अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंAn impending Eleanor Roosevelt visit causes bustle in an English village, while the Ellis family struggles with private problems.An impending Eleanor Roosevelt visit causes bustle in an English village, while the Ellis family struggles with private problems.An impending Eleanor Roosevelt visit causes bustle in an English village, while the Ellis family struggles with private problems.
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Curious title for this film.
From 1945, the film takes place in an English village, Denley, where it is announced that Eleanor Roosevelt will be visiting the next day. She will be observing wartime efforts by the Women's Institute, a program that prepares and sends products to the troops.
The focus is on one family, the Ellis'. The matriarch, Liz (Flora Robson) is a valuable program member. Her husband, Captain Ellis (Eric Portman) is a veteran living in his past glory and spending money they don't have on liquor. Liz has cut off his credit at the local pub so he spends time borrowing or cadging drinks.
Their daughter, Margaret, is planning to marry an older landlord but is really in love with a soldier (Philip Friend). She wants security. Philip's sister is nasty and bitter, opposed to the engagement.
In the midst of the preparations, Captain Ellis is arrested for trying to steal money.
While the film does show the excitement and preparations for Mrs. Roosevelt's arrival, it seems really to be the story of the dysfunction in the Ellis household. This is perhaps an attempt to show, through Liz Ellis, the coping mechanisms and hard work of the village women.
Liz consoles her daughter and is strong for her husband. All the while, she works for the program and makes a new dress for the child who will present flowers to Mrs. Roosevelt. Robson gives a wonderful performance, and Portman is wonderful as a disillusioned soldier who feels the world has left him behind.
The final scene is lovely and uplifting. The film is dedicated to the Women's Institute.
Some trivia: Sheila Sim, the pretty ingenue, was married to Sir Richard Attenborough for 69 years and distinguished herself in several films. Sadly, part of their family was lost in the tsunami that hit Thailand.
From 1945, the film takes place in an English village, Denley, where it is announced that Eleanor Roosevelt will be visiting the next day. She will be observing wartime efforts by the Women's Institute, a program that prepares and sends products to the troops.
The focus is on one family, the Ellis'. The matriarch, Liz (Flora Robson) is a valuable program member. Her husband, Captain Ellis (Eric Portman) is a veteran living in his past glory and spending money they don't have on liquor. Liz has cut off his credit at the local pub so he spends time borrowing or cadging drinks.
Their daughter, Margaret, is planning to marry an older landlord but is really in love with a soldier (Philip Friend). She wants security. Philip's sister is nasty and bitter, opposed to the engagement.
In the midst of the preparations, Captain Ellis is arrested for trying to steal money.
While the film does show the excitement and preparations for Mrs. Roosevelt's arrival, it seems really to be the story of the dysfunction in the Ellis household. This is perhaps an attempt to show, through Liz Ellis, the coping mechanisms and hard work of the village women.
Liz consoles her daughter and is strong for her husband. All the while, she works for the program and makes a new dress for the child who will present flowers to Mrs. Roosevelt. Robson gives a wonderful performance, and Portman is wonderful as a disillusioned soldier who feels the world has left him behind.
The final scene is lovely and uplifting. The film is dedicated to the Women's Institute.
Some trivia: Sheila Sim, the pretty ingenue, was married to Sir Richard Attenborough for 69 years and distinguished herself in several films. Sadly, part of their family was lost in the tsunami that hit Thailand.
The above user's review was quite succinct but I awarded him a useful star as I agreed with his every word.I too considered that the producer of "A Canterbury Tale" (1944) had a success with the pairing of Eric Portman and Sheila Sim in that film so it was decided to pair them again this time as father and daughter in "The Great Day"(1945) the following year.They had a poignant scene together where Sheila suspects her failed father is about to commit suicide but uses artful applied psychology to induce him to return to their family home and to his wife played by the great Dame Peggy Ashcroft.
I suppose it was too much to expect to see Eleanor Rooseveldt in person but I lived in hope when it was announced that America's first lady would visit the English village.I suppose had we seen her she would have just become a widow seeing as how Franklin Delano Rooseveldt died the year this film was made and just before the war ended.There was a veritable cornucopia of well known (to me) actors in the cast list which included cameos by Patricia Hayes (Mrs Cravatte in her later career in "Hancock's half hour") a fine comic and dramatic actress, Ivor Barnard, Irene Handl, Beatrice Varley, and the ubiquitous actor who played private Fraser in "Dads Army, John Laurie.
Being an aficionado of 1940s movies, especially British produced, I was surprised this 71 year old had not seen it before and I rated it with 7/10 as enjoyable.Please upload more of these gems!
