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The Final Test

  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 30min
NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
260
MA NOTE
The Final Test (1953)
ComédieDrameSport

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSam Palmer is a cricketer about to play the final test match of his career. His schoolboy son Reggie is a budding poet who disappoints him by not attending the penultimate day's play. Unexpe... Tout lireSam Palmer is a cricketer about to play the final test match of his career. His schoolboy son Reggie is a budding poet who disappoints him by not attending the penultimate day's play. Unexpectedly, Reggie is invited to the home of poet and writer Alexander Whitehead. Reggie fears... Tout lireSam Palmer is a cricketer about to play the final test match of his career. His schoolboy son Reggie is a budding poet who disappoints him by not attending the penultimate day's play. Unexpectedly, Reggie is invited to the home of poet and writer Alexander Whitehead. Reggie fears he will also miss the final day--and therefore Sam's last innings--but it turns out that ... Tout lire

  • Réalisation
    • Anthony Asquith
  • Scénario
    • Terence Rattigan
  • Casting principal
    • Jack Warner
    • Robert Morley
    • George Relph
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,6/10
    260
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Anthony Asquith
    • Scénario
      • Terence Rattigan
    • Casting principal
      • Jack Warner
      • Robert Morley
      • George Relph
    • 14avis d'utilisateurs
    • 1avis de critique
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos13

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 6
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    Rôles principaux33

    Modifier
    Jack Warner
    Jack Warner
    • Sam Palmer
    Robert Morley
    Robert Morley
    • Alexander Whitehead
    George Relph
    George Relph
    • Syd Thompson
    Adrianne Allen
    Adrianne Allen
    • Aunt Ethel
    Ray Jackson
    • Reggie Palmer
    Brenda Bruce
    Brenda Bruce
    • Cora
    Stanley Maxted
    • Senator
    Joan Swinstead
    Joan Swinstead
    • Miss Fanshawe
    John Glyn-Jones
    • Mr. Willis
    Len Hutton
    • Self - England Cricketer
    Denis Compton
    • Self - England Cricketer
    Alec Bedser
    • Self - England Cricketer
    Godfrey Evans
    • Self - England Cricketer
    Jim Laker
    • Self - England Cricketer
    Cyril Washbrook
    • Self - England Cricketer
    John Arlott
    • Self - Cricket commentary by
    • (voix)
    Jack Arrow
    • Cricket Match Spectator
    • (non crédité)
    Richard Bebb
    • Frank Weller
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Anthony Asquith
    • Scénario
      • Terence Rattigan
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs14

    6,6260
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    Avis à la une

    8g-hbe

    Jack Warner impresses again.

    Up until the last few years, I've only ever seen Jack Warner in 'Dixon of Dock Green' and a few of his higher-profile films such as 'The Blue Lamp' etc. However, since the advent of the excellent TPTV channel, several of his films have been given a good airing. 'Jigsaw' and 'Emergency Call' spring to mind as showcases for his fine acting abilities. The Final Innings is a wonderful film full of good, solid British character actors working wonders with a fairly thin story. The short scene of Sam's final innings and his exit from the pitch to rousing cheers from the crowd and even the opposing side is heart-warming indeed. I don't know much about Cricket, but then the film is barely about cricket at all, more about making allowances, moving on and finding the next chapter in life, which in Sam's case is with the pretty Cora. See this film if you get a chance, especially if you like old-fashioned, homely drama about real people.
    9Welly-2

    An absolute belter

    This is a magnificent film and all the better for this being such a surprise. There's a quiet dread when you watch any film that claims to be about sport, especially when so many of its stars are credited to appear. Wooden and contrived come to mind. This throws all such stereotypes out of the window and is a wonderful and thoughtful classic.

    There is humour and a great deal of emotion, there is also a splendid performance from Jack Warner who really surprised me with his sensitive portrayal of a proud cricketer and father. Robert Morley hams it up as usual and there is the delight of a Richard Wattis cameo to add icing to this wonderful cake.

    All in all, this is a joy to watch; intelligent and witty thanks to Terrance Rattigan's sharp script. I love cricket, but those that know nothing of it will still get a great deal of pleasure from this cracking film.
    Oct

    Jack's last stand

    Like Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter, playwright Terence Rattigan was a cricket devotee. But non-fans need not shun "The Final Test": it contains little cricketing action, and the game's mysteries are sent up by having a baffled visiting American senator interrogate a supercilious Richard Wattis about them. The Test of the title is much more one of loyalty and of the relationship between an older and younger man, like weightier Rattigan works such as "The Winslow Boy", "The Browning Version" and "Man and Boy".

