The Knack… and How to Get It
The Knack… and How to Get It (1965) – 1965 | 84 mins | Comedy | B&W
Plot Synopsis

Director Richard Lester’s follow-up to the successful A Hard Day’s Night was this inventive and energetic swinging London farce based on the stage play by Ann Jellicoe. The plot is little more than an excuse for a frenetic array of sexist one-liners, clipped dialogue, visual gags and jump cutting editing. Although very much a film of its time and a Palme d’Or winner, today The Knack appears sadly dated and embarrassingly misogynistic.
Cool and sophisticated Tolen (Ray Brooks) has a monopoly on womanizing – with a long line of conquests to his name, while the naive and awkward schoolteacher Colin (Michael Crawford), Tolen’s landlord, desperately wants a piece of the action. When Colin goes to the dump to find a king size brass bed he meets doe-eyed country girl Nancy Jones (Rata Tushingham) and gradually falls in love on the journey back to his flat with the bed, but it’s not long before the self-assured fox, Tolen, moves in for the kill. Is all fair in love and, war, or can Colin beat Tolen at his own game if armed with the knack?
Production Team
David Watkin: Cinematography
Jocelyn Rickards: Costume Design
Antony Gibbs: Editing
John Barry: Original Music
Oscar Lewenstein: Producer
Assheton Gorton: Production Design
Charles Wood: Script
Cast
Rita Tushingham: Nancy Jones
Ray Brooks: Tolen
Michael Crawford: Colin
Donal Donnelly: Tom
John Bluthal: Father
Wensley Pithey: Teacher
Dandy Nichols: Landlady


