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  1. Three Men in a Boat

    Three Men in a Boat

    1961 · Comedy · 1h 30m

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  1. Three Men in a Boat is a 1956 British CinemaScope colour comedy film directed by Ken Annakin, starring Laurence Harvey, Jimmy Edwards, David Tomlinson and Shirley Eaton. [3] It was written by Hubert Gregg and Vernon Harris based on the 1889 novel of the same name by Jerome K. Jerome.

  2. Three Men in a Boat: Directed by Ken Annakin. With Laurence Harvey, Jimmy Edwards, David Tomlinson, Shirley Eaton. Three London gentlemen take a vacation rowing down the Thames, encountering various mishaps and misadventures along the way.

    • (426)
    • Comedy, Romance
    • Ken Annakin
    • 1957-05-03
  3. Film Details. Brief Synopsis. Harris, J, and George decide to take a holiday boating up the Thames to Oxford. Battling against Hampton Court maze, tents, rain, locks, and Henley Regatta the accident-prone threesome have one success anyway - they meet Sophie, Primrose and Bluebell. Cast & Crew. Read More. Ken Annakin. Director. Miles Malleson.

    • Ken Annakin
    • Miles Malleson
  4. Three friends -- George (Laurence Harvey), Harris (Jimmy Edwards) and J (David Tomlinson) -- decide to escape from their women problems by going boating on the Thames River.

    • Comedy
    • Laurence Harvey
    • Ken Annakin
  5. Three Men in a Boat. Adapted for the Stage by Clive Francis from book by Jerome K Jerome. The Mill at Sonning. Directed by Joe Harmston. Star rating: 4. Well we all know what happens. Three chaps, inferentially Etonians, set off along the Thames in a small boat with their dog and there are episodic encounters – humorous ones.

  6. Directed by Ken Annakin (Monte Carlo or Bust, Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines), Three Men In A Boat stars Laurence Harvey (Women of Twilight, Room at The Top), David Tomlinson (Mary Poppins, The Love Bug) and Jimmy Edwards (The Bed Sitting Room, Innocents in Paris) as three Edwardian men-about-town want to get away from it all ...

  7. The three men profess their hatred the steam-powered boats and say they often deliberately get in their way. Next, they visit Marlow, which is home to the former house of Percy Bysshe Shelley. The men go to replenish their food stocks and once again acquire much more than they need, heading back to the boat with a trail of young shop-helpers ...

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