Hurrah for the BFI who, together with US boutique Blu-ray outfit Deaf Crocodile, are giving us a 4K restoration of writer-director Val Guest’s TOOMORROW, a bizarre but extremely watchable British science fiction pop musical starring Olivia Newton-John, complete with a bunch of similarly eccentric extras.
Toomorrow is a band whose music is apparently so amazing it’s going to save the universe (shades of BILL AND TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE). The three guys in the band exhibit entry-level charisma but Olivia Newton-John is quite obviously a star in the making. Roy Dotrice is a clueless alien who has been reporting from Earth for 3000 years but still has to have the band pointed out to him by his bosses. Other highlights include BritHorror little girl standby Chloe Franks as Livvy’s character as a little girl and Margaret Nolan being very funny as a sexy alien who is given a crash course in how to seduce someone by being taken to see, amongst other things, Pete Walker’s SCHOOL FOR SEX.
One for fans of really weird and obscure 1970s British cinema (which will be quite a few people reading this, I suspect), your mileage with TOOMORROW may vary but the film is never boring. Other faces familiar to enthusiasts of this period of British cinema include Tracey Crisp (Richard Gordon’s THE PROJECTED MAN) and Imogen Hassall (Freddie Francis’ MUMSY, NANNY, SONNY AND GIRLY, Robert Hartford-Davis’ INCENSE FOR THE DAMNED and, of course, Gerald Thomas’ CARRY ON GIRLS).
As mentioned above, the release is a ‘co-production’ between the BFI here and Deaf Crocodile in the US, having undergone a 4K restoration from the original camera negative and presented here in High Definition. Extras include a commentary track from Andrew Sandoval which will tell you a lot you don’t know if you’re not as up on the musical trends of the period as he obviously is. There’s also plenty of good stuff about the trouble behind the scenes of the production.
Other extras include The Val Guest Guardian interview (62 minutes) from 1998 plus a ten minute piece from ten years earlier in which the director talks about the film’s troubled production over still images from the BFI archive. New material comes in the form of a video essay about the film from Celeste de la Cabra (17 minutes). A genuine highlight of the disc, as with so many other BFI releases, is the wealth of archival and sometimes frankly bizarre short subjects they’ve been able to dig up. First we get THE NOSE HAS IT!, an eight minute 1942 short starring UK comedy legend (yes he is) Arthur Askey telling you all to sneeze into your handkerchiefs to help the war effort. It’s included because it was directed by Val Guest and it also has photography by Arthur FIEND WITHOUT A FACE Crabtree.
Then there’s TOMORROW NIGHT IN LONDON (5 minutes) which is a short travelogue-style piece from 1969. Also from 1969 is IF I COULD TURN YOU ON (13 minutes), a black and white record of a pretty bizarre live performance from US troupe Living Theatre that could be misconstrued as horror if you’re in the wrong / right frame of mind. And then, perhaps the oddest of all (especially for overseas viewers) there’s an episode of TV series Chimp-Mates entitled Alice Goes Pop! (17 minutes), a fine example of what we were watching as kids back in 1975. Written by Frank DEMONS OF THE MIND Godwin with music by Harry Robinson (TWINS OF EVIL, HAWK THE SLAYER and a lot of other great stuff) and featuring Roy Kinnear and Godfrey James (Angel Blake’s father in BLOOD ON SATAN’S CLAW) it’s the story of an adopted chimp who learns to play the drums. The first pressing of the disc also comes with a booklet featuring new writing on both the film and Val Guest as well as an essay on manufactured pop groups.
Val Guest’s TOOMORROW is out on Blu-ray from the BFI in a 4K restoration on Monday 22nd June 2026