Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA mother struggles to maintain normalcy at home as D-Day nears. With lodgers, absent children in the Navy, and no war job, she questions her choice to remain a housewife when her son's ship ... Leer todoA mother struggles to maintain normalcy at home as D-Day nears. With lodgers, absent children in the Navy, and no war job, she questions her choice to remain a housewife when her son's ship is damaged.A mother struggles to maintain normalcy at home as D-Day nears. With lodgers, absent children in the Navy, and no war job, she questions her choice to remain a housewife when her son's ship is damaged.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 2 premios ganados en total
Basil Appleby
- Seaman Taylor
- (sin créditos)
Clement Attlee
- Self
- (material de archivo)
- (sin créditos)
Dorothy Bramhall
- Mrs. Maling
- (sin créditos)
Winston Churchill
- Self
- (material de archivo)
- (sin créditos)
Helen Goss
- Woman in Silk Stockings Queue
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Cheap-looking, studio-bound and obviously based on a play, but it looks good and is to be cherished as a very rare film lead for the charming Ursula Jeans.
The cast and crew were some of the best British movies had to offer. This moving tale of what it was like in England in and just after the war years. I really enjoyed Thora Herd as the ever reliable Char lady, chatting all the time with nothing to say she was perfect. Cecil Parker who was head over heels in love with delightful Ursula Jeans but did not have the nerve to tell her till 2/3rds through the film, very English. The trivia was exactly right. A real who's who in the British film industry. Roy Baker directing, Vetchinsky art direction and Hillier a master of black and white photography. Miur Mathieson, music Seeing this 1948 movie for the 1st time in 2004, I was prepared to be disappointed but was not.
This is what the war years British film industry excelled at. Ursula Jeans and Cecil Parker are a widow and friend of the late husband and her assorted adult children and relatives. The action of the film starts with Mrs. Dacre (Jeans) being given a fresh hen by a random soldier-which might be stolen. Parker is seen vacuuming the floor. War has switched their roles. Their growing friendship is nice to watch. Mrs. Dacre's sister is directly involved in the war so has the luxury of a free uniform, and they frequently clash. A son and daughter are in uniform too. The small issues set the restrained tone, not unlike Mrs. Miniver and Since You Went Away. But inevitably the war and DDay inflict a series of tragic events onto the people connected to Mrs. Dacre.
Now that the last of this generation is down to a few, films such as these will become more important as a cultural record.
If you have any interest in home front history, you'll enjoy this. I found it remarkably moving. The action sequences are terrific and the sets help to remind us how we live in relative luxury compared to life during wartime.
Definitely recommend.
Now that the last of this generation is down to a few, films such as these will become more important as a cultural record.
If you have any interest in home front history, you'll enjoy this. I found it remarkably moving. The action sequences are terrific and the sets help to remind us how we live in relative luxury compared to life during wartime.
Definitely recommend.
This is rather a strange film with an even stranger title.The film has a substantial amount of newsreel film intercut with the drama.Also there are newspaper headlines shown often when they seem to be of little dramatic point.Cecil Parker and Thora Bird steal the acting honours.I do wonder what contemporary audiences would have made of this film.Particularly being reminded of the austerity that everyone was having to suffer.Films like this were far better made during the war.
A rather inconsequential drama that offers a post-war pat on the back to all the housewives that kept the home fires burning while their menfolk and daughters were off fighting Nazis. Ursula Jeans is the anchor of both the film and the family that faces the typical highs and lows of domestic wartime life. It's watchable enough, but feels awfully rushed and episodic the longer it goes on, and is probably the only film in which Cecil Parker plays the romantic lead...
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaMartha Dacre quotes from "Life a duty" by Ellen Sturgis Hooper (February 17, 1812 - November 3, 1848): "I slept, and dreamed that life was Beauty; / I woke, and found that life was Duty."
- Créditos curiososOpening credits prologue: The story of Martha Dacre and her family covered the period of four years from D-Day onwards . . .
It might have been your story.
- ConexionesReferenced in The Good Life: The Weaker Sex? (1975)
- Bandas sonorasThese Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)
(uncredited)
Written (1936) by Eric Maschwitz and Jack Strachey
Sung by Cecil Parker in opening scene
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 24 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Weaker Sex (1948) officially released in India in English?
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