[go: up one dir, main page]

    Calendario de lanzamientosTop 250 películasPelículas más popularesBuscar películas por géneroTaquilla superiorHorarios y entradasNoticias sobre películasPelículas de la India destacadas
    Programas de televisión y streamingLas 250 mejores seriesSeries más popularesBuscar series por géneroNoticias de TV
    Qué verÚltimos trailersTítulos originales de IMDbSelecciones de IMDbDestacado de IMDbGuía de entretenimiento familiarPodcasts de IMDb
    OscarsEmmysSan Diego Comic-ConSummer Watch GuideToronto Int'l Film FestivalPremios STARmeterInformación sobre premiosInformación sobre festivalesTodos los eventos
    Nacidos un día como hoyCelebridades más popularesNoticias sobre celebridades
    Centro de ayudaZona de colaboradoresEncuestas
Para profesionales de la industria
  • Idioma
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Lista de visualización
Iniciar sesión
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Usar app
Atrás
  • Elenco y equipo
  • Opiniones de usuarios
  • Trivia
  • Preguntas Frecuentes
IMDbPro
Celia Johnson, John Mills, and Robert Newton in This Happy Breed (1944)

Opiniones de usuarios

This Happy Breed

69 opiniones
8/10

A very British class act

Old-fashioned? Arch dialogue? Stiff acting? Viewable only as an historical document? Guilty on all counts, but this film still captivates. Made during the second World War, it was probably intended as a flag-waver, a morale booster for the worn-down citizens of Britain, but in fact is much more than that. The story (Noel Coward) deals with the lives and times of an ordinary family in 'between the wars' London. There is nothing dramatic, just the everyday events and the weddings, births and funerals that visit us all. However, there are some wonderfully quiet scenes - the father-to-son talk before the son's wedding is especially notable for its old-fashioned moral uprightness, the way the camera lingers in an empty room when the family learns of a terrible road accident, and Frank's gentle chat with his neighbour over a few glasses of whisky as they prepare to go their separate ways. Director David Lean handles these with care and reserve. The way the family deals with the mini-dramas that beset them was no doubt meant to say to the war-weary people that we may be a middling, grey little society with predictable ways, but it was worth fighting for. The film always leaves me a little melancholy, missing an age that still existed in many ways when I was a youngster. No doubt to a modern cinema audience that can't manage without an explosion or car-chase every ten minutes this would be regarded as dull and boring, but I love its charm.
  • g-hbe
  • 14 oct 2006
  • Enlace permanente
8/10

Twenty years between wars in the history of a British family

The Gibbons family is "This Happy Breed," a 1944 film starring Robert Newton, Celia Johnson, Sterling Holloway, John Mills and Kay Walsh. The story begins with the end of World War I in 1919 with the return of Frank Gibbons (Newton) to his family - wife Ethel (Johnson), son Reg (John Blythe) and daughters Queenie (Kay Walsh) and Vi (Eileen Erskine) as they begin their life in a new home. The next 20 years bring weddings, births, tragedy, and death, as it does to all of us. Queenie is being courted by a sailor, Bill (Mills) who wants to marry her, but she wants to better her class and says she can't be happy with him; Vi falls in love and marries, as does Reg. Frank becomes a travel agent after the war and finds that one of his service friends (Holloway) lives next door. They become best buddies and provide the film's humor as they attempt to drink in secret. Ethel meanwhile has to cope with two somewhat difficult characters: the hypochondriacal Aunt Sylvia (Alison Leggatt) and Ethel's mother (Amy Veness) who live with them.

One thing interesting about British films that deal with the war - "In Which We Serve," "The 49th Parallel," and this one, for instance - one is made aware of the hardships, loss, sacrifice and sadness, while American films have a much more romantic quality to them. Though "This Happy Breed" ends just at the dawn of World War II, there is discussion of the European situation, fascism, and a general fear of another war in light of what they all went through in the last one.

