IMDb RATING
6.5/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
The trials and tribulations of a group of medical students at St. Swithin's hospital in London, England.The trials and tribulations of a group of medical students at St. Swithin's hospital in London, England.The trials and tribulations of a group of medical students at St. Swithin's hospital in London, England.
- Won 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 win & 4 nominations total
Gudrun Ure
- May
- (as Ann Gudrun)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRobert Morley demanded a fee of fifteen thousand pounds sterling when offered the part of Sir Lancelot Spratt. As this would have constituted nearly one-sixth of this movie's proposed budget, the filmmakers instead hired James Robertson Justice at one-tenth the salary. Justice scored a great personal triumph in this movie, and played the role again in five sequels. It was to remain his best-known movie part.
- GoofsSimon Sparrow attends to a birth at Christmas, then almost immediately afterwards takes part in a rugby match in November. What's more the trees are in full summer foliage on the day of the match.
- Quotes
Sir Lancelot Spratt: You cut a patient he bleeds, until the processes of nature form a clot and stop it. This interval is known scientifically as the 'bleeding time'. You! What's the bleeding time?
Simon Sparrow: Ten past ten, sir.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Film Profile: Dirk Bogarde (1961)
Featured review
Doctor In The House was so successful that it spawned not only six sequels (of diminishing quality) but also a television spin-off. Oddly enough this success works against it, as it is easy to forget how good the original was.
Medical school provides a good background for the comedy capers, as well as providing a sound plot structure that some of the sequels lacked.
Dirk Bogarde leads a very strong cast, which includes such familiar British comedy faces as Joan Sims and Shirley Eaton in small roles. Kenneth More provides strong support to Bogarde but the great James Robertson Justice, in his signature role as Sir Lancelot Spratt steals the movie. Despite only appearing in a handful of scenes, Justice dominates the screen, notably in the famous `What's the bleeding time' scene.
Luscious colour photography adds to the enjoyment as the movie delivers a great hour and half of escapist fun, still fresh and breezy after almost fifty years, I'd recommend this move to any one who is interested in British comedy.
Medical school provides a good background for the comedy capers, as well as providing a sound plot structure that some of the sequels lacked.
Dirk Bogarde leads a very strong cast, which includes such familiar British comedy faces as Joan Sims and Shirley Eaton in small roles. Kenneth More provides strong support to Bogarde but the great James Robertson Justice, in his signature role as Sir Lancelot Spratt steals the movie. Despite only appearing in a handful of scenes, Justice dominates the screen, notably in the famous `What's the bleeding time' scene.
Luscious colour photography adds to the enjoyment as the movie delivers a great hour and half of escapist fun, still fresh and breezy after almost fifty years, I'd recommend this move to any one who is interested in British comedy.
- How long is Doctor in the House?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Aber, Herr Doktor
- Filming locations
- Myddelton Square, London, England, UK(Flour fight with St Crispins)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- £100,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
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