Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn Mr. Radfern's house relatives and in-law parasites are pestering him about lending them money. One day he discloses that he is earning his living by illegal means, scaring them off for go... Tout lireIn Mr. Radfern's house relatives and in-law parasites are pestering him about lending them money. One day he discloses that he is earning his living by illegal means, scaring them off for good. But did he just tell that story in jest?In Mr. Radfern's house relatives and in-law parasites are pestering him about lending them money. One day he discloses that he is earning his living by illegal means, scaring them off for good. But did he just tell that story in jest?
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Police Sergeant
- (as Terence Conlin)
- Train Passenger
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
Gwenn is good and carries the film. After a slow and irritating start as we follow Hardwicke's bumbling cartoon-like oafish character - nobody in life is like that - with his comedy mannerisms that aren't funny, the film takes a turn when everyone sits down to dinner and Gwenn announces he is a criminal. Ha ha. Nobody can believe it but he doesn't let go. We get a story of intrigue from then on as a detective turns up on the scene to ask some questions about a 'commercial' crime. Could it be innocent?
Gwenn has that harmless old man disposition that works well in this film and Katie Johnson has that thing about her where you are not quite sure whether she is unaware of everything or a master criminal herself. The film loses points for the twee wallflower that is Victoria Hopper and the incredibly annoying buffoonery of Cedric Hardwicke.
At one point in the film, Ethel Coleridge tells Hardwicke to "go and wash your face" before mealtime and I heard my wife laughing at this. I just know that this line will be repeated at me at some point soon. Not because I have a dirty face but because I heard her laugh and that means something is being retained in the memory bank. Ha ha.
It's based on a J. B. Priestley play, and only slightly opened up from the stage, but it's a distinguished cast for director Carol Reed, It's only his third movie in that seat, and he was already out of the quota quickies. Perhaps his quick rise was because he was the illegitimate son of Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, one of six he had with a second family he kept in Putney. Reed had a middle-class upbringing, and when he said he wanted to go on the stage, his mother shipped him off to his elder brother's chicken farm in Massachusetts. He was soon back in England, acting with Dame Sybil Thorndike's company, and then on to a stage troupe started by Edgar Wallace to stage his works. He followed Wallace to British Lion. When Wallace died, he transferred to ATP (which became Ealing), as a dialogue director. And so began his career. He died in 1976 at the age of 69.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis film received its earliest documented telecast Saturday 19 August 1944 on New York City's pioneer television station WNBT (Channel 1).
- Citations
Mr. Baxley: Exactly why are you going to Birmingham, George?
Mr. Radfern: Business.
Mrs. Baxley: Ha! Business!
Mr. Radfern: Exactly, business. You don't think I'd go to Birmingham for pleasure, do you?
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 13 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1