muted

Girl Stroke Boy

Rating6.1 /10
19711 h 26 m
United Kingdom
194 people rated

The straitlaced parents of a young boy who has, until now, shown no interest in the opposite sex, are confounded when he brings home his new partner: an elegant, confusingly androgynous West Indian.

Comedy
Drama
Romance

User Reviews

Malex Praise TikTok

29/05/2023 14:49
source: Girl Stroke Boy

Leyluh_

23/05/2023 07:09
I absolutely adore this GEM of a Movie ! What makes it for me, is the Acting Talents of all of the Cast, beginning with Sir Michael Hordern playing the Father & his Wife played by Joan Greenwood with that "Smokey" sounding voice of hers... When in the film they get a visit from their Son with his "Friend". From the opening "seconds" of the film to the "END ?" of the film, the Mother and Father & You Dear Reader, will be no wiser as to the Gender of the Son's "FRIEND" !!! That basically is the entire Plot of this very delightful English Comedy. I saw it, on it's Original Release back in the early 1970's. I wish I had a WAYBACK ( TIME MACHINE ) so that I could return then, to see it again. As to why we cannot yet purchase it on DVD or BLURAY: I recently went looking for information of the Film Company responsible for it's Production and it's subsequent FILM Distribution, and I learned that the Film Production Company was broken up in the 1970's and it has since become part of the assets of Various Film Libraries/Entities/Collections ( or perhaps I should more rightly say FILM COLLECTIONS in Various 35mm FILM Repositories Owned by Various Corporations, which have been changing hands & Ownership on a somewhat regular basis to this point in time of March-2018, which appear to have little or no interest in releasing it to us FILM / VIDEO Collectors who appreciate the Cinema of the 1970's. Might I add, that I am living with the Hope that the current Owner/Owners of the Film Copyright Holder of this FILM of "GIRL STROKE BOY" will IN MY LIFETIME = Release this film to us: on a REMASTERED BLURAY for us FILM BUFFS/Collectors. Whoever You are dear Copyright Owner of "GIRL STROKE BOY", You have a VERY EAGER FILM NUT who is VERY KEEN to get a copy of "GIRL STROKE BOY" and I will once again be able to Laugh at the Combined Comedy Talents of Sir Michael Hordern & Joan Greenwood throughout this filmed Comedy. For some readers here, who may not know of Joan Greenwood, I recommend that you IMDB either = "JOAN GREENWOOD" under "Celebs" or check the Cast Listing for the Anthony Askwith version of the 1950's Technicolor Film of "THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST" which is for me, perhaps the Best Filmed British Comedy of All Time. PLEASE Copyright Owner/Owners PLEASE RELEASE ON BLURAY "BOY STROKE GIRL" !!! Thank You Folks !!!

Assane HD

23/05/2023 07:09
In 1971, when this film "came out,"(pun intended) I went to see it and I remember laughing almost non-stop. I'm unable to say why as I've not seen it since that one time. It's almost as if it's vanished off the face of the planet. Were the filmmakers ashamed of it, I wonder? I doubt I would find much in its content to laugh at were I to see it today, almost twenty-five years on. It doesn't strike me as a particularly funny film at this late stage in the film's life. However, on to the film(not that I intend to let loose any "spoilers" since I can't remember any particular incidents). Three of the stars are my favourites and I have seen them in many other films/TV plays. The late and lamented Sir Michael Hordern, Joan Greenwood and, in an early role, Hyacinth Bucket(pronounced "Bouquet") herself, Patricia Routledge. For me Sir Michael gave easily the best performance in the whole movie. His look of stunned insensibility dominates from the moment he's introduced to his son's "friend." Since they--and we--never discover if it's a boy or a girl that their son has brought home, they don't know if he is gay or straight. The fact that the one phone call that could have cleared the puzzle up only makes matters worse is the final nail in the coffin of this relationship--at least as far as us and the unfortunate parents are concerned. The children, at least, will go blithely on as if nothing out of the ordinary has occurred. The mystery surrounding the actor/actress playing the boy/girlfriend was solved, for this reviewer, some years after I saw the film. Again I'm not going to give out a spoiler but I did find out the sex of the person who played the boy/girl. So I have a whole new slant on the movie and should I see it again, I'll look at it with the knowledge of what was revealed many moons ago. All in all this was a film that no-one understood(despite being adapted from a stage play--was it successful, I wonder?). But I enjoyed the performances, especially by the three I've mentioned. Of course, at the time, I never knew that Patricia would go on to play the ultimate snob in TVs 'Keeping Up Appearances' but the woman has gone up in my estimation and, I have no doubt, will continue to do so. I give this film 8 stars out of 10 as it's been almost twenty-five years since I saw it last and, as we all know, tastes do change. The 8 stars are for what I remember of Sir Michael Hordern's performance. To me he is a consummate actor who never turned in a bad performance in his life.