"This Happy Breed" is another triumph, though an unsung one, for two wonderful artists - David Lean and Noel Coward, who worked together in this film, "Blithe Spirit" and "In Which We Serve" and had so many brilliant accomplishments on their own. The Gibbons feel like a real family, with a no-nonsense, hard-working matriarch, her more relaxed, emotional husband, and three children who go their separate ways in life and meet turmoil, normalcy, or tragedy. The most touching scene in the movie for me was the talk that Frank has with Reg before his wedding. "Always put your wife first," Frank says after he finally gets Reg to stop kidding around and listen to him.

I wasn't expecting this slice of life to be a tear-jerker, but it was, due to the beautiful acting of Celia Johnson and Robert Newton especially. They are the rocks of the film, providing its center. When Queenie runs off with a married man, she is shunned and disowned by Ethel, yet one can tell just by her movements that she is as heartbroken and worried as she is angry. Frank seems to accept what she says, yet once he's alone, he breaks down and sobs.

"This Happy Breed" sneaks up on you; before you know it, you're involved with the Gibbons. They're the stuff Britain is made of, the stuff that gets the country through its darkest times. A little gem; don't miss it. Oh, and I knew that was Laurence Olivier's voice in the beginning.
  • blanche-2
  • 5 jul 2007
  • Enlace permanente
7/10

Noel Coward's domestic saga of ordinary British family between wars...

What really boosts THIS HAPPY BREED into the "superior" category of British films is the direction by David Lean and the two central performances by CELIA JOHNSON and ROBERT NEWTON as the heads of a rather ordinary household living the provincial life between two World Wars. And what is surprising is that this '44 film from the U.K. uses Technicolor in an age when most films, unless they were spectacular musicals, were filmed in B&W. The color photography adds a handsome touch to the otherwise unspectacular story that is more a character study of a marriage and family relationships.

CELIA JOHNSON does a magnificent job as the mother who raises a daughter (KAY WALSH) unsatisfied with her family's social status, who yearns to rise above what she perceives as too provincial and runs off with a married man. It's just one of the many episodic tales in this domestic drama but it's played with such intensity by Johnson that the reunion scene toward the end is heartbreaking to watch.

All of the saga which stretches between the two wars is episodic, told in a series of vignettes which I imagine were done in blackout style on the stage, for which the tale was written. But Lean has successfully managed the transfer to the screen and all of the performances are top notch, particularly ROBERT NEWTON as the concerned father, JOHN MILLS as a man caught in an unrequited love affair and STANLEY HOLLOWAY who provides a good deal of comic relief as a boozy neighborhood friend of Newton.

Noel Coward evidently had more success in telling domestic tales with sharp observation of characters than Edna Ferber did with her own American sagas in which her characters seemed to get lost among all the vast territory she covered.

Summing up: Well worth watching for the performances alone.
  • Doylenf
  • 7 jul 2007
  • Enlace permanente

Fantastic, Mesmerising history lesson

This film by David Lean takes us on a journey from 1919 after the First World war towards into WW2. But focuses not on the fighting, but on the home front, and the effects of a changing world.

I love this films ability to take you along with the day to day routine of a large, close knit family. Youre there with their smiles and tears then then in an instant you feel the heartache of their tragedy.

Robert Newton has never been better - a truly mesmerising performance. Forget Long John Silver (although another very fine performance).

The rest of the cast are a brilliant complement to Robert Newton. John Mills is on top form in a cameo performance.

Did David Lean ever make a bad film?

The only down side to the film is you see how great the British Film Industry once was, and now its virtually gone.
  • Marxbr1027
  • 15 ago 2002
  • Enlace permanente
7/10

Much like Cavalcade but more accessible

This British Technicolor domestic drama from Eagle-Lion and director David Lean charts 20 years in the life of the Gibbons family, from 1919 to 1939. Husband Frank (Robert Newton) has just returned from fighting in WW1, and he and his wife Ethel (Celia Johnson) are moving into a new home in a crowded working class neighborhood. We follow them as they have children, raise them, and deal with the various ups and downs of family life, all leading up to the outbreak of WW2. Also featuring John Mills, Kay Walsh, Stanley Holloway, Eileen Erskine, John Blythe, Amy Veness, Alison Leggatt, and the voice of Laurence Olivier.

