Stodge City is in the grip of the Rumpo Kid and his gang. Mistaken identity again takes a hand as a 'sanitary engineer' named Marshal P. Knutt is mistaken for a law marshal. Being the conscientious sort, Marshal tries to help the town get rid of Rumpo, and a showdown is inevitable. Marshal has two aids—revenge-seeking Annie Oakley and his sanitary expertise.
Sid James
Johnny Finger, the Rumpo Kid
Jim Dale
Marshal P. Knutt
Angela Douglas
Annie Oakley
Kenneth Williams
Judge Burke
Charles Hawtrey
Chief Big Heap
Joan Sims
Belle Armitage
Bernard Bresslaw
Little Heap
Peter Butterworth
Doc
Percy Herbert
Charlie, the Bartender
Jon Pertwee
Sheriff Albert Earp
Sydney Bromley
Sam Houston
Edina Ronay
Dolores
Lionel Murton
Clerk
Peter Gilmore
Henchman Curly
Davy Kaye
Josh the Undertaker
Alan Gifford
Commissioner
Margaret Nolan
Miss Jones
Bryan Mosley
Rider (uncredited)
Sally Douglas
Kitikata
Director
Gerald Thomas
Author
Talbot Rothwell
February 19, 2017
8
The Rumpo Kid and the parody supreme.
When Judge Burke sends for help to rid Stodge City of The Rumpo Kid and his gang of trouble makers, he's delighted to hear that he is being sent a trained Marshall. Trouble is is that it's Marshall P. Knutt, a trained sanitary engineer.
In 1964 the "Carry On" team has ventured into their first parody of the movies with Carry On Cleo. A huge success, and arguably the best film of the lot to many fans, it prompted the Thomas/Rogers/Rothwell team to believe that movie pastiche's was the way forward for the franchise. Enter Carry On Cowboy a year later. With a knowing of the genre and all its conventions, screenwriter Talbot Rothwell produced one of the better parodies to have ever been made. The stock cartoon fervour and cheeky asides still exist, but Carry On Cowboy is a more leaner, even darker "Carry On" than any of the others film's in the series. In its own right, with out the "Carry On" name attached, it's a fine comedy, with dashes of violence and even a revenge thread running thru it (courtesy of the gorgeous Angela Douglas as Annie Oakley). It's also one of the few film's in the series to demand a bit more from its actors outside of guffaw jinx and innuendos. Sid James, Kenneth Williams and Joan Sims rise to the challenge, happy in the knowledge that Jim Dale and Charles Hawtrey were there to grab (and get) the laughs. 8/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00