
Erudite manservant Jeeves hopes to keep his frivolous employer Bertie out of new harrowing adventures, but a damsel in distress, carrying half of some mysterious plans, intrudes on their London flat one rainy night. Bertie follows her to country hotel Mooring Manor, prepared to do slapstick battle with crooks posing as Scotland Yard men.

Is it worth a watch? If you have an hour to kill and you like 1930s movies where people run in and out of doors, then yes. It is fast and loud and doesn't ask you to think at all. If you are a big fan of the P.G. Wodehouse books, you will probably hate this. It’s not really the Bertie and Jeeves you know from the sto...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Arthur Greville Collins

Henry Edwards
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"Is it worth a watch? If you have an hour to kill and you like 1930s movies where people run in and out of doors, then yes. It is fast and loud and doesn't ask you to think at all. If you are a big fan of the P.G. Wodehouse books, you will probably hate this. It’s not really the Bertie and Jeeves you know from the stories. The movie starts with Bertie Wooster playing the drums. Not just playing them, but absolutely smashing them like he’s trying to wake up the whole of London. David Niven p..."
Joseph North
Stephen Gross, P.G. Wodehouse, Joseph Hoffman
United States


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