Home :: DVD :: Classics :: Musicals  

Action & Adventure
Boxed Sets
Comedy
Drama
General
Horror
International
Kids & Family
Musicals

Mystery & Suspense
Sci-Fi & Fantasy
Silent Films
Television
Westerns
Expresso Bongo

Expresso Bongo

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $22.46
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Where's the rest of it?
Review: Although the print is great and the letterbox format really helps, several of the songs from the original are missing. I recorded this film back in the 80's off of television and the version I recorded has at least three more songs. Their ommision for me makes it a very different film. If you've never seen it, you might not mind, but if you have, be prepared for the musical readers digest version of the film. Laurence Harvey is fabulous although the deletion of his musical numbers greatly inhibits the arc of his character's development. Richard is excellent in his first role. All his songs are intact!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Expresso Bong.....Oh
Review: An on target black and white satire of the 1950's pop music scene with only one problem. The music isn't all there. As I remember it , there was at least one other song in the original cinema release and it's omission removes some of the bite from the whole. Overall, a bit of a let-down considering that there wasn't much music to start with, although Cliff Richard does get a reasonable look-in. (Can you believe that he was really nineteen at the time ? He only looks about fourteen here.)Anyway, it is still worth having a look at but I imagine that those expecting to see the same film that they saw all those years ago are going to feel disappointed.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Expresso Bong.....Oh
Review: An on target black and white satire of the 1950's pop music scene with only one problem. The music isn't all there. As I remember it , there was at least one other song in the original cinema release and it's omission removes some of the bite from the whole. Overall, a bit of a let-down considering that there wasn't much music to start with, although Cliff Richard does get a reasonable look-in. (Can you believe that he was really nineteen at the time ? He only looks about fourteen here.)Anyway, it is still worth having a look at but I imagine that those expecting to see the same film that they saw all those years ago are going to feel disappointed.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The Same Shoddy Piece of Goods
Review: Forget about stars. Kino's DVD of "Expresso Bongo" is the same mangled version that appeared on VHS a couple of years ago. Three
songs performed by Laurence Harvey are missing. I e-mailed Kino about this abridgement at the time. Mr. Gonzalez is quite correct in calling Kino's cut a "Reader's Digest" version of the film.I was hoping Harvey's numbers would be restored for the DVD version but I see I will have to make do with my murky off-the-air video recording.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Bohemian Madness
Review: Laurence Harvey as Johnny Jackson is appealing, cool and wild. This movie is just one great period piece of a time and place long gone. What a ride in 50s London! Spellbinding.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Botched
Review: Make no mistake, I love EXPRESSO BONGO, and the film itself would normally merit five stars; for style and sensibility, it was ahead of the curve for 1959. Watching this version of it, however, gives the false impression that this is just another teen idol film, due primarily to the several excised musical interludes. Of course, my own discovery of the missing Harvey numbers was upsetting, but by far the biggest letdown was the absence of Meier Tzelniker's peculiar performance of a charming number called "Nausea," the strangest moment in the film and biggest disappointment of this edition. Kino is generally one of the few labels I would buy from sight unseen, but this gives me cause for concern...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wild
Review: This is a terrific film. Harvey and Richard are a tremendously entertaining comedy team. The songs are great, and the view of 1950's London is priceless.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Temple's template?
Review: This look at the British rock'n'roll scene, circa 1959, HAD to have inspired Julien Temple's "Absolute Beginners", right from its opening nightime shots swooping through London's Soho coffee bar/club scene to its depiction of naive show biz beginners with stars in thier eyes and savvy talent agents' hands in thier wallets. The late great Laurence Harvey portrays the classic success-hungry hustler/"manager" stereotype with the kind of cheeky chutzpah that remained unmatched until Ray Sharkey's astounding performance in 1980's "The Idolmaker". The elfin Cliff Richard plays it straight as Harvey's "discovery", the hilariously named 'Bongo' Herbert. Great footage of the original "Shadows" group, including guitar whiz Hank Marvin (whom Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page have cited as a seminal influence). The smart, bitchy dialog is better written than most U.S. "youth" films of the era ("The Girl Can't Help It" and "Rock Rock Rock" may contain priceless performance footage, but tend to sport somewhat sophmoric scripts). DVD notes: The Kino release has the best picture I've ever seen of the film, but the oversaturated sound makes much of the dialog unintelligable and some of the "brassier" songs unlistenable. A real hoot for music geeks.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Temple's template?
Review: This look at the British rock'n'roll scene, circa 1959, HAD to have inspired Julien Temple's "Absolute Beginners", right from its opening nightime shots swooping through London's Soho coffee bar/club scene to its depiction of naive show biz beginners with stars in thier eyes and savvy talent agents' hands in thier wallets. The late great Laurence Harvey portrays the classic success-hungry hustler/"manager" stereotype with the kind of cheeky chutzpah that remained unmatched until Ray Sharkey's astounding performance in 1980's "The Idolmaker". The elfin Cliff Richard plays it straight as Harvey's "discovery", the hilariously named 'Bongo' Herbert. Great footage of the original "Shadows" group, including guitar whiz Hank Marvin (whom Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page have cited as a seminal influence). The smart, bitchy dialog is better written than most U.S. "youth" films of the era ("The Girl Can't Help It" and "Rock Rock Rock" may contain priceless performance footage, but tend to sport somewhat sophmoric scripts). DVD notes: The Kino release has the best picture I've ever seen of the film, but the oversaturated sound makes much of the dialog unintelligable and some of the "brassier" songs unlistenable. A real hoot for music geeks.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sharp Showbiz Satire.
Review: WOW ! Talk about mixed reviews ! I gather from some of the reviewers that certain parts of the original film--apparently Laurence Harvey had some songs--are missing in this version.
Sorry--I find it difficult to miss what I have never seen in the first place. As long as the Cliff Richard numbers are included, I suspect most people will be satisfied.

This is a highly entertaining film, and while Laurence's singing may be "missing in action", his acting as the ultimate hustling, unethical, desperate showbiz manager is terrific. Whether it's 1959, when the film was made, or 2003, one suspects that success in the world of pop music does dictate that "nice guys will finish last". Harvey's character is certainly not a "nice guy", but his brash, "silver-tongued" persona becomes, thanks to a great actor, sympathetic to the viewer. As his long-suffering girlfriend, Maisie the Stripper, Sylvia Syms matches Harvey's performance as the only type of woman who would stick with this manic guy for more than five minutes !

An incredibly young Cliff Richard is "Bongo" Herbert, Harvey's big "discovery". This was not Cliff's first film, but it was his first major role, and he was well-cast as a naive young singer who just performs "for kicks", until he learns the ways of a ruthless world. One more point for music fans--you will also see Cliff Richard's legendary backing group, the Shadows, in the coffee bar scene, before they became big stars in their own right.

The film captures the atmosphere of London's more sleazy areas, circa 1959, as well as the excitement created by a new force in music--rock n' roll. Of course, if there is one ingredient that lifts this movie over many others of the same type, it is the script--this one really crackles !

The picture is widescreen, black and white and the quality is good, rather than great--sound, of course, is mono.

Overall, a classic satire on the music business and the exploitation of artists. Recommended.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates