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The Behaviour Game

1969 EN 9 min

Overview

A BAFTA award nominated documentary investigating how bad behaviour affects colleagues and the public and the correct way to act towards others.

Release date

01/01/1969

Votes

0

Popularity

0.1

Genres

Status

Released

Language

EN

Runtime

9 min

Original Soundtrack

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CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

2025-06-06

⭐ 5

Barclays Bank decided to give us a rather contrived lecture on the relative merits of being polite to each other by presenting us with this exaggerated look at what constitutes behaviour. True, many of us probably do just assume that word applies to children, but the point here is that it changes as we grow up and the impressions we both give and take can have quite profound effects on how we interact with and respect each other. There is a scene reminiscent of something akin to “Monty Python” only without the humour and indeed the whole gist of this borders all too closely on the patronisingl…

Read full review →
CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

2025-06-06

⭐ 5

Barclays Bank decided to give us a rather contrived lecture on the relative merits of being polite to each other by presenting us with this exaggerated look at what constitutes behaviour. True, many of us probably do just assume that word applies to children, but the point here is that it changes as we grow up and the impressions we both give and take can have quite profound effects on how we interact with and respect each other. There is a scene reminiscent of something akin to “Monty Python” only without the humour and indeed the whole gist of this borders all too closely on the patronisingl…

Read full review →
CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

2025-06-06

⭐ 5

Barclays Bank decided to give us a rather contrived lecture on the relative merits of being polite to each other by presenting us with this exaggerated look at what constitutes behaviour. True, many of us probably do just assume that word applies to children, but the point here is that it also needs to be considered as we grow up and the impressions we both give and take can have quite profound effects on how we interact with and respect each other. There is a scene reminiscent of something akin to “Monty Python” only without the humour and indeed the whole gist of this borders all too closely…

Read full review →