NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
739
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA drama set during World War II. A tale of adultery and desertion.A drama set during World War II. A tale of adultery and desertion.A drama set during World War II. A tale of adultery and desertion.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Frank Atkinson
- George - Pub Barman
- (non crédité)
Nellie Bowman
- Tillie's Mother
- (non crédité)
John Boxer
- Policeman in Fight in Arcade
- (non crédité)
Dave Crowley
- Baked Beans
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
An interesting and watchable British feature which provides interesting insights into the wartime lifestyles and attitudes of the working class. John Mills is the soldier who goes AWOL during the Blitz to return home to check up on his pretty young wife Joy Shelton after his nosey sister sends him a letter accusing her of having an affair in his absence with Stewart Granger's spivvy draft-dodger.
That's about all the plot there is, apart from a little padding which sees Alastair Sim's G. P. act as the moral conscience of the film, subtly guiding Mills to his wife's whereabouts on the arm of the scheming Granger and even on how to defend himself in the anticipated fisticuffs with his rival.
There's also an encounter between Mills and a U. S. counterpart although significantly the Yank has only gone missing because he wants to see some fighting action, as if American soldiers never committed adultery, especially when in old Blighty!
It's interesting to witness the conflicting treatment of two able-bodied males of the time and almost see the film as part of a recruitment drive for the British forces whilst shaming shirkers like Granger's character. We see this in the way that Mills's character benefits from the pursuing military police almost looking the other way as he tries to sort out his domestic situation and are even given to believe that little Johnny can win a bare-knuckle fight with the much bigger Granger who we're told is a champion boxer.
The contemporary attitude towards women is also interesting to observe as we see Shelton's fading resistance to Granger's charms almost excused by not only the obvious device of his wining and dining her but more pertinently demonstrating some understanding of the sense of loneliness and physical and emotional needs of a young woman deprived of her husband's company for long periods of time.
Naturally it all ends up as it should with the married couple reconciled and the bounder getting a thick ear, but it was nevertheless interesting to view this less than rosy picture of marital life during the war.
Sydney Gilliat, this time without the aid of his long-time associate Frank Launder, wrote the screenplay and directed the action. Just over 70 minutes long, even then it feels slightly padded as Mills and his American army pal try to avoid detection, but nevertheless it doesn't gild the lily in painting its true to life family portrait. There's one particularly fine shot early in the film when Sim's character introduces the extended flashback as we see the present-day part-flattened Waterloo Road restored to completion to begin the story and the film elsewhere makes good use of actual physical locations.
Not the kind of feature normally associated with the Gainsborough studio but definitely a welcome change from its more usual overripe costume melodramas.
That's about all the plot there is, apart from a little padding which sees Alastair Sim's G. P. act as the moral conscience of the film, subtly guiding Mills to his wife's whereabouts on the arm of the scheming Granger and even on how to defend himself in the anticipated fisticuffs with his rival.
There's also an encounter between Mills and a U. S. counterpart although significantly the Yank has only gone missing because he wants to see some fighting action, as if American soldiers never committed adultery, especially when in old Blighty!
It's interesting to witness the conflicting treatment of two able-bodied males of the time and almost see the film as part of a recruitment drive for the British forces whilst shaming shirkers like Granger's character. We see this in the way that Mills's character benefits from the pursuing military police almost looking the other way as he tries to sort out his domestic situation and are even given to believe that little Johnny can win a bare-knuckle fight with the much bigger Granger who we're told is a champion boxer.
The contemporary attitude towards women is also interesting to observe as we see Shelton's fading resistance to Granger's charms almost excused by not only the obvious device of his wining and dining her but more pertinently demonstrating some understanding of the sense of loneliness and physical and emotional needs of a young woman deprived of her husband's company for long periods of time.
Naturally it all ends up as it should with the married couple reconciled and the bounder getting a thick ear, but it was nevertheless interesting to view this less than rosy picture of marital life during the war.
