Carry On Cleo
The Funniest Film Since 54 B.C.
Two Britons—inventor Hengist Pod, and Horse, a brave and cunning fighter—are captured and enslaved by invading Romans and taken to Rome. One of their first encounters in Rome leaves Hengist being mistaken for a fighter, and gets drafted into the Royal Guard to protect Cleopatra.
Trailers & Videos
![Thumbnail for video: Carry on Cleo (1964) Original Trailer [FHD] Thumbnail for video: Carry on Cleo (1964) Original Trailer [FHD]](https://img.youtube.com/vi/4mlU6bxcx5s/hqdefault.jpg)
Carry on Cleo (1964) Original Trailer [FHD]
Cast

Sidney James
Mark Antony

Kenneth Williams
Julius Caesar

Kenneth Connor
Centurion Hengist Pod

Charles Hawtrey
Seneca

Joan Sims
Calpurnia

Jim Dale
Horsa

Amanda Barrie
Cleopatra

Victor Maddern
Sergeant-Major

Julie Stevens
Gloria

Sheila Hancock
Senna Pod

Jon Pertwee
Soothsayer

Francis de Wolff
Agrippa

Michael Ward
Archimedes

Brian Oulton
Brutus

Tom Clegg
Sosages

Peter Gilmore
Galley Master

Ian Wilson
Small Messenger

Warren Mitchell
Spencius

Michael Nightingale
Ancient Briton

Bill Douglas
Companion (uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
A pretty paranoid Caesar (Kenneth Williams) is anything but the hero of legend. Luckily, he has the brave "Hengist" (Kenneth Connor) to protect him. He is a captured Briton who has sworn to protect his master - except, well, it's a bit of mistaken identity and he's really just an useless inventor who is even more yellow than his boss. Conspiracies abound at the court of the eponymous and flirtatious, milk-bathing, queen (Amanda Barrie) and with Mark Antony (Sid James), Agrippa (Francis De Wolff) and Seneca (Charles Hawtrey) all plotting away to stay alive, take control of the empire, seduce anyone/everyone - it's an ideal courtly scenario for the gang to get up to some high jinx. "Infamy, infamy - the've all got it infamy!" has got to be one of the most famous lines in the English language and this joyful depiction of all things phnaa phnaa works well for ninety minutes. It looks good, there's some effort gone into the quite witty and clever writing, the costumes and the sets (clearly made of polystyrene). The ensemble effort delivered by the team, aided as always by the sparingly used but on-form Joan Sims as the put upon Calpurnia, reminded me of why, at times, this series of films was worth watching. Amongst the best, I'd say.
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