Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0

Dr. Simon Sparrow

Joy Gibson

Dr. Tony Benskin

Sir Lancelot Spratt

Nurse Nan MacPherson

Dr. Erasmus Potter-Shine

Dr. Charlie Bingham

Maharajah of Branda

O'Malley

Wilkins

Pascoe

Mrs. Digby

Mrs. Wilkins

Emerald

Sir Charles Hopcroft

Dr. Hatchet

Mr. Smith

Examiner

Mrs. Jasmine Hatchet

Jessup

George

Duke of Skye and Lewes

Major Porter

Kitty

Mrs. Law

Mr. Wayland

Sam

Mrs. Dalton

Padre

Dr. Farquarson

Lady Hawkins

Waiter at Hotel

Examiner

Colonel Graves

Eva's Mother (uncredited)

Old Ives (uncredited)

Surgeon (uncredited)

Anaesthetist (uncredited)

Medical Student (uncredited)

Police Constable (uncredited)

Patient (uncredited)

Large French Swimmer (uncredited)

Butler (uncredited)

Girl on Boat (uncredited)

Surgeon (uncredited)

Medical Student (uncredited)

Passerby (uncredited)

Police Sergeant (uncredited)

Stubbins (uncredited)

House Surgeon (uncredited)

Elephant Keeper (uncredited)

Outpatient (uncredited)

Secretary (uncredited)

Dustman with Cyst (uncredited)

Man (uncredited)

Haymaking Farmer (uncredited)

Cyril (uncredited)

Haymaking Farmer's Son (uncredited)

Ernest (uncredited)

Eva (uncredited)

Clerk (uncredited)

Alice (uncredited)

Barman (uncredited)

Una (uncredited)

Student Doctor (uncredited)

Outpatient (uncredited)

Surgeon (uncredited)

Mrs. Ives (uncredited)

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-04-04
This third outing for our now qualified doctors has largely lost it's sting. Though many of the original cast have remained, there is far too much dialogue, way too many characters and the original stalwarts - Dirk Bogarde ("Sparrow"); James Robertson Justice ("Sir Lancelot") and Muriel Pavlow ("Joy") just don't feature enough as the story offers us some ever increasingly ridiculous scenarios. We even have an elephant! It's too long too, perhaps it could be tightened up by fifteen or twenty minutes, and the wordy chatter could really do with similar treatment too. It's fine, but the joke is really wearing thin and the frequently rather crass humour is now stretched past the point where laughs can easily be had.