What's Good for the Goose

What's Good for the Goose
Directed by Menahem Golan
Produced by Tony Tenser
Written by Norman Wisdom
Menahem Golan
Starring Norman Wisdom
Sally Geeson
Terence Alexander
David Lodge
Music by Ken Howard
Cinematography William Brayne
Edited by Dennis Lanning
Distributed by Tigon British Film Productions
Release dates
March 1969 (UK)
Running time
105 minutes (UK)
98 minutes (edited)
Country United Kingdom
Language English

What's Good For The Goose, also known as Girl Trouble, is a 1969 British comedy film, starring Norman Wisdom.[1] [2]

It was written and directed by Menahem Golan. The film features pop music by Electric Banana otherwise known as the Pretty Things. The film uses locations around the Southport area, including the Birkdale Palace Hotel.

Plot

Norman Wisdom plays a 50-something assistant bank manager called Timothy Bartlett whose working life and marriage have become lacklustre. On his way to a bankers' conference in a coastal town, he meets a fun-loving female student called Nikki (Sally Geeson) with whom he has a brief affair and abandons his work responsibilities to have a perfect day with her, having fun taking in all the seaside amusements and recapturing his youthful energy.

He thinks he has fallen in love with Nikki, only to find out he was just a two-day novelty for her and she has already moved on to someone her own age.

The next day, he invites his wife to join him at the resort and, with his new-found youthful spirit, he replicates his perfect day with her, finding he can have just as much enjoyment with her, now that he has rediscovered how to enjoy life.

Production

There was also a German dubbed version of the film which bears the title Öfter Mal Was Junges!!. This version is 27 minutes shorter than the UK version running to 75 minutes instead of 102 minutes. It contains alternate longer versions of the hotel bedroom scenes in which Sally Geeson is topless rather than remaining in her bra as she does in the UK print (which is the generally available version). The text in the opening credits is completely redone in German over the same unfettered film sequence as in the UK version meaning it must have been prepared concurrently.

The main impact on the story caused by the much shorter running time is that Timothy is not seen replicating his perfect day with his wife and the film ends when she arrives at his hotel on a note that makes it seem he is dismayed by her appearance, thus losing the well-rounded charm of the full film.

Cast

  1. John Hamilton, Beasts in the Cellar: The Exploitation Film Career of Tony Tenser, Fab Press, 2005 p 126-127
  2. Simon Sheridan, Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema, Titan Books 2011 p 61-63
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