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P'tang Yang Kipperbang [1982]

by 4dvd

List Price: £19.99
Lowest Price New: £8.92
Rent this DVD: £5.99/month, learn more
Price as of: December 1, 2008 8:31:11 PM GMT*
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Director: Michael Apted
Average Rating: 5.0 out of 5
Sales Rank: 11509 (lower is better)
Released: 2007-09-17
Record Label: 4dvd
Binding: DVD
Publisher: 4dvd
Amazon.co.uk ASIN: B000S399IS
Group: DVD


Actors and Actresses

Customer Reviews

The Grass Is Always Greener On The Other Side - Reviewed on 2008-09-14
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 5 out of 5

P'Tang Yang Kipperbang is one of those movies you see by chance that stay with you for a long time, at least it was for me.
The story is based around Jack Duckworth (sometimes referred to by his nickname 'quack quack'). Jack has a crush on a female classmates, some events occur that result in his teacher punishing him by assigning him as one of the leads in the school play, in this role he must kiss his crush.
It is essentially a comiing-of-age story, first love & the frustration of it.
The main aspect of the movie is learning the difference between dreams & reality & that fulfilling those dreams doesn't always equal happiness (e.g the grass is always greener mentality).
Jack is likable as the anti-hero, by the end of the film he has grown & matured as a person, whether you agree or disagree with Jack's decisions in the film shouldn't dictate whether you like the film or not.
All in all I would reccommend this film to pretty much anyone, its innocent, sometimes funny & you'll probably relate to Jack's universal predicament.
Delightful*! - Reviewed on 2007-10-29
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 5 out of 5
6 customers found this review helpful.

This film is a delight on so many levels, it has something for everyone at whatever age. I watched it when it appeared on channel 4 now years later I rediscovered it and it has lost none of it's charm.
"P,Tang Yang Kipperbang Uuuuhhh!" and about time too. - Reviewed on 2007-07-25
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 5 out of 5
37 customers found this review helpful.

I was beginning to think I had dreamt it. P,Tang Yang Kipperbang first appeared on Channel Four in 1982 as part of the "First Loves" season .Written by Jack Rosenthal of "Londons Burning " fame it was shown that November then disappeared ,though it was released on video and may have popped up on Film Four .Now its out on DVD and I have final irrefutable proof to all those people I have mentioned it to down the years , who have looked at me like I have sprouted a Boris Johnson haircut , that it wasn't some figment of my cricket mad -sex obsessed imagination.
Cricket and sex are pertinent to P,Tang Yang Kipperbang,, unlikely team mates I'll concede but there you go. Schoolboy Alan Duckworth(John Albasiny) in the England of the late 1940,s dreams of hitting the wining runs in an Ashes series .He also dreams of kissing his beautiful classmate Ann (Abigail Cruttneden) who is going out with the years smarmy pin up Geoffrey (Maurice Dee) who share a toe curling ritual every time they part . His frustrations , ennui , desires are mirrored with a cricket commentary going on in his head , voiced by the late great John Arlott. So frustration and failure are met with a duck in his imaginary game, and as he suffers many disappointments and failures gives him the nickname "Quack Quack Duckworth ", though its also an obvious play on his name.
Duckworth has a confidant in the schools groundkeeper Tommy(Garry Cooper) who injects some working class realism into the script( It's a very middle class tale) with his assertion that girls like sex as well . Tommy has something going on with acerbic teacher Miss Land (Alison Steadman) and their relationship provides a more pragmatic element that counteracts Duckworth's blue sky reverie about love and girls. His chance to get closer to Anne comes via the school play where his role requires him to kiss Ann's character at the end. But as he lies in bed at night , masturbating hand clad in a enormous boxing glove , he wonders whether he can go through with it while at the same playing out the scene in golden soft focus over and over.
P,Tang Yang KipperBang is a skilfully handled tale of an adolescents rites of passage. Some will view it's conclusion that dreams lead to disillusionment as depressing rather than poignant but it's told with such humour and delicacy it achieves a touching timbre and its very well acted by all especially Steadman and Albasiny who perfectly conveys the sweating awkwardness of adolescence. It may seem a little innocent and gauche to today's audience but has undeniable charm . Best of all it's filled with moments of tremendous humour . Duckworth's, friends Shaz(Christopher Karaliss) and Abbo,s( Mark Brailsford) reactions to Alan having to kiss Ann -"Spewosity up-throw" or "Puke Vomitude-inosty" show the sort of verbal dexterity that has become the signature of writers like Armando Ianucci or Chris Morris. The two workmen observing Duckworth's playing out of his fantasy cricket career as he comes to and from school give a priceless down-to-earth window into the drama as they shake their heads in bafflement at his cavorting
Then there is that title . A reference to the greeting the boys give each other , accompanied by a slow motion raised hand and an "Uuuuhhh" .It's completely stupid, infantile and elitist yet I have never forgotten it. Despite this being set in a place and time I have never experienced it sticks in the head like ....well a first kiss. It's one of the best things Channel Four has ever put it's name to which makes it even more of a pity the channel has descended into the tawdry disarray it's in now.
- uh! - Reviewed on 2004-08-08
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 5 out of 5
4 customers found this review helpful.

echo all of cathelsmere's words - wonderful film - let's see it on DVD!
When film used to be innocent - Reviewed on 2003-09-30
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ 4 out of 5
14 customers found this review helpful.

This film recalls the story of a young schoolboy. Its charm lies in the fact that he has met this girl and he fantasises about kissing her. It highlights the struggles and emotional conflicts of a young boy coping with life, parents and a continuing lust for this girl. It is nice to see a film that portrays the innocence of youth unlike todays society that is so caught up in casual relationships and life for the party.
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