A family makes a lengthy and fraught journey across South Africa by truck when their son-in-law gets a job in the country.A family makes a lengthy and fraught journey across South Africa by truck when their son-in-law gets a job in the country.A family makes a lengthy and fraught journey across South Africa by truck when their son-in-law gets a job in the country.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe last of the Huggett films. A sequel, "Christmas with the Huggetts", was planned but never made.
- GoofsMrs Huggett who had been soaking wet seconds earlier gets in the house and apart from a few drops on the shoulders of her coat she's bone dry.
- Crazy credits[Following the opening credits, the following disclaimer]: The Huggett Family, which made its screen debut in "Holiday Camp", appears again in this film.
Since the name of the family was chosen it has been brought to our notice that a Mr. and Mrs. Vane Huggett and their family made a trek across Africa, subsequently returning to England.
This film does not relate to Mr. and Mrs. Vane Huggett and their family and is not in any way based on their experiences.
On the contrary, all characters and events are fictitious.
Any similarity to actual events, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
- ConnectionsFollows Holiday Camp (1947)
Featured review
Refreshingly stereotypical
A charming, sentimental, simple tale of a charming, sentimental, simple British suburban family who would like to escape from the post WW2 austerity programme in operation. And Dad had lost his job too. To execute this escape they decide to drive over Africa to South Africa in a 2nd hand truck with a paying Canadian guest who has a rather dark secret in his oil powered refrigerator.
Jack Warner as Dad and Kathleen Harrison as Mum were perfectly cast Cockney stereotypes, the kids and Jimmy Hanley were excellent role models too. Everyone and everything, the story, production and acting is old fashioned and mind-numbingly ordinary - I've always loved this film! 83 minutes to switch off thinking and let it flow. If you do it's amazing just how believable the plot and people really are, even when Pet Clark bursts into song. Her second song was pleasant, yet it was rudely interrupted by a nasty piece of work complaining about the row.
This was the 4th and final Huggett film, but the family were revived by BBC radio from 1953 to 1962, at its peak getting more than 10 million weekly listeners. As the other films are never shown on UK TV nowadays I presume they've been banned by the Department of Political Correctness. I'm not surprised it didn't win any prizes at the time, but it's a nice little film.
Jack Warner as Dad and Kathleen Harrison as Mum were perfectly cast Cockney stereotypes, the kids and Jimmy Hanley were excellent role models too. Everyone and everything, the story, production and acting is old fashioned and mind-numbingly ordinary - I've always loved this film! 83 minutes to switch off thinking and let it flow. If you do it's amazing just how believable the plot and people really are, even when Pet Clark bursts into song. Her second song was pleasant, yet it was rudely interrupted by a nasty piece of work complaining about the row.
This was the 4th and final Huggett film, but the family were revived by BBC radio from 1953 to 1962, at its peak getting more than 10 million weekly listeners. As the other films are never shown on UK TV nowadays I presume they've been banned by the Department of Political Correctness. I'm not surprised it didn't win any prizes at the time, but it's a nice little film.
helpful•251
- Spondonman
- May 27, 2005
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Gainsborough Studios, Islington, London, England, UK(studio: made at Gainsborough Studios, London, England.)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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