Take Me High
Take Me High
| 07 December 1973 (USA)
Take Me High Trailers

Tim (Cliff Richard) is a successful ambitious young financier working for a London Merchant bank, but even his happy-go-lucky attitude is severely jolted when he is sent to Birmingham instead of his promised New York for his posting! But comedy reigns when the enterprising bank manager helps an unsuccessful Birmingham restaurant compete with its rivals by introducing a new fast food - the Brumburger!

Reviews
Cortechba

Overrated

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Micransix

Crappy film

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Nayan Gough

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

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Kinley

This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows

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mike_olley

By any measure this is a very cheesy film, but it's so harmless and wholesome you can't really take umbrage with it. Based around the jewel of the British Waterways, the Gas Street basin it offers a fascinating historical insight into this very special area of Birmingham. Sort of film you can enjoy as long as you restrict watching it to, say, every ten years or so.It's a pity that it has yet to be released on a modern format as I know many Brummies would enjoy just watching the film for the shots around the City. A City which has changed much, Take me High provides a good visual snap shot of the capitol of the British Midlands just before it's decline as a light industrial engineering world centre.During Cliffs tenure on his canal boat in the Gas Street basin he would have had a neighbour in the fictional Wilf Harvey popular elderly Crossroads character who lived on dry land adjacent to the canals.

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ShadeGrenade

I love those films you get free in newspapers. I love even more the ones you get free in papers you don't actually read - this one was generously given to me by a neighbour with a lifelong hatred of Sir Cliff Richard. 'Take Me High' ( 1973 ), his last film, re-teamed him with Kenneth Harper, producer of many of his earlier pictures, including the much-loved 'Summer Holiday' ( 1963 ). It is an altogether different sort of picture. There's no Shadows, for instance, nor winsome Una Stubbs or Melvyn Hayes in a hat or Richard O'Sullivan looking like 'Harry Potter'. It is a product of a more cynical age. Cliff is 'Tim Matthews', an ambitious young banker looking forward to promotion to a top New York job. Alas he falls out with girlfriend Vicki ( Maddy Smith ) and not even a new food mixer brings her round. There is more bad news for Cliff ( sorry, Tim ). The New York job has fallen through. Tim is instead bundled off to Birmingham. The film looks as though it is going to be a retread of Lindsay Anderson's 'O Lucky Man!', but then goes in a different direction. Tim has a rival in the shape of slimy Hugo Flaxman ( Anthony Andrews ), who is steadfastly refusing financial help to Sarah Jones ( Debbie Watling ), the owner of a struggling restaurant. Tim not only gives her the money, but a solid gold idea - why not open a new restaurant devoted to one product - the Brumburger?Enlisting the aid of local businessman Hugh Griffith, Sarah gets her restaurant ( which seems to be doing a roaring trade even before it opens ), Hugo gets the New York job, and Tim gets to go to bed with Sarah. Happy ending time! I expected to hate this, but was pleasantly surprised. I cannot think of many musicals about the creation of a new burger, so in that respect it breaks new ground. Cliff is much too nice to be taken seriously as a ruthless banker, but gets by. He looks great throughout. Buxom Debbie Watling was a former 'Dr.Who' companion ( in Patrick Troughton's time ). She too looks great, particularly in that Pink Panther T-shirt. Lucky old Tim. New York? Who needs it? Birmingham with Debbie looks more appealing.Director David Askey worked on L.W.T.'s 'Doctor' series and 'Bless Me Father' amongst other things. The sterling supporting cast features Richard Wattis and George Cole. Griffith's tycoon is a riot though. Watching Cole denouncing him on television, he is so incensed he whips out a gun and blasts the set. He's like one of those eccentrics who inhabits 'The Avengers'.The opening of the Brumberger restaurant has to be seen to be believed. Crowds cheer enthusiastically as Tim and Sarah glide through the streets in an open-topped car. You have never seen so many people excited over a burger in their lives! The 1981 Royal Wedding looks like a back-garden barbecue by comparison. This tosh was penned, amazingly, by Christopher Penfold, author of many great 'Space:1999' episodes. Watling said of the film years later: "everyone knew it was going to be dreadful but didn't say anything!". She is a bit harsh. Yes it is mind-crushingly daft, but pleasantly watchable. The songs are nice too ( if you like this era's music ). The I.T.V. children's programme 'Clapperboard' devoted a two-part special to its making, not an honour bestowed on many movies so Cliff and co. must have gotten something right.A belated Happy 70th birthday, Sir Cliff!

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okonski

Back in the late 1960's, Birmingham's canal network was in sad decline - with more miles of canals than Venice, this undemanding story with tracks sung by Cliff had a reasonable story-line, but the REAL star is the City of Birmingham itself.Since the film was made, the canal network has been given the respect it deserved and is now a working waterway, with new developments at Gas Street Basin (behind the 'Brumburger' shop) a testament to the regeneration. Since the 70's, Birmingham is probably unrecognisable, with many of the modern buildings shown already replaced.The cast worked well, but it was often painful watching the Fox hunting scenes (now a banned activity) and seemingly added only to add some 'english quaintness' for non-native viewers.

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michaeltyler898

i was introduced to 'take me high' by a friend and avid cliff fan. i was sceptical at first but soon got absorbed by the plot and songs and as i herald from Birmingham i found the scenery of 'yesteryear' Brum just hypnotic. the 'Jiggedy Jaggedy' buildings are still there today! the film has fantastic moments like the hilarious way cliff discovers gas street (by folding a map into 4 pieces)and saying...."gas street!!!" and the Clifftastic 'winning' its just a must.and the way he converts his barge into a floating mansion is superb.great cameos from George Cole and the ever-young Anthony Andrews make this film a must see. Cliffs least known work but surely his best as his great voice and zany personality shine through.i only wish there was a Brumburger in real life as it looks lovely!!Michael

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