What a Whopper

What a Whopper
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Gilbert Gunn
Produced by Edward Joseph
Written by Terry Nation
Starring Adam Faith
Sid James
Carole Lesley
Music by Laurie Johnson
Cinematography Reginald H. Wyer
Edited by Bernard Gribble
Distributed by Regal Films International
Release date
  • 17 October 1961 (1961-10-17)
Running time
90 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

What a Whopper is a 1961 British comedy film, written by Terry Nation, from a story by Jeremy Lloyd and Trevor Peacock. Pop singer Adam Faith stars as a writer who travels with some friends to Scotland to fake a sighting of the Loch Ness Monster.

The cast includes a number of leading British film actors, including Wilfrid Brambell as a local postman, Sid James, Charles Hawtrey and Terry Scott. The TV reporter Fyfe Robertson appears briefly as himself, covering the alleged sightings of the monster.

Plot

Struggling young writer Tony Blake (Adam Faith) is served an eviction notice by Mr Slate (Clive Dunn) from his rented room in a Chelsea house shared with other artistic types including abstract "flicking" painter Arnold (Charles Hawtrey). Tony hatches a plan to drum up interest in his rejected book on the Loch Ness Monster by faking a sighting of the creature. He and his friend Vernon (Terence Longdon), who makes electronic music, construct a phony monster, which they photograph in the Serpentine, startling a tramp (Spike Milligan). The two friends and Vernon's ditzy girlfriend Charlotte 'Charlie' Pinner (Carole Lesley) decide to visit Scotland to further their ruse. Driving in a second-hand Rolls Royce hearse, they pick up a young French hitchhiker Marie (Marie-France) along the way. They are pursued by Charlie's dipsomaniac father (Freddie Frinton). Tony and his friends arrive at a Loch Ness inn, whose landlord Harry Sutton (Sid James) is trying to conceal dozens of poached salmon from two local policemen (Gordon Rollings and Terry Scott). Tony befriends the local postman (Wilfred Brambell) and other locals, who become more convinced the monster is real when they hear a monstrous roar from a speaker secretly installed by Vernon. The next day, the inn is swarming with people, but their enthusiasm wanes when Tony is unable to produce a promised photo of the monster. He and his friends make another phony monster to photograph, only discover the locals have made their own monsters. Vernon and Charlie decide to get married, while Marie falls for Tony, and the poached salmon are inadvertently loaded into a police car. The film ends with Tony and Marie attempting to escape an angry mob by rowing across the loch, only for the real monster to appear.

Background

Aspiring writer Jeremy Lloyd was working as a travelling salesman of rust-proof paint in the late 1950s when he wrote a story called 'What a Whopper' about a Cockney youth who runs tours to see the Loch Ness monster. After delivering paint near Pinewood Studios, he pitched the script to studio chief Earl St John, who bought it.[1] Songwriter and actor Trevor Peacock, who had previously written two songs for Adam Faith in the 1960 film Beat Girl[2], provided ideas for the story and has an uncredited cameo as a barrow-boy. The script was reworked by Terry Nation. It was the first full film screenplay by Nation, who had started out writing for Spike Milligan, who has a cameo. What a Whopper displayed some of the strengths and flaws that would feature in Nation's subsequent television serials. Among the positives were his "ornate verbosity" (such as the postman's flowery description of the monster) and his tendency to add new complications at every opportunity, whereas the negatives included loose ends never being tied up (such as Tony's book disappearing from the story), and overt borrowing (such as the modern art parody being influenced by the recently released Tony Hancock film The Rebel).[3]

Cast

References

  1. "What a riotous life I led! A disastrous marriage to Joanna Lumley, a red-hot affair with Charlotte Rampling... the rip-roaring memoirs of late comic genius behind 'Allo 'Allo and Are You Being Served". Associated Newspapers Ltd. the Daily Mail. 9 January 2015. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  2. Legge, Charles (12 July 2010). "He's a Clever Trevor". pressreader. Daily Mail. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  3. Alwyn W. Turner (1 April 2013). Terry Nation: The Man Who Invented the Daleks. Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-84513-687-1.
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