Based on a play by Noel Coward, this bears some thematic similarities to 1933's Cavalcade. This is more accessible though, and certainly much better made. Technically the movie is a marvel, with perhaps the best looking color cinematography, courtesy of Ronald Neame, up to this point in film. Lean's direction is also very admirable, with interesting and innovative camera movement. There's one truly outstanding scene wherein a person who has bad news to share exits out of the back door into a garden to relay the message, only the camera stays inside the house, moving a bit, looking out into the backyard but not seeing the news being delivered, all the while loud, upbeat music is blaring from a radio. It's a shattering scene that depicts the often banal setting for life-changing developments. Unfortunately I found much of the rest of the movie uninvolving. The acting is good, very natural and played in the medium to low register. I just couldn't bring myself to get emotionally connected with much of it.
  • AlsExGal
  • 19 dic 2022
  • Enlace permanente
9/10

Up there with the very best. Wonderful !

This film caught me completely unawares. I had never heard of it until it presented itself on daytime television one afternoon. I really dislike this type of film, as I find most of the time is spent on mediocre happenings in predictable situations. (Ordinary peoples lives are very boring). I was therefore amazed at the fact that I couldn't leave it, Maybe it's because I am getting older or maybe the people in this film reminded me of the adults of the 1950's when I was a child.

The acting is absolutely superb, you really believe in this family and the ups and downs of their lives. The direction of David Lean polishes the excellent cast performance, what more can I say ! ......Fantastic.....
  • fleetstar
  • 4 nov 2004
  • Enlace permanente
7/10

Agreeable portrait about a bourgeois family during thirty years

The movie narrates the happenings of a British family since the first world war (1914-18) until the end second world war (1939-45) . The parents (Robert Newton and Celia Johnson) , the troubled and rebel daughter (Kay Walsh) , the friendly neighbor (Stanley Holloway) , the seaman son (John Mills) and others . Meanwhile , being reflected the course of time and are succeeding various historic deeds , thus : the first and second world wars , the soldiers recruitment , death of the king George , the jolly reception to Minister Chamberlain after the useless Munich Convention with Hitler , the trenches digging in preventing the bombing over London by the Germans .

The movie is interpreted by the greatest English actors with important careers . Robert Newton (Treasure island) , Celia Johnson (Brief encounter) , John Mills (Daughter of Ryan), Kay Walsh (Oliver Twist), Stanley Holloway (My fair lady) . Colorful and glittering cinematography by Ronald Neame , a future director with many successes (Adventure of the Poseidon) . Musical conducting by Muir Mathieson , habitual of English classic films , as he was director of symphonic orchestra of London . The picture begins and finishes with a camera travelling from exterior and interior home what it subsequently would be copied in a lot of films (for example : The Family by the director Ettore Scola) . The motion picture was perfectly directed by David Lean considered the greatest British filmmaker . Rating : Awesome . Above average.
  • ma-cortes
  • 20 jun 2005
  • Enlace permanente
10/10

This Happy Breed-Best British Film I've Ever Seen ****

An outstanding David Lean film examining England between the World Wars. It deals with the Gibbons family and their lives during this tumultuous time.

Robert Newton and Celia Johnson are absolutely fabulous as the couple with 3 children. A stellar supporting cast enables this picture to be even better. We experience happiness, tragedy, the Charleston, general strikes hitting an endearing British people.

We see a family in crisis. The mother is quite a character, and even with her morbid ways, we can chuckle as this is what occurs as our seniors get older. A strong family structure committed to family values is terribly hurt by the actions of the youngest daughter, but in life there is redemption, and that is admirably shown in this film.