    Quickly filmed after being one of the earliest British TV plays by an established writer, "The Final Test" is a cheap and cheerful comedy. Documentary footage of real play at the Oval, South London, is hardly up to "Zelig" standards in melding into the studio shots. The film stocks do not match, and the crowd's rush into the ground is evidently back-projected. The setting is less grand than one associates with Rattigan. It is Cowardesque in the vein of "This Happy Breed", with a sauce bottle on the dinner table: the hero, Sam Palmer, is a professional batsman who has done well enough to give his son a fee-paying education. The only "posh" character besides Wattis is Robert Morley's pompous poet and playwright, whom the literary-minded son would rather visit than watch his dad play his last innings against the Australian tourists. Luckily Morley proves to be a cricket maniac and all ends well.

    Jack Warner's remarkable, belated rise from fairly blue music hall comic and Maurice Chevalier impersonator to one of Britain's leading character actors is consolidated here. He can be humorous, gruff, judicious... and all in the same scene if required. There is no trace of the over-expressiveness of so many comedians trying to act. Though pushing 60, Warner looks no older than the real doyen of the English side, Cyril Washbrook, who along with a handful of colleagues nervously plays himself (no role is harder for a non-pro). The widowed Warner has a fancy for a barmaid at his local pub, the gaunt Brenda Bruce, and he has his own retirement dilemmas to resolve: should he marry a woman who may have a past, and should he take a job coaching boys at Eton when his son is about to go to Oxford and mingle with Etonians on level terms?

    "The Final Test" therefore has a few gentle remarks to drop about changing social values and snobberies in post-war Britain. Sam's captain, Len Hutton, urges him not to fuss so much about the pecking order: an amusing way of using a real-life character, since the great Yorkshireman was England's first professional cricket captain and would soon be knighted. Morley's TV play "Following a Turtle to My Father's Tomb", which Sam's son watches in rapture and which drives Sam out to the pub, is a spoof of the middlebrow poetic drama (TS Eliot, Christopher Fry) then in vogue, which Rattigan did not admire. One line, "the great dome of discovery that men call the sky", takes off the exhibit of that name in the recent Festival of Britain.

    The deserved rehabilitation of Rattigan, with the likes of David Mamet doing him homage, gives fresh interest to a script which takes the boulevard playsmith outside his usual range. No doubt the film technicians' union approved the democratic spirit, since this was one of its occasional efforts, via ACT Films, at keeping its members in work. Director "Puffin" Asquith, though the son of an earl and ex-prime minister, was a keen union activist. Sam Palmer was Jack Warner's last big film part for a decade. He was soon to resurrect his slain copper from "The Blue Lamp" and become TV's most famous PC in "Dixon of Dock Green."
    6malcolmgsw

    On A Sticky Wicket

    Certainly not one of Ratigans best screenplays.Not really helped by the casting of the 60 year old Jack Warner as a test cricketer in his forties.There are some really odd things about this film.Warner inviting to dinner one of the match umpires,the day before he bats.Later going into a pub at 1030pm,albeit just to romance Brenda Bruce who is about 25 years younger than him.They seem more like grandfather and granddaughter than lovers.Then there is a batsman who is out sauntering about the dressing room in a tie and suit.All very archaic.Good to see many of the heroes of the 1953 ashes winning team,Dennis Compton,Len Hutton and Jim Laker.How we could have done with them in Australia.
    10shell-26

    The only film ever made about a cricketer?

    The Final Test is probably unique in that it revolves around the final match in the career of an old cricketer. Jack Warner (of Dixon of Dock Green/The Blue Lamp fame) plays the cricketer who has had the misfortune to have fathered a poet.

    His son wriggles out of watching his fathers final match in order to visit his own hero a poet played by the wonderful Robert Morley.

    It is a charming light comedy which deals with the father/son relationship. Morley steals the show, as expected and the ending is suitable happy.

    The real tragedy is that this is practically the only film to feature cricket when dozens have been made about baseball. Cricket contains all the metaphor and allegories that exist about life and the universe. In fact it is itself a branch of philosophy which can teach humankind the true path to enlightenment. It is not just an interesting way to hit a ball with a stick!

    This film should have been the thin end of a very large and wonderful wedge. John Boormans "Hope and Glory" contains an excellent cricket scene. If anyone can suggest any other films with a cricketing theme I would be pleased to hear from you.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      In the opening scene, shot in London Waterloo railway station, the film of the locomotive arriving at the platform is flipped left-to-right, as revealed by the mirror-reversed number on the side of the locomotive cab. This was most likely intentional, so that in the next shot the platform is on the same side of the train.
    • Gaffes
      At the end of the first day of England's innings it is said that they scored 320. The next day on the radio, John Arlott says 283.
    • Citations

      Reggie Palmer: I'm afraid I don't awfully like cricket.

      Alexander Whitehead: Don't you really? I have heard of such people.

    • Connexions
      Remade as The Final Test (1961)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 4 mai 1953 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Poslednja provera
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(studio: made at Pinewood Studios, England)
    • Sociétés de production
      • J. Arthur Rank Organisation
      • Association of Cinema Technicians (A.C.T.)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 30min(90 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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