meriam alaoui

23/05/2023 07:09
SO many funny, edgy films are done in europe first, where the viewing audience isn't so squeamish about discussing LGBT topics. (The Ritz, Cage aux Folles, Girl Stroke Boy, Queer as Folk). Girl Stroke Boy came five years before Norman, Is That You? similar plot. in england, son Laurie (Clive Francis) brings home his girlfriend, or boyfriend (Straker)... the parents aren't quite sure which. and because the furnace won't shut off, it's already hot and uncomfortable in the house. Mom (Joan Greenwood) acts completely inappropriately the entire film, and the husband without a backbone (Michael Hordern) gets nagged into going along with it. some clever lines, but mom said so many rude things, the son Laurie should have told the mother to mind her own business. I personally would have stood up for the girlfriend or boyfriend and returned to my own home. Laurie has more patience, and stays to argue it out with his parents. an awkward and painful scene where mom and dad actually call Jo's parents to try to figure out if he/she is really a boy or girl. there are some surprises in here, and some clever turns of phrase. Patricia Routledge (Hyacinth from Keeping Up Appearances!) is the neighbor who pops in here and there. directed by Bob Kellett, who also did Space 1999 and Are You Being Served, the film. this seems to have started out as a play by David Percival. not much out there on him. the film is good, if you have the patience to sit through all the bickering.

Fena Gitu

23/05/2023 07:09
Based on a play called 'Girlfriend', which had a brief West End run in 1970, the most remarkable change made to the film version is that the mysterious partner has been made a West Indian yet that particular revelation is shown not to bother Laurie's parents in the slightest. There's an awful lot of talk but little is actually said - some of it witty, some of it crass. Michael Hordern looks suitably embarrassed, while Joan Greenwood at 50 has aged considerably, yet, aided by a stylish short haircut, still looks and sounds amazing as only Joan Greenwood could. Clive Francis is the fey son, while 'Straker' with a soft-pitched voice and an afro towers over him as the androgynous Jo. (As with 'Jean Arless' in William Castle's 'Homicidal', the billing of the player was aimed to generate confusion in the mind of the viewer while they both looked strange enough to form a hunch; but Hordern would have been able to tell the difference on the two occasions they kiss.) It's difficult to tell from the grainy VHS recording which all that is presently available if the sound was originally as muffled or the nighttime exteriors as impenetrable in the original cinema prints; but parts of the film currently sound like the work of Ken Loach. The poor sound operators seem unable to cope with the constant low angles favoured by director Bob Kellett, since the microphone appears several times at the top of the frame. The exaggerated visuals, claustrophobic setting (the action takes place almost entirely in a house where the heating has become stiflingly jammed at full blast), fast pans and unflattering extreme close-ups of Joan Greenwood's perspiring face all look as if Sergio Leone may also have been in attendance.

V ę t č h ø

14/03/2023 01:25
source: Girl Stroke Boy

Althea Ablan

14/03/2023 01:25
I absolutely adore this GEM of a Movie ! What makes it for me, is the Acting Talents of all of the Cast, beginning with Sir Michael Hordern playing the Father & his Wife played by Joan Greenwood with that "Smokey" sounding voice of hers... When in the film they get a visit from their Son with his "Friend". From the opening "seconds" of the film to the "END ?" of the film, the Mother and Father & You Dear Reader, will be no wiser as to the Gender of the Son's "FRIEND" !!! That basically is the entire Plot of this very delightful English Comedy. I saw it, on it's Original Release back in the early 1970's. I wish I had a WAYBACK ( TIME MACHINE ) so that I could return then, to see it again. As to why we cannot yet purchase it on DVD or BLURAY: I recently went looking for information of the Film Company responsible for it's Production and it's subsequent FILM Distribution, and I learned that the Film Production Company was broken up in the 1970's and it has since become part of the assets of Various Film Libraries/Entities/Collections ( or perhaps I should more rightly say FILM COLLECTIONS in Various 35mm FILM Repositories Owned by Various Corporations, which have been changing hands & Ownership on a somewhat regular basis to this point in time of March-2018, which appear to have little or no interest in releasing it to us FILM / VIDEO Collectors who appreciate the Cinema of the 1970's. Might I add, that I am living with the Hope that the current Owner/Owners of the Film Copyright Holder of this FILM of "GIRL STROKE BOY" will IN MY LIFETIME = Release this film to us: on a REMASTERED BLURAY for us FILM BUFFS/Collectors. Whoever You are dear Copyright Owner of "GIRL STROKE BOY", You have a VERY EAGER FILM NUT who is VERY KEEN to get a copy of "GIRL STROKE BOY" and I will once again be able to Laugh at the Combined Comedy Talents of Sir Michael Hordern & Joan Greenwood throughout this filmed Comedy. For some readers here, who may not know of Joan Greenwood, I recommend that you IMDB either = "JOAN GREENWOOD" under "Celebs" or check the Cast Listing for the Anthony Askwith version of the 1950's Technicolor Film of "THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST" which is for me, perhaps the Best Filmed British Comedy of All Time. PLEASE Copyright Owner/Owners PLEASE RELEASE ON BLURAY "BOY STROKE GIRL" !!! Thank You Folks !!!