Life goes on. The question of what happens when we leave our homes and new occupants come in, is there some sort of link between the old and new? This is a fascinating question and this period piece, shot in bright textures, well answers this. Yes, we keep up that stiff upper lip.
  • edwagreen
  • 31 dic 2010
  • Enlace permanente
7/10

Dig The Old Breed

David Lean's affectionate family portrait of a working-class London family, right from its establishing panoramic shot of the city panning all the way down and into the no doubt two-up two-down marital household of Robert Newton and Celia Johnson, affords the viewer a near fly-on-the-wall insight into everyday life between the wars. The daily lives of the couple and their family and neighbours are told in a realistic, near-documentary manner, the more so by the use of full-colour photograpy, colloquial, vernacular dialogue and easily recognisable characters and familial tensions against the backdrop of significant events in Britain at the time, such as the National Strike of 1924, the death of King George V, although oddly not the abdication of Edward VII and the false hope that followed Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's "Peace in our Time" Munich declaration as the prelude to the Second World War.

Look in any gift store today, almost everywhere in Britain and you'll see a Union Jack mug, plate, towel or even T-shirt emblazoned with the phrase "Keep Calm and Carry On" which pretty much sums up the underlying theme of the movie.

Newton and Johnson are the ordinary, average couple who share their house with their three soon-to-be-adult children and Johnson's whingeing old mother, who's forever bickering with their live-in widowed sister-in-law. Next door lives Newton's war-time drinking buddy played by Stanley Holloway while John Mills is also on hand as the young suitor to the older daughter, the rebellious Queenie, played by Kay Walsh.

Lean clearly has sympathy for the working-class he's depicting but at does at least show some contrary viewpoints to the norm with the other, more conventional daughter Vi's boyfriend and later husband spouting pro-Communist invective reflecting the Red Scare just after the end of the First World War and even a public Blackshirt rally by Oswald Mosley's fascist party in the early 30's. Such events as these and the afore-mentioned great strike of 1924 aren't however covered in any kind of detail, in fact they serve as little more than clues as to the passing of time.

The beating heart of the film is Celia Johnson's matriarchal figure. She espouses earthy common sense throughout but even her patience reaches its breaking point when her oldest daughter runs off with a married man, oh the shame of it! Newton puts in a doughty performance as the straight-arrow husband and interacts well not only wirh Johnson but slso Holloway.as "'im next door".

Perhaps the film lacks a little dramatic tension as it flits from episode to episode but there's no denying the quality of the acting, writing, cinematography and direction of this worthy and entertaining feature, which is worth viewing as much for its historical encapsulation of Britain between the wars as for its cinematic quality.
  • Lejink
  • 13 oct 2022
  • Enlace permanente
10/10

magnificent pace and powerful understatement

This Happy Breed is a truly magnificent film.The genre of showing the lives of ordinary people during times of great historical importance has been done often enough but seldom,perhaps never, better than in this adaptation of Noel Cowards play. The family around whom the film revolves are comfortable but the film's dialogue enables us to realise the hardships being endured by millions of others Britain between the wars. The drama is powerful but never over the top and the strength of character of 'ordinary people' in those difficult times is magnificently portrayed through the father's advice to his son and the mother's views on morality.This relative subtlety on the part of director David Lean works extremely well in conjunction with the gentle pace at which we are made aware of the passing of time and the attending events. The film's ending,too,is in keeping with the unsensational nature of the whole piece and leaves the viewer with the very satisfying feeling that he/she has just watched an enjoyable and significant piece of drama.
  • jimbarr1
  • 19 mar 2006
  • Enlace permanente
7/10

This Lean fellow might have a future in directing.

David Lean continues his burgeoning directing career by working again closely with Noel Coward, this time adapting one of his plays for the screen. Telling the story of a middle class British family from the end of one World War to the start of the next, This Happy Breed leans heavily on the themes that would resurface in Lean's later films about the conflicting and, at times, complimenting ideas of change and permanence. It also returns many of the actors that Lean worked with so well in In Which We Serve including John Mills and Celia Johnson.

