The Knack ... and how to get it


1h 24m 1965
The Knack ... and how to get it

Brief Synopsis

A rampant womanizer tries to help an innocent friend bed an eccentric girl.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Adaptation
Release Date
Jan 1965
Premiere Information
New York opening: 29 Jun 1965
Production Company
Woodfall Film Productions
Distribution Company
Lopert Pictures
Country
United Kingdom
Location
London, England, United Kingdom
Screenplay Information
Based on the play The Knack by Ann Jellicoe (London, 27 Mar 1962).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 24m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Synopsis

Colin, a young teacher who owns a boardinghouse in London, does not have the knack of attracting women; his tenant, Tolen, on the other hand, has so many women swarming around him that he is able to hold a reunion of girl friends at Albert Hall. Colin decides that a brass bed would improve his luck, and Tom, an artist tenant who acts as a stabilizing influence on both men, takes him to a junkyard to find one. While rolling the bed home through the streets, they come upon Nancy Jones, an innocent young woman from the provinces looking for the Y. W. C. A. The men offer to assist her, but instead she helps them push the bed, causing traffic jams and creating hysteria along the way. After reaching the house, Tolen demonstrates his amorous technique for Colin, intending for the latter to take over after Nancy becomes romantically inclined; Colin awkwardly bungles his opportunity, however, and Nancy leaves with Tolen on his motorcycle. Colin and Tom take off in pursuit and finally catch up with them in the park, where Nancy has fainted from the excitement. Despite Tolen's denials, Nancy claims to have been raped. Tolen, unnerved by the persistent accusations, loses his grip on her, enabling Colin to assert his own influence as he and Nancy become fast friends. Colin, it seems, has learned the knack at last.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Adaptation
Release Date
Jan 1965
Premiere Information
New York opening: 29 Jun 1965
Production Company
Woodfall Film Productions
Distribution Company
Lopert Pictures
Country
United Kingdom
Location
London, England, United Kingdom
Screenplay Information
Based on the play The Knack by Ann Jellicoe (London, 27 Mar 1962).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 24m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Articles

The Knack...And How To Get It


Just how do you get the Knack? According to Richard Lester's quixotic film, a defining film of the Sixties, it could be any of these reasons: luck, sublimation, pseudo rape, perseverance, unconscious obsession, backward logic, a cool motorbike, or the careful placement of gold medallions. In what still remains probably one of the best extensions of the French New Wave, The Knack (1965) brought together the fast-paced editing style of television advertising (Lester had directed and perfected his techniques in over 50 commercials before directing The Knack) with the sensibilities of New Wave directors like Jean-Luc Godard, an unlikely combination which nevertheless worked at selling a hip new concept.

The movie has its origins in the play The Knack by Ann Jellicoe, a minor Off-Broadway play which ran successfully in New York and London and caught the eye of the film's producers. The screenwriter, Charles Wood, first negotiated with Lindsay Anderson to direct the film, but he eventually declined. Lester was a hot director after the critical and financial success of the Beatles' sensation A Hard Days Night (1964) and was commissioned to direct the next film for the Fab Four, but was offered The Knack as an in-betweener. Made in a matter of weeks for a minor sum of $385,000, The Knack was assembled with a combination of careful planning, some improvisation, and a great deal of creative freedom. The film retained a great deal of Jellicoe's dialogue, but moved the action out onto the streets of Swingin' London. Lester employed an innovative use of the camera capturing candid and unrehearsed reactions of onlookers during key outdoor sequences and over-dubbing their scenes with a running dialogue, a technique he would use again in subsequent films.

Of the ensemble cast, only Rita Tushingham came from the stage production ­ and she was probably the best known 'star' after bursting onto the 60's film scene in A Taste of Honey (1961) which won her a British Academy Award and The New York Film Critics Award. The film also surprised critics and audiences alike when it took home the top prize, the Palm D'Or, at the Cannes Film Festival in 1965.