Ashu Habesha

14/03/2023 01:25
Based on a play called 'Girlfriend', which had a brief West End run in 1970, the most remarkable change made to the film version is that the mysterious partner has been made a West Indian yet that particular revelation is shown not to bother Laurie's parents in the slightest. There's an awful lot of talk but little is actually said - some of it witty, some of it crass. Michael Hordern looks suitably embarrassed, while Joan Greenwood at 50 has aged considerably, yet, aided by a stylish short haircut, still looks and sounds amazing as only Joan Greenwood could. Clive Francis is the fey son, while 'Straker' with a soft-pitched voice and an afro towers over him as the androgynous Jo. (As with 'Jean Arless' in William Castle's 'Homicidal', the billing of the player was aimed to generate confusion in the mind of the viewer while they both looked strange enough to form a hunch; but Hordern would have been able to tell the difference on the two occasions they kiss.) It's difficult to tell from the grainy VHS recording which all that is presently available if the sound was originally as muffled or the nighttime exteriors as impenetrable in the original cinema prints; but parts of the film currently sound like the work of Ken Loach. The poor sound operators seem unable to cope with the constant low angles favoured by director Bob Kellett, since the microphone appears several times at the top of the frame. The exaggerated visuals, claustrophobic setting (the action takes place almost entirely in a house where the heating has become stiflingly jammed at full blast), fast pans and unflattering extreme close-ups of Joan Greenwood's perspiring face all look as if Sergio Leone may also have been in attendance.

Ashu Habesha

14/03/2023 01:25
SO many funny, edgy films are done in europe first, where the viewing audience isn't so squeamish about discussing LGBT topics. (The Ritz, Cage aux Folles, Girl Stroke Boy, Queer as Folk). Girl Stroke Boy came five years before Norman, Is That You? similar plot. in england, son Laurie (Clive Francis) brings home his girlfriend, or boyfriend (Straker)... the parents aren't quite sure which. and because the furnace won't shut off, it's already hot and uncomfortable in the house. Mom (Joan Greenwood) acts completely inappropriately the entire film, and the husband without a backbone (Michael Hordern) gets nagged into going along with it. some clever lines, but mom said so many rude things, the son Laurie should have told the mother to mind her own business. I personally would have stood up for the girlfriend or boyfriend and returned to my own home. Laurie has more patience, and stays to argue it out with his parents. an awkward and painful scene where mom and dad actually call Jo's parents to try to figure out if he/she is really a boy or girl. there are some surprises in here, and some clever turns of phrase. Patricia Routledge (Hyacinth from Keeping Up Appearances!) is the neighbor who pops in here and there. directed by Bob Kellett, who also did Space 1999 and Are You Being Served, the film. this seems to have started out as a play by David Percival. not much out there on him. the film is good, if you have the patience to sit through all the bickering.

Hits_lover_143

14/03/2023 01:25
In 1971, when this film "came out,"(pun intended) I went to see it and I remember laughing almost non-stop. I'm unable to say why as I've not seen it since that one time. It's almost as if it's vanished off the face of the planet. Were the filmmakers ashamed of it, I wonder? I doubt I would find much in its content to laugh at were I to see it today, almost twenty-five years on. It doesn't strike me as a particularly funny film at this late stage in the film's life. However, on to the film(not that I intend to let loose any "spoilers" since I can't remember any particular incidents). Three of the stars are my favourites and I have seen them in many other films/TV plays. The late and lamented Sir Michael Hordern, Joan Greenwood and, in an early role, Hyacinth Bucket(pronounced "Bouquet") herself, Patricia Routledge. For me Sir Michael gave easily the best performance in the whole movie. His look of stunned insensibility dominates from the moment he's introduced to his son's "friend." Since they--and we--never discover if it's a boy or a girl that their son has brought home, they don't know if he is gay or straight. The fact that the one phone call that could have cleared the puzzle up only makes matters worse is the final nail in the coffin of this relationship--at least as far as us and the unfortunate parents are concerned. The children, at least, will go blithely on as if nothing out of the ordinary has occurred. The mystery surrounding the actor/actress playing the boy/girlfriend was solved, for this reviewer, some years after I saw the film. Again I'm not going to give out a spoiler but I did find out the sex of the person who played the boy/girl. So I have a whole new slant on the movie and should I see it again, I'll look at it with the knowledge of what was revealed many moons ago. All in all this was a film that no-one understood(despite being adapted from a stage play--was it successful, I wonder?). But I enjoyed the performances, especially by the three I've mentioned. Of course, at the time, I never knew that Patricia would go on to play the ultimate snob in TVs 'Keeping Up Appearances' but the woman has gone up in my estimation and, I have no doubt, will continue to do so. I give this film 8 stars out of 10 as it's been almost twenty-five years since I saw it last and, as we all know, tastes do change. The 8 stars are for what I remember of Sir Michael Hordern's performance. To me he is a consummate actor who never turned in a bad performance in his life.
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