After the close of The Great War, the Gibbons family moves into a house in the suburbs of London. Middle-aged Frank fought in the war while his wife, Ethel, and three children, Reg, Vi, and Queenie stayed behind. Their new neighbor is an old acquaintance of Frank's from the war and things seem to already be settling down into familiar old rhythms from before the four year conflict. Frank and Bob, his friend and neighbor, drink regularly with toasts to their different regiments, both of which, they decide, were the best in the world. Ethel runs the house with her mother and Frank's sister. It's the children who represent the changing world around them.

Frank and Ethel aren't interested in the burgeoning flapper culture, but Queenie is. Frank and Ethel aren't interested in the new political movements, most notably socialism, but Reg is. Vi is closest to her parents, but even she marries the young socialist friend of Reg, helping him to settle down at the same time. Over the years, the family steadily breaks apart for different reasons. Queenie runs off with a married man to France instead of marrying Bob's son Billy, a sailor in His Majesty's Navy. Reg and his wife get killed in a car crash. Everything seems to be disintegrating along with the newfound peace of Europe as Hitler rises to power and fascism comes to England on the street corners of London.

And yet, just on the eve of war with Neville Chamberlain returning to England with his successful plan for peace with Hitler, which was of course doomed to failure, the family begins to reassemble as best as it can when Queenie returns home, married to Billy, long after having been abandoned by her lover in France. There's a comfort to be found in the changes that have occurred through the two decades since the end of the last war and in the things that have remained the same at the same time. As Frank and Ethel clean out their house to move into the country, the mirror image of how the movie began with them moving in, they pause to reflect on their time there. England will always be England, they seem to conclude as their family functions as a metaphor for the country and the times they've lived through.

Made in the middle of the Second World War, there's a sense of propaganda about the film in telling the audience, who would be predominantly British, that despite all the changes that have come to their nation over the previous two decades they were still of the same breed that won the last Great War. There's not a single shot of a battlefield beyond a poster for the travel agency that Frank works for, but it does fall under the same umbrella as William Wyler's Mrs. Miniver. At the same time, though, the character work is strong enough to raise the movie from its status as propaganda and work as a straight drama, much in the same way that In Which We Serve was able to focus strongly enough on the sailors to make it a strong piece at the same time.

Acting is solid all around especially from Celia Johnson as Ethel who goes through the most having to reject her own daughter, Queenie, after she leaves for France. A filmed play, it never feels like it's limited to a single set, though most of it does take place in the house with only brief sojourns outside. Lean found ways to keep the framing interesting and changing throughout in non-flashy ways, keeping the movie visually engaging throughout.

It's a solid little drama that, much like Lean's previous film, is very much of its time but strong enough to stand outside of it as well. This Lean fellow might have a future in directing.
  • davidmvining
  • 14 sep 2020
  • Enlace permanente
10/10

The best hearth-and-home movie I've ever seen

While completely ignored by the American Academy, This Happy Breed was one of the most successful films in England in 1944. When the movie starts, it seems like a British version of The Best Years of Our Lives, but as the story continues, it becomes much more of a domestic drama than a story of veterans' plight. It's one of the most fantastic, moving hearth-and-home films I've ever seen, and since I'm a classic movie aficionado, that's a very meaningful compliment.

Starring Robert Newton and Celia Johnson, it follows the ups and downs of one family during the years between the world wars. David Lean, a master director, and Noel Coward, usually known for his lighter comedies, bring an incredible drama to the screen. As it was created and released in the thick of WWII, an extra sadness is included, as audiences were watching the uncertainty in the theaters mirroring their own uncertainty at home.

Robert and Celia start the story young, happy, and relatively fresh as they move into their first home after the end of WWI. Bobbie's friend and fellow veteran, Stanley Holloway, is their neighbor. Together, the two families age and watch their children pursue their own paths, and they lean on each other during the terrible times; sometimes, reminiscing with dear friends is the only way to muddle through. One unique and fantastic element to the film is the makeup. The film spans twenty-five years, and Bobbie, Celia, and Stanley all age very realistically, as do the children: John Mills, Kay Walsh, Eileen Erskine, and John Blythe.