Sydney Gilliat, this time without the aid of his long-time associate Frank Launder, wrote the screenplay and directed the action. Just over 70 minutes long, even then it feels slightly padded as Mills and his American army pal try to avoid detection, but nevertheless it doesn't gild the lily in painting its true to life family portrait. There's one particularly fine shot early in the film when Sim's character introduces the extended flashback as we see the present-day part-flattened Waterloo Road restored to completion to begin the story and the film elsewhere makes good use of actual physical locations.
Not the kind of feature normally associated with the Gainsborough studio but definitely a welcome change from its more usual overripe costume melodramas.
A most satisfying film ,well acted and produced,a simple story of a wartime incident when the husband(john mills) came on leave.The fight scene between John Mills and Stewart Granger was the highlight.In those unsophisticated days audiences often applauded and cheered a good film.It was the only entertainment for the hard working people in those wartime years.
I wonder how daring this film was for wartime with a sympathetic treatment of soldiers AWOL? Also unfaithful wifes, a worry to many soldiers, the ones that weren't frollicking with girls in liberated countries of course. My interest were lots of authentic outdoor scenes in wartime London. Only criticism was the requirement for the cad to be doubly punished!! (Villains had to be seen to punished for it to get by the censor). Alister Sims seemed menacing even though he was playing a good guy.
When John Mills gets a letter from his sister that his wife, Joy Shelton, is carrying on with local sporting man Stewart Granger, he goes AWOL back to his home to track them down and deal with the situation.
I've passed up numerous chances to see this movie before I realized that it had John Mills in it. "Huh! Is there a third movie version of WATERLOO BRIDGE?" No, it's a domestic drama directed and co-written by Sidney Gilliat, so it has a good, rough sense of humor, abetted by Alastair Sim as the local doctor, and one of every three characters who recognize local boy Mills. This being released before the end of the War, it also has a morale-boosting bit of propaganda at the end, enlarging Sim's role a bit.
There are lots of faces familiar to movie fans, including Jean Kent, Wallace Lupino, Ben Williams, and Kathleen Harrison. It's not a very deep or important film, but it will interest and amuse fans of the talented cast and crew.
I've passed up numerous chances to see this movie before I realized that it had John Mills in it. "Huh! Is there a third movie version of WATERLOO BRIDGE?" No, it's a domestic drama directed and co-written by Sidney Gilliat, so it has a good, rough sense of humor, abetted by Alastair Sim as the local doctor, and one of every three characters who recognize local boy Mills. This being released before the end of the War, it also has a morale-boosting bit of propaganda at the end, enlarging Sim's role a bit.
There are lots of faces familiar to movie fans, including Jean Kent, Wallace Lupino, Ben Williams, and Kathleen Harrison. It's not a very deep or important film, but it will interest and amuse fans of the talented cast and crew.
"Waterloo Road" deserves to be better known than it is. If, like me, you were born after the war, it is a fascinating glimpse of a time gone by, but don't watch it for that alone. It is a story about ordinary people in wartime, without heroics and melodrama, but with an abundance of character and incident. The characters struck me as being true to life, and I didn't find a jarring line of dialogue or a scene which dragged. John Mills gave a fine performance as a soldier gone AWOL, and Stewart Granger as the cad out to seduce his wife. All in all, a wonderful little film.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis movie received its initial television showing in the U.S. in New York City, Thursday, November 2, 1950 on the DuMont Television Network's London Playhouse on WABD (Channel 5).
- GaffesWhen Dr. Montgomery (Alastair Sim) deals with the blow Jim Colter (John Mills) sustained to his head, he applies a round sticking plaster. In the next shot it has changed to a horizontal rectangle. When Jim arrives at the Alcazar club, the plaster is a vertical rectangle. By the time he reaches The Lucky Star to accost Ted Purvis (Stewart Granger) the plaster has disappeared.
- Citations
Mrs. Colter: [back at home after the night's Blitz] Ah well, another day. Still 'ere, aren't we? That's something.
- ConnexionsFeatured in War Stories (2006)
- Bandes originalesWho's Gonna Take You Home Tonight?
(uncredited)
Written by Michael Carr and Irwin Dash (as Lewis Ilda)
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 16min(76 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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