Ghost in the Noonday Sun

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Ghost in the Noonday Sun
File:GhostInTheMoondaySun.jpg
Directed by Peter Medak
Produced by Thomas Clyde
Gareth Wigan
Written by Evan Jones
Spike Milligan
Starring Peter Sellers
Spike Milligan
Music by Denis King
Cinematography Michael Reed
Larry Pizer
Edited by Ray Lovejoy
Distributed by Tyburn Entertainment (UK)
Columbia Pictures (USA)
Release dates
1973
Running time
93 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Ghost in the Noonday Sun is a 1973 British comedy film, directed by Peter Medak, starring Peter Sellers, Anthony Franciosa and Spike Milligan. The script was written by Evan Jones and Ernest Tidyman (uncredited) with additional dialogue attributed to Spike Milligan. It was produced by Thomas Clyde & Gareth Wigan with cinematography by Michael Reed & Larry Pizer. The title and some of the plot details are based on the book of the same title by Newbery Medal-winning children's author Sid Fleischman.

Plot

Bumbling pirate crewman (Sellers) kills his captain after learning where he has hidden buried treasure. However as he begins to lose his memory, he relies more and more on the ghost of the man he's murdered to help him find the treasure.

Cast

Sellers' onetime Goon Show colleague Spike Milligan, appears halfway through the film.

Production

Shortly after filming began, Peter Sellers began to lose confidence in the project and when Spike Milligan arrived on location to shoot his scenes, Sellers asked him to assess the footage that had been shot thus far. Milligan was unimpressed, which led to Sellers trying to convince Peter Medak to assist him in a scheme to get the production shut down. Medak refused to comply. Sellers subsequently became deliberately uncooperative and would often pretend to be sick, only to be later spotted water-skiing the same day. Sellers caused further upset by agreeing to shoot a cigarette commercial during one of the few off-days in the filming schedule, drafting in an unwilling Peter Medak to direct it, and then on the day refusing to be filmed holding the cigarette packet because he claimed to be the chairman of the Anti-Smoking League.[1]

Released several years after filming was wrapped and after Sellers' death (1980) in the 1980s, the film was semi-completed and released on VHS. The film never received a full cinematic release.

External links

References

  1. Farnes, Norma (2004). Chapter 11 of Spike: An Intimate Memoir, Harper Perennial, London. ISBN 1841157872

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