The Movie Waffler Re-Release Review - NOTHING BUT THE BEST | The Movie Waffler

Re-Release Review - NOTHING BUT THE BEST

Nothing but the Best review
A social climbing working class man enlists the help of a disreputable aristocrat.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: Clive Donner

Starring: Alan Bates, Denholm Elliott, Millicent Martin, Harry Andrews

Nothing but the Best poster

Clive Donner's 1964 class satire Nothing but the Best arrived at a time when British cinema was struggling to keep up with the social changes enveloping Britain. The British New Wave had arrived just a few years earlier with movies focussed on the lives of the sort of working class folk (usually Northerners) that had been largely ignored in British films prior to that movement. It also followed a series of comedies that mocked Britain's class system in a more gently prodding fashion than the works of the "Angry Young Men." Conversely, with a male protagonist who treats women as disposable, it's ahead of the curve, something of a proto-Alfie. And yet despite arriving in the middle of the swinging '60s, it plays more like a product of the '50s, only elevated above the middle of the road Dirk Bogarde "Doctor" comedies by its acerbic wit.

Nothing but the Best review

Alan Bates plays James Brewster, a low-level employee of London real estate firm Horton's who is desperate to leave his working class roots behind and climb the social ladder. He's more than willing to break every rung below him if it means he can achieve his ruthless ambitions. "He/she'll have to go," is a repeated phrase we hear in his voiceover narration regarding anyone he views as an obstacle. James has his sights set on winning a promotion at work, which will require impressing his boss Mr. Horton (Harry Andrews). Standing in his way is toff Hugh (James Villiers), who also happens to be the boyfriend of Horton's daughter Ann (Millicent Martin) on whom he has cast his beady eyes.


A chance encounter with Charlie Prince (Denholm Elliott) is viewed by James as a shortcut to the big time. Charlie is of aristocratic stock but has been disowned by his family for his caddish ways, which includes a line in forgery that saw him fired from a job at Horton's. To James, Charlie has "what I want," i.e. nobility, and so he moves the homeless Charlie into his bedsit in return for lessons on how to infiltrate high society, and of course, win the hand of Ann.

Nothing but the Best review

Nothing but the Best is at its liveliest whenever Elliott is on screen. His caddish Charlie gets all the best lines, and Elliott delivers them with cynical conviction. Despite the large favour James is doing in giving him a home and supplementing his allowance, Charlie can't hide his contempt for what he views as a social climbing parasite, which is a bitingly caustic view of upper/working class relations. The manner in which Donner presents Charlie's tutoring of James through interactions in a variety of locations suggests his film may have been an influence on Woody Allen's Annie Hall, right down to a sweaty interaction on a squash court.


The trouble with Nothing but the Best is that James is such a loathsome individual that we find it impossible to root for him. As a class satire, Donner's film unintentionally makes us feel sympathy for the upper class figures James is out to depose, as they're portrayed as a rather harmless bunch of twits, save for Ann, who it turns out is as ruthlessly ambitious as James. If there was a cleverness to James's tactics we might begrudgingly get behind him, but there's nothing especially smart about he goes about his plans. The character's misogyny (at one point he describes the switchboard operator he's a dating as "strictly division three") certainly won't win him any female fans in 2024.

Nothing but the Best review

Nothing but the Best is based on a mystery story by Stanley Ellin, which seems odd until the movie takes a late turn into macabre territory with James's ambitions taking a murderous turn (the same story would later be adapted for an episode of the mystery anthology Tales of the Unexpected). It's a jarring development and one that the film never really pulls off. Donner is no Hitchcock, and he fails to generate any suspense from this scenario. Everything just goes too well for James, who never encounters the sort of setbacks that make for good drama. The result is a film that passively documents a horrible little man on his way to becoming a horrible big man with very little to stop him along the way. Donner just doesn't seem to realise how dark and depressing this material really is.

Nothing but the Best is on UK bluray, DVD and VOD from August 26th.