Despite Alan Bates' undeniably personal affiliation to the part of Frank Meadows, and director Colin Cregg's desire to tell a perceptive story about the difficulties of life as a homosexual in post-war Britain, We Think the World of You is a greatly unsatisfactory film which turns into little more than a whining version of Lassie with a gay twist if you like. Much of the blame is Cregg's, who angles his story badly, with too much seen from the point of view of Frank, and he also goes for an easygoing, semi-humorous tone which is perplexing at best, downright annoying at worst, and certainly never funny. There's a lot of potential in both these characters, and especially Gary Oldman's Johnny is underdeveloped, but we're not really given any reason to sympathize with any of them, and in the end, it all becomes a wretched one-dog show.
We Think the World of You
1988
Action / Comedy
We Think the World of You
1988
Action / Comedy
Plot summary
An aimless young man, Johnny, is sent prison. He entrusts his beloved dog, Evie, to the care of his former lover and best friend, Frank. When he gets out of prison, he has to face difficulties at home. Added to this, is the fact that he may have to give up Evie to Frank.
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January 04, 2022 at 05:14 PM
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A wretched one-dog show
I wish I had written this review in 1988 when I first saw it so I didn't have to sit through it again.
In spite of the fact that Alan Bates and Gary Oldman are great actors, they are completely upstaged by Liz Smith (the British character actress, not the new york-based gossip columnist) as Oldman's mother, who along with her husband (Max Wall), cakes in Oldman's dog when he is sent to prison. Bates and Oldman, one time lovers, have remained friends and when Bates goes to visit the dog, she learns that the dog is being mistreated by Wall, and often beaten. Smith, seemingly naive about the abuse, claims that all is well, but Bates and the dog manage to bond even though Wall goes out of his way too beat the dog with his stick when Bates is around.
It's depressing stuff, a return to the British kitchen sink dramas that Bates did in the 1960's, with some good visuals of the surrounding area of this working class neighborhood, but I didn't find the characters outside of Smith's dotty matron to be well-rounded or fully detailed, forcing the viewer to attempt to care about characters they know really nothing about. There are too many miscellaneous subplots that just slows the film down, and it becomes a very trying and ponderous drama where the relationship between man and dog doesn't really fully bond until later in the film. The beautiful German Shepherd is trained well, but it became rather disconcerting to hear the dog yelping in both pain and loneliness while Bates goes on and on about not getting any correspondence from Oldman. This definitely seems like a film that would have played better on BBC rather than be released in the theaters.