A Nice Girl Like Me | |
---|---|
Directed by | Desmond Davis |
Written by | Millard Lampell |
Produced by | Roy Millichip |
Starring | Barbara Ferris Harry Andrews |
Cinematography | Gilbert Taylor Manny Wynn |
Edited by | Ralph Sheldon |
Music by | Patrick Williams |
Production company | Partisan Productions |
Distributed by | AVCO Embassy Pictures (UK) |
Release date | 1969 |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
A Nice Girl Like Me is a 1969 British comedy film directed by Desmond Davis.[1] The plot revolves around a girl who lives with her shrewd aunts, goes on a trip, gets pregnant, and must lie to her aunts that the baby is not hers.[2]
It was shot on location in Paris, Venice and London around Chiswick and Hammersmith riverside. The film was originally meant to star Stanley Baker.[3]
In July 1968 it was going to star Michael J Pollard and Barbara Ferris.[4]
The Spinning Image wrote, "it was regarded at the time as a glossy exercise in marrying cinema advert visuals to a would-be daring plot about unmarried motherhood, some way away from the nineteen-sixties "issue" films and TV plays that offered audiences and commentators alike something to get their teeth into. Cathy Come Home or Up the Junction this was not. All that said, and those naysayers did have a point, funnily enough this has aged rather better than might have been expected since it conforms to the Swinging Sixties stereotype fairly comfortably; though it remained a shade artificial as an experience as a nostalgia piece it came across very well, and much of that was down to the central relationship."[5]