The Love Box


The Love Box, also known as Lovebox, is a 1972 British sex comedy film. It was written, produced and directed by Tudor Gates and Wilbur Stark under the pseudonyms "Billy and Teddy White".

Plot

Tris Patterson runs a classified ads section called "Love Box" for an entertainment guide magazine. The ads provide the settings for eleven separate self-contained sex comedies:
  1. Peter the virgin
  2. The sex kittens
  3. The young wives' club
  4. Massage wanted
  5. The trade descriptions act
  6. The refined couple
  7. The wife swappers
  8. Orgy in Kilburn
  9. The bored housewife
  10. Trying new colours
  11. The love park

Cast

In the magazine office

Peter the virgin

  • Maggie Wright as Mrs Angela Simpson
  • Paul Aston as Peter
  • Christine Bradwell as Miss Harvey

The sex kittens

The young wives' club

  • Jane Cardew as Fran
  • Leonora Little as stripper
  • Anthony Bailey as Jock
  • Rosemary Burdon as club member
  • Lita Petrou as club member
  • Julia Breck as club member

Massage wanted

The trade descriptions act

  • Raymond Young as the official
  • Anne Henning as Gerda
  • Jennifer Guy as student

The refined couple

The wife swappers

Orgy in Kilburn

  • Emmet Hennessy as Martin/boy
  • Dick Hayden as John
  • Georgina Symonds-Rose as Kit
  • Trudi Blue as Sandra

The bored housewife

  • Joan Alcorn as Kathy
  • Craig Israel as Texan
  • Dave Carter as husband

Trying new colours

  • Simon Legree as Rod
  • Minah Bird as black girl
  • Pauline Anderson as Eskimo
  • Vivienne as Chinese girl
  • Kerima as Indian girl

The love park

  • Laurie Goode as boy
  • Emmett Hennessy as boy
  • Nicola Austine as girl
  • Sue Bowen as girl
  • Jeanette Marsden as girl
  • Rina Brown as girl
  • Liz Carlson as girl

Production

It was the first film from a production company set up by Tudor Gates, and was originally called Looking for Love. In his interview for the British Entertainment History Project Gates states that he was nervous about the film's reception, so he and co-director Stark adopted the pseudonyms "Billy and Teddy White".

Reception

Box office

Gates said the film was "very successful of its kind and it did make money for us."

Critical reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A number of potentially funny situations go sadly to waste in this essentially witless offering. The makers have settled for an 'illustrative' style that reduces every episode to predictable routine, while the attempts at humorous dialogue never rise above the level of smutty double entendre.. Out of a crowded gallery of one-dimensional characters, three performances suggest talents worthy of less limp material: those of Alison King as Margery, of Paul Astor as Peter, and of Maggie Wright, who exudes sensuality and even manages to wring some humour out of her role as Mrs. Simpson. Directors contemplating this episodic style of sex-comedy might profitably take a look at The Secrets of Sex since, even in the film's censored version, Antony Balch gave a lead which has still to be taken up."
The Spinning Image said: "this is tat, really, but for a glimpse of seventies Britain it is more revealing than many a documentary."