The chemistry between Bobbie and Celia is so natural, and while they are given very good lines to demonstrate their closeness, it's their acting that is the glue of the film. Neither roles require the actors to give over-the-top performances, but they're tour-de-force parts for both leads. It's a subtle, realistic movie, and they play subtle, realistic people. Without giving spoilers to the plot, it isn't really possible for me to fully complement Bobbie and Celia, but I will say this: at the end of the movie, you truly feel like you've just witnessed twenty-five years of their lives. You will be exhausted, and you'll be filled with awe of their talent.
  • HotToastyRag
  • 6 abr 2018
  • Enlace permanente
7/10

This Happy Breed

  • jboothmillard
  • 22 ago 2009
  • Enlace permanente
3/10

For me, close to unwatchable; other's will like it

This is a very odd film indeed; I'm not sure if Coward's title "This Happy Breed" was something of a joke, because no one seems particularly happy in it. Coward was a real talent, both as a performer and writer; this, for me, was a rare misfire.

It's essentially "kitchen sink" drama with a first rate cast of British talent, director and cinematographer. I'll normally give a thumbs up to any movie with the excellent Stanley Holloway in it, but he, like most of the cast, are wasted here. Coward's dialog is perfectly OK, but the storyline is pretty darn awful. Celia Johnson's character is tough to listen to for any period of time.

On the plus side, the technical quality and the chance to see 1944 London in high quality color is wonderful. Most of the "action" takes place in the house setting, but occasional location scenes are fascinating to watch.
  • gregorybquinn
  • 7 ene 2024
  • Enlace permanente

A gem

Whether or not, one agrees with the "truth or morality" of Noel Coward's ennobling view of the British "bourgeois" from 1919-1939, the acting and direction in "This Happy Breed", are superb, and what a cast. I think the notion of sacrifice, pride, and work ethic, might have easily been written about many similar low and middle income families in America from Brooklyn to San Francisco, during the same period, as it was portrayed in the equally, excellent film, "Best Years of our Lives" (1946)
  • Durante
  • 28 jun 2001
  • Enlace permanente
6/10

Quite good, but better things were to come for David Lean...

  • jem132
  • 19 dic 2008
  • Enlace permanente
9/10

The Gibbons And Mitchells Of Sycamore Lane

Kind of overlapping the era of British history that his previous work Cavalcade had covered, Noel Coward wrote one of his most popular plays in The Happy Breed which premiered in London in 1942 as Great Britain was fighting for its life. This film adaption coming as it did in 1944 when the tide of the war had turned, almost seems to justify Coward's faith in his country and the pluck of its people.

The image we have today of Noel Coward is the ultra-sophisticate hanging around with royalty and other titled folks, amusing them with a sample of his acclaimed wit. But the kind of middle class background that the Gibbons and their neighbors the Mitchells come from is exactly where Noel Coward had his roots. His early years are covered in Cavalcade and the years overlap into This Happy Breed. Both films really ought to be seen back to back as a great sample of British social history.

Newly discharged veteran from the Great War, Robert Newton and his wife Celia Johnson buy their dream house on Sycamore Lane to raise their three children. By chance their neighbors happen to be Stanley Holloway, Newton's wartime buddy and his family the Mitchells. The film is the story of the Mitchells and the Gibbons and how their lives interconnect in the years between the World Wars. Their family situations are seen against the backdrop of the events of the times like the General Strike, the Depression and the formation of the Coalition National Government to fight it, and the death of King George V.

Anyone who expects the eye rolling Blackbeard from Robert Newton will be pleasantly surprised. Newton could be restrained if he had to, and in David Lean he certainly had a director that would rein in his excesses if it were ever necessary. What surprised me was that Noel Coward himself played the lead when This Happy Breed debuted in London. I certainly would have liked to have seen Coward's interpretation of the part.

Kay Walsh who was Mrs. David Lean at the time played the elder daughter Queenie for Newton and Johnson. John Mills who is a career Navy man and Holloway's son loves Walsh, but she's a naughty thing and out for a good time. Let's say I think Mills just might qualify for sainthood in his performance with what he put up with.

