For Men Only (1967 film)
| For Men Only | |
|---|---|
![]() Theatrical release poster  | |
| Directed by | Pete Walker | 
| Written by | Pete Walker | 
| Produced by | Pete Walker | 
| Starring | David Kernan Andrea Allen Derek Aylward  | 
| Cinematography | Gerry Lewis | 
| Edited by | Peter Austen-Hunt | 
| Music by | Harry South | 
Production company  | Pete Walker-Border  | 
| Distributed by | Border Films | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 38 minutes | 
| Country | UK | 
| Language | English | 
For Men Only, also known as I Like Birds, is a 1967 British short sex comedy film written, produced and directed by Pete Walker. It was his debut production.[1][2][3]
Plot
Freddie Horne loves his job working for a trendy women's fashion magazine, but his pretty blonde fiancée is getting jealous. To smooth things over Freddie takes a job with the Puritan Magazine Group, an organisation hell-bent on promoting moral reform and "family values". However, the caddish chief executive Miles Fanthorpe is not all he seems. Fanthorpe's East Grinstead country house is actually full of scantily-clad young women, and he is secretly publishing a girlie magazine.
Cast
- David Kernan as Freddie Horne
 - Andrea Allen as Rosalie
 - Derek Aylward as Miles Fanthorpe
 - Tom Gill as father
 - Neville Whiting as Claude
 - Mai Bacon as mother
 - Glyn Worsnip as Rudolph
 - Joan Ingram as Esther
 - John Cazabon as Lamphrey Gussett
 - Apple Brook as receptionist
 - Gladys Dawson as Mrs. Whitely
 
Critical reception
Monthly Film Bulletin said "The permissive society is obviously making it more difficult to produce a prurient film. To convince us that there's something naughty about photographing girls in bikinis, this one resorts to the improbable device of creating a mild pornographer whose primary concern is to safeguard his reputation among East Grinstead churchgoers. And although none of its cast remains fully dressed throughout, its hero is just old-fashioned enough to marry the one girl who loses her clothes by accident rather than by design. Not that the film is provocative – merely embarrassing. And its crude scripting means that its elaborate car chase is entirely unmotivated."[4]
References
- ^ "For Men Only". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
 - ^ Simon Sheridan, Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema, Titan Books 2011 p 54
 - ^ "'God, what a terrible film'"by Will Hodgkinson, The Guardian 11 March 2005 accessed 15 November 2014
 - ^ "For Men Only". Monthly Film Bulletin. 34 (396): 190. 1967. ProQuest 1305821243.
 
External links
- For Men Only at IMDb
 
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