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Joseph Andrews (film)

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1977 British film
Joseph Andrews
Theatrical release poster, artwork byTed CoConis
Directed byTony Richardson
Written byAllan Scott
Screenplay byChris Bryant
Based onJoseph Andrews
byHenry Fielding
StarringAnn-Margret
Peter Firth
Michael Hordern
Beryl Reid
Jim Dale
CinematographyDavid Watkin
Edited byThom Noble
Music byJohn Addison
Production
company
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • April 1977 (1977-04)
Running time
104 min.
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3 million[1]

Joseph Andrews is a 1977 Britishperiodcomedy film directed byTony Richardson and starringAnn-Margret,Peter Firth,Michael Hordern,Beryl Reid andJim Dale.[2] The screenplay was byAllan Scott andChris Bryant based on the 1742 novelJoseph Andrews byHenry Fielding.

Plot

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The film follows the comic adventures of Joseph Andrews,footman to Lady Booby.

Cast

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Production

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Development

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Paramount announced the film in May 1976.[3]

Filming locations

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The movie was filmed on location atBroughton Castle,Banbury, Oxfordshire, England, at the Roman Baths inBath, Somerset, England, and at theRoyal Crescent in Bath, Somerset, England,the George Inn, Norton St Philip and in other locations in England.[citation needed]

Music

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The ballads were sung byJim Dale.

Critical reception

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The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Hoping, no doubt, to repeat the box-office success ofTom Jones (Hugh Griffith is called back for a repeat performance as Squire Western), Richardson unhappily misses out all down the line. Firth is no Finney (leaving aside the fact that the insipid Joseph is singularly lacking in Tom's gumption); the sexual encounters are, it seems, motivated more by desperation than exuberance or, in Joseph's case, when he finally makes love to the passive girl, by an incongruously clichéd romanticism; a parade of stars walk on and off, none (like David Warner, as the odious Blifil) leaving more than a momentary impression; the episodes (elegantly linked by the narrator in Tom Jones) tumble randomly on top of each other. ... Fielding's redeeming asides are missing and even the incidental pleasures of Michael Hordern's Parson Adams, a workmanlike, worried-bloodhound performance from an accomplished character actor, cannot offset the sense of déja vu which pervades this musty enterprise."[4]

Sight and Sound wrote: "Joseph Andrews ... was a shamelessly blatant attempt at reviving past glories that reassembled many of the ingrethents behind the Oscar-winningTom Jones (1963) a Henry Fielding source novel, John Addison score, Hugh Griffith's Rabelaisian Squire Western and some visual innuendo involving asparagus. The later film certainly has its sprightly comic moments, and British stars-potters will be in seventh heaven, but its self-conscious bawdiness becomes wearying when accompanied by little discernible satirical point. Peter Firth and Natalie Ogle are prettily blank-faced as the romantic leads, though Ann-Margret's turn as the scheming Lady Booby shows unexpected range."[5]

Variety wrote: "Joseph Andrews is a tired British period piece about leching and wenching amidst the highand lowlife of Henry Fielding's England. Tony Richardson's film is a ludicrous mix of underplayed bawdiness and sporadic vulgarity. Large cast of otherwise British players is headed by Ann-Margret, sometimes appearing grotesque in her rendition of Lady Booby, the noblewoman-with-a-past with the hots for servant Peter Firth in title role. ... Commercial outlook is thin and uneven."[6]

Vincent Canby ofThe New York Times wrote: "Joseph Andrews contains more great (and more greatly funny) character performances than any film I've seen in years. It's one of the few movies around now that truly lifts the spirits, not only because it is so good-humored but also because the humor is laced with so much wit and wisdom. ...(Ann-Margret) looks great and she is enchantingly funny, but so is almost everyone else in a cast so big I really don't know where to begin, since I'm sure to leave out someone important. It's one of those films in which even the smaller roles are as beautifully and as memorably done as the larger ones. ...The film is ... an almost perfect blending of beauty, romance and adventure, of landscapes too lovely to believe alternating with the kind of gritty period detail that prompts one character (Squire Thomas) to say of a street jam in the resort city of Bath, 'The only things that move here are the bowels of the horses.'"[7]

Filmink said Ann-Margret "stole the show".[8]

Accolades

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Ann-Margret was nominated for a 1978Golden Globe Award for her performance in the film.[9]

Michael Annals,Patrick Wheatley were nominated for the 1978BAFTA award for Best Costume Design.[10]

References

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  1. ^Richardson Gibes the Gentry Again in 'Joseph Andrews'Champlin, Charles. Los Angeles Times 13 June 1976: p1.
  2. ^"Joseph Andrews".British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved8 November 2025.
  3. ^MOVIE CALL SHEET: Elliott More Than a Sex SymbolMurphy, Mary. Los Angeles Times 3 Mar 1976: f6.
  4. ^"Joseph Andrews".The Monthly Film Bulletin.44 (516): 74. 1 January 1977.ProQuest 1305827574.
  5. ^"Joseph Andrews".Sight and Sound.19 (11): 89. November 2009.ProQuest 237126762.
  6. ^"Joseph Andrews".Variety.286 (6): 22. 16 March 1977.ProQuest 1401308274.
  7. ^Canby, Vincent (14 April 1978)."Witty 'Joseph Andrews': Misadventures Galore".
  8. ^Vagg, Stephen (6 September 2021)."Surviving Cold Streaks: Ann-Margret".Filmink. Retrieved9 March 2023.
  9. ^"Joseph Andrews".Golden Globes. Retrieved8 November 2025.
  10. ^"Joseph Andrews".BAFTA. Retrieved8 November 2025.

External links

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Films directed byTony Richardson
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