This Happy Breed is a great play with average folks that Mr. Average American, let alone Mr. Average British could identify with and it's great social commentary of an important era in history.
  • bkoganbing
  • 24 mar 2009
  • Enlace permanente
6/10

"We like planting things and watching them grow"

This Happy Breed was David Lean's first picture as sole credited director, and continued his collaboration with playwright Noel Coward. It's a far cry from the massive epics that Lean is best known for, although there are links between the early Lean and the later Lean. The focus couldn't be much more different, but just like Laurence of Arabia nearly twenty years later, Lean (or rather Coward, since it's his play) is here telling the story of historical events through the experiences of individual, well-defined characters.

One thing that's always struck me about these early David Lean pictures is how similar his technique was to that of Alfred Hitchcock. His subject matter was vastly different, but you could say this is what it would look like had Hitch made dramas. You can see this right from the opening shot, as the camera pans over the Thames then homes in on one house, echoing the beginning of many a Hitchcock thriller – like Hitch, Lean is here saying "this could be any home, any family". He shows similarities with Hitch in the way he arranges the actors in a shot, and there is some fairly classy handling of characters emotional states – a more gentle take on Hitchcock's aim to always show character psychology.

It's a mystery to me why this was made in colour. For a start, Technicolor was not easy to get hold of in Britain at this time (for example The Archers had to delay making A Matter of Life and Death til after the war was over). There's nothing about the subject matter that really demands colour, and to be honest Lean doesn't make that good use of it (he was to demonstrate great skill with black and white in subsequent films up until the mid 1950s). The only reason I can think of is to inject more realism into it. Also, in spite of its small focus, the picture does seem to give itself the airs and sweep of a "big" picture, what with the grand orchestral score and the location shooting.

There's some good acting talent on display here. Stanley Holloway and Frank Mills are great in their supporting roles, but the real standout is Celia Johnson. Her performance is both powerful and naturalistic. She may not have had the looks to be given many lead roles, but she really was one of the best English actors of her generation.

This Happy Breed was probably quite something for the British public at the time of its release. It wasn't that common to see a film depicting a normal, average family having normal, average experiences, particularly where these were related to events in recent memory. However, it hasn't aged well, and looking at it now I'd say it probably says more about the inside of Noel Coward's head than it does about the British people or the British experience in the inter war years. The dialogue is full of meaningless waffle about Britain or the British character. There are some rather obvious attempts to represent a variety of political standpoints through different characters, although This Happy Breed is extremely subjective in its portrayal of actual historical events.

Another clue as to why This Happy Breed was such a major success at the time is its bolstering optimism. David Lean is often said to have captured the post war mood with his late-40s output, and here in 1944 he seems to be looking forward to the end of the war. This Happy Breed starts with the end of the last war, and ends with the beginning of the then-current one, and there is that air of "we took it before, we can do it again". But unlike the superlative war and post-war films of Michael Powell, or Lean's own Brief Encounter, no matter how timely it was in its day, this is no great picture here and now.
  • Steffi_P
  • 16 jun 2007
  • Enlace permanente
10/10

A Film About Family

This is my favorite film about family. Big names produced this great little gem. Written by Noel Coward and directed by David Lean, like an epic novel there is love, hate, bickering, devotion, jealousy, fear, disappointment, birth and death. The story is modern, yet timeless. The dialogue is real and detailed. The characters are sharply written. Although This Happy Breed isn't as recognizable as It's a Wonderful Life, I think you can appreciate this unsung hero.
  • shelleygilbertauthor
  • 19 ago 2022
  • Enlace permanente
6/10

Eastenders - thirties style

Describing something as a soap is generally meant as an insult but soaps are the most popular form of entertainment and if done well like this they can be quite special. This is an uneventful story of ordinary everyday normal life turned into something spectacular.

