flops the series had endured at that point. The franchise was in
danger, so a special guest star was ordered and many of the usual actors who
had been missing for that last few Carry On films were begged back. Carry On
Nurse was still the most popular of the series to date so director Gerald
Thomas and producer Peter Rogers took the team back to the hospital. The great
Frankie Howerd made his first of two Carry On appearances, something that
franchise regular Kenneth Williams was said to be upset about. The two were
Britain’s top camp comedy performers, Williams refused to be a part of the film
until he realised that it was his series and he’d be damned if he would give
way to someone else. Howerd was largely brought in as Sid James, although in
the film, had just had a heart attack, so spend the entirety of the film in a
hospital bed. Jim Dale, Charles Hawtrey, Joan Sims, Peter Butterworth and
Bernard Bresslaw all returned, Barbara Windsor came back for her second Carry
On performance and Hattie Jacques was begged back after being absent for four
years and seven films. It worked and Carry On Doctor became the third biggest
film in the UK of 1967. The revisit to the world of a British NHS hospital was
done with a nudge and a wink, beautifully so in a certain scene whereby a nurse
arranges some flowers – daffodils no less – in Frankie Howerd’s room, only for
Howerd’s character to snap back “Oh no you don’t! I saw that film” in reference
to Carry on Nurse, where a nurse used a daffodil instead of a rectal thermometer.
The comradery between patients under the strong arm of the hospital’s matron is
now something of comedy legend in the UK and a wonderfully nostalgic look back
at the way things were. The franchise had to be careful though, as the story
came very close to ‘Doctor’ film series, that stared one time Carry On actor
Leslie Philips and the great James Robertson Justice. However, the Doctor
series was produced by Carry On producer Peter Roger’s wife, the wonderfully
named Betty E. Box. He was granted permission as long as his wife was credited
and a little bit of money offered and a portrait of James Robertson Justice
with the caption ‘Dr James R. Justice, Founder’ was also hung over the ward
door in tribute and acknowledgement. The film certainly has one of the better
Carry On scripts with a collection of some of the series’ better characters.
Howerd plays Francis Bigger, a charlatan faith healer who promotes ‘mind over
matter’ over conventional medical treatment. During a lecture, he falls
offstage and is admitted to hospital where he moans that he’s being treated
badly and demands preferral treatment. There is a lot of sneaking into the
women’s ward and hiding from matron and there is a very funny scene involving
laughing gas. My favourite character is Charles Hawtrey’s Mr
Barron who seems to be suffering sympathy pains while his wife awaits the birth
of their baby. It’s all good clean fun before the series got really smutty. I’m
glad the series was saved, as this was meant to be the last, but I’m not sure
anyone really learned from their mistakes, although many a great Carry On
followed.
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