Old Mother Riley M.P. (1939) Poster

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5/10
The life of Riley
Prismark1016 June 2017
Old Mother Riley MP is a daft but an enjoyable film with an over the top and manic performance by Arthur Lucan, who seems to be all arm movements and some innuendo as well.

Old Mother Riley gets sack from her job as a washer woman in a laundry after a quarrel with the laundry owner. When the owner stands for Parliament and plans to pull down the houses on her street, Old Mother Riley also decides to stand as well, leading to some dirty tricks by his rival.

When she is elected to Parliament, Old Mother Riley fights for social justice and becomes a Minister in the department of Strange Affairs where she pursues a European country that owes Britain some money.

There is an element of farce in this film and also surrealism when Old Mother Riley knocks on a door while canvassing, two kids play the husband and wife of the household with an overgrown man playing their child.

Mrs Brown from the BBC sitcom is really the modern version of Old Mother Riley with more swearing and smuttiness.
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6/10
The Wicker Man
richardchatten19 August 2020
The fantasy of telling one's boss where they can stick their job is obviously a perennial since it pops up again in this still timely piece of social history.

One wonders what the seven minutes cut on reissue during the war contained, since it already contains plenty of home truths about life in thirties Britain where Mother Riley's boss is also her landlord (whose "workers are slaves and his tenants will soon be outcasts"), which funds his political ambitions.

The familiar argument of public amenities versus foreign aid was obviously also as hot a topic eighty years ago as it is now...
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7/10
One of the best vintage British comedies
aw014d88781 February 2008
Despite its age, this movie shows why the "Old Mother Riley" productions were so popular. The title character is very funny in speech and movements. The theme is that someone who can be dismissed as a idiotic old woman is actually a popular woman who has the support of her down to earth daughter and friends. That those who think of the welfare of others triumph over those who are only interested in themselves.

When Mother Riley finds out that her ex-boss plans to stand for parliament and pull down her and her neighbours houses, she decides to stand against him. At first, it is taken as a joke but the villain of the movie soon realises he has to resort to underhand methods to stop her.
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10/10
A CLASSIC COMEDY FROM ARTHUR
peachymead-122 April 2004
Another winner for the great variety act of Old Mother Riley and Kitty. How can any body judge this great variety act if they are not aware of the bill topping pull they had both on stage and in the series of movies they made,which are collectors items. This heap of fun is when the irish washer woman stands as an M.P. after getting the sack from the irish wash house where she works. every movement and line is a treasure, if you have watched this and did not think it funny watch again and listen to every word and watch the perfect timed action.You will soon want more. See how mother Riley, takes on the other M.P.'s and becomes the P.M. good clean fun for both kids and adults, if only it was possible to see all the series as half the films are missing. At least this one is saved.
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Butcher's Film Service
F. Gwynplaine MacIntyre is wrong to suggest that the name Butcher's Film Service was a play on the Cockney rhyming slang phrase "butcher's hook." Butcher's Films was one of the earliest and longest-surviving British film production companies and distributors, founded by William Butcher and later taken over by his sons William and Fred. Beginning as a chemist in 1860, William Senior progressed to the manufacture of photographic goods, then lantern slides. He died 1904. His sons began film distribution around 1909. The last Butcher's release was Fantasm in 1978. Many Butcher's films are now on DVD on the Renown label. I'm writing about the fascinating history of Butcher's Films in the summer issue of "The Veteran". Postscript 2018: By the time I wrote the above review F. Gwynplaine MacIntyre had been dead for nearly a year. It's probable that his claims to have seen many lost films were untrue. Much of what he says in his IMDb reviews should be taken with a pinch of salt. He was, however, a prolific and talented sci fi writer.
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Above average raucous farce in this once popular series of 15 films.
mikelang4227 July 2011
Good quality transfer to DVD. This is one of the best in the series, with a cracking script, showing off Arthur Lucan's over the top washerwoman, Old Mother Riley character to it's best. The plot has Lucan getting he sack from the laundry after a quarrel with its owner and perspective candidate for Parliament.Riley finds out that he wishes to pull down their homes and the local pub and decides to stand for Parliament herself.The social points of the haves and the have-nots are as fresh today as it was in the year of release 1939.Riley is appointed Minister of Strange Affairs,(there should be one of those!) and in a stupid ending to a good farce, forces an Emperor of a tin pot country called Rocavia to cough up a dept of £50,000,000 owing to Britain. Very topical you see. This also benefits with Kitty Mcshane, his real wife at the time, being sidelined from much of the plot. Third billed and looking like some 1950s beefcake actor is Brit Torin Thatcher,later to be a brilliant villain in The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958).Well worth a look.
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Mrs Ginocchio, don't bother
F Gwynplaine MacIntyre10 March 2002
Arthur Lucan and Kitty McShane toured the variety halls of pre-war Britain in a comedy act called "Come Over", in which Lucan (in drag) played an Irish washerwoman named Old Mother Riley, while McShane (Lucan's real-life wife) played Mother Riley's daughter Kitty. They parlayed these roles into a series of films, very popular in 1930s Britain and still shown today on bank-holiday television. Only the last film in the series ("Mother Riley Meets the Vampire", minus McShane) had played widely in America, due to the casting of Bela Lugosi as the villain.

The Old Mother Riley films aren't very funny. Lucan is totally unbelievable as a woman, and he speaks all his lines in a high-pitched falsetto which sounds neither female nor Irish. Kitty Riley (played by McShane) is supposed to be the most beautiful girl in town, so gorgeous that all the young men are always courting her. Not to be ungallant, but Kitty McShane isn't very pretty, and she's got enough nose for two Streisands. Whenever Old Mother Riley gets in trouble, she shouts her peculiar catchphrase "Mrs Ginocchio, S.O.S.!" (Mrs Ginocchio is Mother Riley's neighbour, often mentioned but never seen, like Jimmy Durante's "Mrs Calabash".)

"Old Mother Riley, M.P." is one of the better Lucan films, which isn't saying much. Mother Riley runs afoul of her local council, so she campaigns to get herself elected to Parliament. Torin Thatcher gives a good performance (too good for this film) as Kitty's sailor boyfriend who's planning to marry her.

There were weird touches of surrealism in all the Mother Riley films. The best scene in this movie occurs during Mother Riley's election campaign, when she calls on a household in her district. The house looks normal, but the husband and wife who live here are midgets. Then their son comes to the door, and he's nearly seven feet high.

American viewers might be surprised to notice an item in the credits of this movie: it was distributed by 'Butcher's Film Service'. A film service for meat-choppers? This corporate name was the producer's joke: "butcher's hook" is Cockney rhyming slang for "have a look". The producer hoped that cinema audiences would want to "have a butcher's" (look) at this movie. Some hope!

I'll give 2 points out of 10 to "Old Mother Riley, M.P."
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