Producer: Oscar Lewenstein
Director: Richard Lester
Screenplay: Ann Jellicoe (play), Charles Wood
Production Design: Assheton Gorton
Cinematography: David Watkin
Costume Design: Jocelyn Rickards
Film Editing: Antony Gibbs
Original Music: John Barry, Alan Haven (songs)
Cast: Rita Tushingham (Nancy Jones), Ray Brooks (Tolen), Michael Crawford (Colin), Donal Donnelly (Tom), John Bluthal (Father).
BW-86m. Letterboxed.

by Richard Steiner

The Knack...and How To Get It

The Knack...And How To Get It

Just how do you get the Knack? According to Richard Lester's quixotic film, a defining film of the Sixties, it could be any of these reasons: luck, sublimation, pseudo rape, perseverance, unconscious obsession, backward logic, a cool motorbike, or the careful placement of gold medallions. In what still remains probably one of the best extensions of the French New Wave, The Knack (1965) brought together the fast-paced editing style of television advertising (Lester had directed and perfected his techniques in over 50 commercials before directing The Knack) with the sensibilities of New Wave directors like Jean-Luc Godard, an unlikely combination which nevertheless worked at selling a hip new concept. The movie has its origins in the play The Knack by Ann Jellicoe, a minor Off-Broadway play which ran successfully in New York and London and caught the eye of the film's producers. The screenwriter, Charles Wood, first negotiated with Lindsay Anderson to direct the film, but he eventually declined. Lester was a hot director after the critical and financial success of the Beatles' sensation A Hard Days Night (1964) and was commissioned to direct the next film for the Fab Four, but was offered The Knack as an in-betweener. Made in a matter of weeks for a minor sum of $385,000, The Knack was assembled with a combination of careful planning, some improvisation, and a great deal of creative freedom. The film retained a great deal of Jellicoe's dialogue, but moved the action out onto the streets of Swingin' London. Lester employed an innovative use of the camera capturing candid and unrehearsed reactions of onlookers during key outdoor sequences and over-dubbing their scenes with a running dialogue, a technique he would use again in subsequent films. Of the ensemble cast, only Rita Tushingham came from the stage production ­ and she was probably the best known 'star' after bursting onto the 60's film scene in A Taste of Honey (1961) which won her a British Academy Award and The New York Film Critics Award. The film also surprised critics and audiences alike when it took home the top prize, the Palm D'Or, at the Cannes Film Festival in 1965. Producer: Oscar Lewenstein Director: Richard Lester Screenplay: Ann Jellicoe (play), Charles Wood Production Design: Assheton Gorton Cinematography: David Watkin Costume Design: Jocelyn Rickards Film Editing: Antony Gibbs Original Music: John Barry, Alan Haven (songs) Cast: Rita Tushingham (Nancy Jones), Ray Brooks (Tolen), Michael Crawford (Colin), Donal Donnelly (Tom), John Bluthal (Father). BW-86m. Letterboxed. by Richard Steiner

Quotes

Are you a homosexual?
- Tolen
No. Thanks all the same.
- Tom
Just think of what you could do with a real whip, Tolen. A real whip.
- Tom

Trivia

one of the reaction shots when Nancy, Colin and Tom roll the bed through the streets. He's the balding guy standing next to a lady with big hair.

Notes

Filmed on location in London. Opened in London in May 1965. Also known as The Knack.

Miscellaneous Notes

The United Kingdom

Winner of the Palme d'Or for Best Film at the 1965 Cannes Film Festival.

Released in United States Summer June 29, 1965

Released in United States January 1990

Released in United States 2000

Shown at United States Film Festival Park City, Utah January 20-28, 1990.

Richard Lester has a bit part in the film.

Release in London May 1965.

Released in United States Summer June 29, 1965

Released in United States January 1990 (Shown at United States Film Festival Park City, Utah January 20-28, 1990.)

Released in United States 2000 (Shown in New York City (Film Forum) as part of program "The British New Wave: From Angry Young Men to Swinging London" October 27 - November 16, 2000.)