What makes this film so special is how unspecial the family's life is. There's no world shattering events, no abject poverty to struggle through, no murders, conspiracies or crimes, just everyday life. Even the Technicolor is cleverly used to reinforce the drabness and ordinariness of life, but nevertheless life to be celebrated. David Lean however turns what could have been a stagey filmed theatre play into a beautiful big screen, big budget cinematic piece of art. It does take a while to get to know the characters. For the first hour you do feel it drags a little but like with any good soap, you'll be so glad you stick with it.

Watched today it's interesting to see how very similar the attitudes of this typical lower middle class family are to ours today. It's interesting to contrast these attitudes to the narrow-minded snobbery of the upper classes often portrayed as cold-hearted villains in American films of the early thirties or more pertinent to this film, BRIEF ENCOUNTER. It seems that us ordinary people haven't changed that much. This makes this old movie very accessible to us now.

And talking of American films of the early thirties, when some of the family go to see THE BROADWAY MELODY it looks absolutely ancient in context of what you yourself are watching now. How quickly film making techniques improved (but I still quite like BROADWAY MELODY). "I coornt understand a wuurd thuy say" says someone commenting on the American accents. Interesting how totally different the cockney accent was back then to now. Celia Johnson, although definitely not a cockney does an authentic pre-war accent which would sound as ridiculous now as would her own 1940s upper-class accent a lá BRIEF ENCOUNTER.
  • 1930s_Time_Machine
  • 31 dic 2023
  • Enlace permanente
9/10

The art of gentle film making

Was it nostalgia I asked myself? Brought up in the fifties many of the attitudes seem familiar although the family itself were an idealised vision of how I remember things. All that said I loved it for what it was, a gentle, often funny, film with superb acting and great visual images. A touching and thoroughly enjoyable film that I am sure I will return to at another time. Not a great film and no massive impact, but what a pleasure to watch and what a shame that the British film industry seems to have lost some of the skills and application so evident in this movie. This is one for a quiet afternoon. It won't tax your mind nor overly excite but it will leave you feeling happier for watching it.
  • ikbradford
  • 10 sep 2007
  • Enlace permanente
6/10

Film Outlasts Its Welcome

Title is surely ironic as the mostly unhappy Gibbons family outlasts its welcome. Despite its dramatic sweep, film is best appreciated as a comedy. Reflects the conventional attitudes of the English lower middle class. At the General Strike the left-leaning son Reg is soon straightened out by his insufferable father while his Socialist friend also sees the error of his ways and settles down to a humdrum middle-class existence that is seen as the ultimate goal. Pity it skirts around the real inter-war issues. It doesn't challenge the conventions. It could have shown the effects of war on that generation but obviously just wants to paint a superficial picture. A cuppa solves everything. This sort of thing would be the fodder of second-rate TV soap-operas. John Mills, Celia Johnson and Stanley Holloway stand out. Richard Burton characterised writer Noel Coward as a lovely man with a "slight mind." That helps me understand the lost opportunity here to put the inter-war years into some sort of real perspective. But it also makes me wonder how the same team a couple of years later produced the masterpiece that is Brief Encounter!
  • SwollenThumb
  • 8 abr 2018
  • Enlace permanente
10/10

Wonderful

  • lindsey-19601
  • 25 abr 2022
  • Enlace permanente
6/10

Art imitates art?

  • neolitic
  • 18 ago 2007
  • Enlace permanente
5/10

Even Their Servants Were Poor

  • JamesHitchcock
  • 22 sep 2011
  • Enlace permanente

Más de este título

Más para explorar

Visto recientemente

Habilita las cookies del navegador para usar esta función. Más información.
Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
Inicia sesión para obtener más accesoInicia sesión para obtener más acceso
Sigue a IMDb en las redes sociales
Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
Para Android e iOS
Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
  • Ayuda
  • Índice del sitio
  • IMDbPro
  • Box Office Mojo
  • Licencia de datos de IMDb
  • Sala de prensa
  • Publicidad
  • Trabaja con nosotros
  • Condiciones de uso
  • Política de privacidad
  • Your Ads Privacy Choices
IMDb, una compañía de Amazon

© 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.