The Naked Truth buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
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List Price: $14.98
Features
• Black & White
• Closed-captioned
• DVD-Video
• Letterboxed
• Subtitled
• Widescreen
• NTSC
In Theaters : 1957
DVD Release : 07 June, 2005 |
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DVD : This item is currently not available. |
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The Naked Truth description
In 1957's The Naked Truth, Terry-Thomas plays a peer of the realm being blackmailed in the company of Peter Sellers, Peggy Mount, and Shirley Eaton by a gutter-press journalist, Dennis Price ("Don't try to appeal to my better nature, because I haven't one"). One fascinating element in this picture is the portrayal of those relationships that could be only suggested in a period of tighter censorship, such as Peter Sellers's TV personality and Kenneth Griffith as his dresser, whose gay relationship is only faintly etched in here. More overt is the characterization of a masculine-looking authoress, known only by her initials, but sporting Agatha Christie's hairdo. The moments of slapstick are brought off to a tee, as when the larger-than-life Peggy Mount attempts a suicide drop from her window to be saved by an awning on a shop front. --Adrian Edwards |
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The Naked Truth Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥
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Funny, British ensemble comedy from 1957
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First things first, the original title of this 1957 film seems actually to have been "The Naked Truth," if the standard filmographies for Peter Sellers are to be believed. Fifty years later, as I write this, the title seems a little unfortunate, considering the company this black little comedy currently shares here on Amazon and elsewhere. On the DVD itself, the title card shows not "The Naked Truth," but "Your Past is Showing." I presume that was the American title, for a movie called "The Naked Truth" was unlikely to gain much acceptance or profit in small- or even big-town America during the Eisenhower years. "Your Past is Showing" is hardly scintillating, but it's a better title, being perfectly appropriate to the story and having the advantage of removing the DVD from the present company of its booty-shaking peers.
This is one of that amazing series of relatively low-budget, witty, intelligent, often hilarious, usually black-and-white comedies that various English studios seemed to turn out at a rate of about one every couple of months throughout the 1950s and into the mid-60s. While "The Naked Truth" is hardly great, it's a perfectly respectable and sound representative of the class.
Like many fine British comedies, it has a heart of inky darkness: four individuals, initially strangers to one another, are being blackmailed by a particularly despicable character. Two of them independently hit on the notion of solving their problems by murdering the blackmailer. When their initial individual schemes fail in blackly humorous ways, they resort to the very British practice of forming a committee to carry out the murderous deed (or not, as the case may be) ... again with blackly hilarious results.
This is one of those films in which the plot is of secondary consideration, for the cast is a mini-Who's Who of mid-century comedic talent and skill. This crowd would have an audience rolling on the floor with laughter with a reading from an airline arrival and departure list: gap-toothed Terry-Thomas, ever formidable Peggy Mount, indomitably unaware Miles Malleson, so-gorgeous-you-don't-realize-she's-smart Shirley Eaton, incomparable Joan Sims (frazzled here rather than brassy), smooth, charming, despicable Dennis Price and Peter Sellers.
This is Sellers' third major film role. He made his movie debut in 1955 in "The Lady Killers." His second film was "The Smallest Show on Earth" in 1957. All three of these films are ensemble films and in all three, Sellers was teamed with, to say the very least, performers of impressive talent: Alec Guinness in "The Ladykillers," Margaret Rutherford in "The Smallest Show on Earth" and Terry-Thomas in "The Naked Truth." In each of these films, Sellers has a memorable but subordinate part. That would all change in his Wunderjahr, 1959, when he became a one-man picture franchise with back-to-back international triumphs in "The Mouse That Roared" and "I'm All Right Jack." In the former, he played (at least) three starring roles. In the latter, he outshone the brilliant Ian Carmichael.
If memory serves me correctly, I first became aware of Sellers' new star status when the then-mighty Life Magazine devoted a full picture spread to the wonderful new, satirical comedy about labor relations, "I'm All Right Jack." (The magazine even felt obliged to explain to puzzled Americans what the title meant.) The only star that I can recall receiving an equivalent accolade was Jacques Tati in "Mr. Hulot's Holiday."
Time and the publication of tell-all memoirs place this film is a rather different light than the one in which I viewed it in 1957. I certainly see things in "The Naked Truth" (by whatever title) that I entirely missed fifty years ago. Amazon's editorial reviewer, Adrian Edwards, touched on this, but his gaze was firmly fixed on what he perceived as gay elements in the film: the relationship between Sellers' character and his Welsh dresser (heh-heh), and perhaps an overly butch caricature of Agatha Christie. Well ... maybe.
Of more significance to me is the nature of the character played by Sellers. He's a widely-loved television personality who is massively insecure in his private life. He's a man who hops manically from persona to persona, never taking rest in any one of them, while on the hop, he concocts grandiose and unworkable schemes that only bring him pain. This, it turns out, was a coldly accurate portrait of Peter Sellers, himself, whose agonized cry to the universe was, "I don't know who I am!" Who knew?
This is a funny picture from a brilliant epoch with a superb cast. Of course it deserves five stars. |
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