What a Whopper

Naughty Maids And Naughtical Monsters, A Book! A Monster! A Film!

5.9
19611h 30m

A writer attempts to raise some cash by writing a book about the Loch Ness Monster. No publisher will take it because they all think there isn't really a monster. The writer and some of his friends make a fake monster and take photographs and then travel to Scotland to see if they can convince the locals.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: What a Whopper - Directed by Gilbert Gun

What a Whopper - Directed by Gilbert Gun

Cast

Photo of Adam Faith

Adam Faith

Tony Blake

Photo of Carole Lesley

Carole Lesley

Charlotte 'Charlie' Pinner

Photo of Freddie Frinton

Freddie Frinton

Gilbert Pinner

Photo of Sidney James

Sidney James

Harry Sutton

Photo of Clive Dunn

Clive Dunn

Mr. Slate

Photo of Terry Scott

Terry Scott

Sergeant

Photo of Fabia Drake

Fabia Drake

Mrs Pinner

Photo of Archie Duncan

Archie Duncan

MacDonald

Photo of Lance Percival

Lance Percival

Policeman at Roundabout

Photo of Molly Weir

Molly Weir

Teacher

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

Heart-throb pop star Adam Faith ("Tony") is a struggling author who cannot get his book about the famed Loch Ness monster published. It purports to be a serious work and naturally all the publishers know there's no such beastie. Determined to prove them wrong, he and some pals fake some photos and soon the world and it's wife is heading to verify the sightings. Now as a Scot, this irked on a couple of levels - not least Faith's appalling attempt at the accent and director Gilbert Gunn's determination not to use any Scottish actors at all, as far as I could see. Sidney James as the Highland hotel owner really did take the proverbial biscuit. Despite these rather obvious, doubtless budget-driven clangers, at times it's actually quite a fun, light-hearted, wheeze but it's really let down by the fairly stilted acting across the board which is almost as ropey as the stereotype-ridden script. Needless to say, the filming never left the home counties and as for the theme song - well, least said. It does have a nostalgia value - simple comedy around an even more simple story, but it's still not very good.

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