Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueArthur is the groundsman. He's a perfectionist who has lovingly tended the cricket pitch for 45 years. Now he is given a new assistant.Arthur is the groundsman. He's a perfectionist who has lovingly tended the cricket pitch for 45 years. Now he is given a new assistant.Arthur is the groundsman. He's a perfectionist who has lovingly tended the cricket pitch for 45 years. Now he is given a new assistant.
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Freddie Young was a distinguished cinematographer who won three Oscars including for Lawrence of Arabia.
The low budget Arthur's Hallowed Ground was Young's directorial debut. It centres on Arthur (Jimmy Jewel) the crabby caretaker of a cricket field. He has looked after it for 45 years and the ground is perfect.
Only the local county team is on a losing streak. The captain blames the pitch.
The new owner Len (Michael Elphick) has had enough of Arthur's intransigence.
The cricket club is losing money, matches and spectators. Len is a property developer who will happily build houses on the ground.
As Arthur is getting on a bit, he gets help. A young black lad Henry (Vas Blackwood) who is imposed on Arthur. He is on a government training scheme.
Henry's puts up with Arthur's stubbornness and gets to learn some skills as to how to maintain the cricket pitch.
This is a twee small scale film. It does have a blindspot. Any cricket groundsman knows that a cricket pitch needs to help the bowlers or the batsmen. Divots in the pitch that could help the spin bowlers for example.
It is no use Arthur having a carpet, that was not his job. The movie never tackles that question.
The low budget Arthur's Hallowed Ground was Young's directorial debut. It centres on Arthur (Jimmy Jewel) the crabby caretaker of a cricket field. He has looked after it for 45 years and the ground is perfect.
Only the local county team is on a losing streak. The captain blames the pitch.
The new owner Len (Michael Elphick) has had enough of Arthur's intransigence.
The cricket club is losing money, matches and spectators. Len is a property developer who will happily build houses on the ground.
As Arthur is getting on a bit, he gets help. A young black lad Henry (Vas Blackwood) who is imposed on Arthur. He is on a government training scheme.
Henry's puts up with Arthur's stubbornness and gets to learn some skills as to how to maintain the cricket pitch.
This is a twee small scale film. It does have a blindspot. Any cricket groundsman knows that a cricket pitch needs to help the bowlers or the batsmen. Divots in the pitch that could help the spin bowlers for example.
It is no use Arthur having a carpet, that was not his job. The movie never tackles that question.
Thoroughly enjoyed this movie, from a bygone era.
It covers the relationship between an elderly grounds an and his ground (and his young new apprentice).
All rather harmless and enjoyable.
It covers the relationship between an elderly grounds an and his ground (and his young new apprentice).
All rather harmless and enjoyable.
Charming debut from octogenarian director Freddy Young. The hallowed ground in question is a cricket pitch, of which Arthur is the groundsman
The directing debut from 80-year-old Freddy Young (David Lean's triple Oscar Winning photographer), comes from the same Puttnam produced TV series, First Love, as P'Tang Yang Kipperbang.
For 45 years, groundsman Arthur (Jimmy Jewell) has toiled to create the perfect cricket pitch. He's fiercely protective of his pride and joy to the extent that the hallowed turf's appearance is more important to him than its purpose, and his obduracy is turning the school authorities against him.
New assistant, Henry (Blackwood), struggles to establish a relationship with his intimidating boss, but slowly he wears away at Arthur's leathery surface to reveal the old man's tender affections.
The directing debut from 80-year-old Freddy Young (David Lean's triple Oscar Winning photographer), comes from the same Puttnam produced TV series, First Love, as P'Tang Yang Kipperbang.
For 45 years, groundsman Arthur (Jimmy Jewell) has toiled to create the perfect cricket pitch. He's fiercely protective of his pride and joy to the extent that the hallowed turf's appearance is more important to him than its purpose, and his obduracy is turning the school authorities against him.
New assistant, Henry (Blackwood), struggles to establish a relationship with his intimidating boss, but slowly he wears away at Arthur's leathery surface to reveal the old man's tender affections.
Le saviez-vous
- GaffesOn several occasions, Arthur refers to the outfield as the 'pitch', something a cricket groundsman would never do. The pitch refers exclusively to the strip 66' (22yds) by 10' on which the game is played. The remainder of the field is referred to as the infield, outfield, or simply 'the field'. He also mentions the field's perimeter. This is always called the boundary, also a mistake no cricketer would ever make.
- ConnexionsFollows P'tang, Yang, Kipperbang (1982)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Arthur szent földjén
- Lieux de tournage
- Courtaulds Cricket Ground, Lockhurst Lane, Coventry, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(The cricket ground used throughout the film)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 2 870 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 1 234 $US
- 9 févr. 1986
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What was the official certification given to Arthur's Hallowed Ground (1984) in the United Kingdom?
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