I suppose it was too much to expect to see Eleanor Rooseveldt in person but I lived in hope when it was announced that America's first lady would visit the English village.I suppose had we seen her she would have just become a widow seeing as how Franklin Delano Rooseveldt died the year this film was made and just before the war ended.There was a veritable cornucopia of well known (to me) actors in the cast list which included cameos by Patricia Hayes (Mrs Cravatte in her later career in "Hancock's half hour") a fine comic and dramatic actress, Ivor Barnard, Irene Handl, Beatrice Varley, and the ubiquitous actor who played private Fraser in "Dads Army, John Laurie.
Being an aficionado of 1940s movies, especially British produced, I was surprised this 71 year old had not seen it before and I rated it with 7/10 as enjoyable.Please upload more of these gems!
In a small English village, everyone is excited because Mrs. Roosevelt is going to visit the town.
Not that this forms much more than a background to the subplots that are going on. Much time is devoted to retired captain Eric Portman, who is nearly broke but has been putting on a front for a long time; his long-suffering wife, Flora Robson; and their daughter, Sheila Sim. Miss Sim is carrying on a love affair with a young soldier, while proposing to marry a well-to-do older man for security.
It's all very well performed, but the way the script is talking about how Mrs. Roosevelt is coming not as the First Lady, but as a wife and mother one moment, and Portman is caught stealing ten bob the next makes it difficult to maintain more coherence.
Eleanor Roosevelt was known for turning up in the most unexpected places. There's an old New Yorker cartoon of two coal miners deep underground; one of them announces "Why, it's Mrs. Roosevelt!"
Not that this forms much more than a background to the subplots that are going on. Much time is devoted to retired captain Eric Portman, who is nearly broke but has been putting on a front for a long time; his long-suffering wife, Flora Robson; and their daughter, Sheila Sim. Miss Sim is carrying on a love affair with a young soldier, while proposing to marry a well-to-do older man for security.
It's all very well performed, but the way the script is talking about how Mrs. Roosevelt is coming not as the First Lady, but as a wife and mother one moment, and Portman is caught stealing ten bob the next makes it difficult to maintain more coherence.
Eleanor Roosevelt was known for turning up in the most unexpected places. There's an old New Yorker cartoon of two coal miners deep underground; one of them announces "Why, it's Mrs. Roosevelt!"
10clanciai
This is one of those small films about small matters looming to greatness. It's just a small village making a big fuss about a great occasion falling suddenly upon them, making them all contribute a last great war effort to welcome - Eleanor Roosevelt. Of course, she never appears in the film, because the film is about all those small common very human people who are looking foraward to receiving her by making the best possible impression. This is not so easy, as there are tragedies on the way, there is a love affair that turns out in odd ways, there is jealousy among the ladies, and there is Eric Portman in perhaps his finest act. He was always made to play impossible roles, often murderers and at least very unsympathetic characters, and this is no exception, but more overwhelmingly human in its pathetic realism. He has memories of the first world war and has been doing nothing since but living on those memories with a wife and daughter always being obliged to take care of him when he falls, but he makes this impossible role just perfectly, and you will cry for him if not for all the gorgeous community of mostly ladies just making an effort. William Alwyn's music crowns it all with an addition of Hubert Parry in the end to suit Eleanor Roosevelt together with the Star Spangled Banner. Also the cinematography is a marvel with its many close-ups, really closing in on people with their innermost feelings, like Eric Portman in the beginning with his daughter watching birds; but perhaps the greatest impression of all is made by the wonderful dialogue all the way -- it's a vast river of brilliant conversation, nothing remarakable, nothing eloquent, but flowing incessantly of just human nature. In brief, this is one of those very small films that tower above many great ones.
From the title, and from the brief plot summary, you might expect this to be another wartime morale booster. If it is, it is a strange one indeed.
The story is set in an English village preparing for a visit from Eleanor Roosevelt. So you might expect a celebratory story about a hard pressed but noble people. If so, you would be wrong.
Far from being noble, some of the village women are petty, gossipy, and borderline vicious. Many of course are not, but they are portrayed as normal, not noble. The story centers on the Ellis family, who have apparently moved to the village after failing elsewhere. The father, John Ellis (quite effectively portrayed by Eric Portman) is a failure in life, hanging on to his one moment of glory as an Army Captain in World War I. His wife, Flora Robson in another great performance, is long-suffering and supportive, and our hearts go out to her. Their daughter, Shelia Sim, must choose between two men: one an exciting young man her age and an older but settled man. What makes the decision difficult for her is that she has had too much of going without or just barely getting by so that she is strongly drawn security offered by the older man.
I find the remark of another viewer about obvious sets odd. Though there are some scenes like this, I found the black and white outdoor scenes quite impressive and striking. Even some scenes, such as two men talking in a field, that could have been filmed on a set were actually filmed outdoors. I was especially struck by the scenes where the father wanders the country at night, emotionally if not physically lost, while his daughter searches for him.
The movie does end on a triumphant note with Mrs. Roosevelt's visit, but if you want to see this as propaganda I guess the message would be that even these flawed people are worthwhile. For me this film was a well made, well written, well acted, interesting and moving character study.
The story is set in an English village preparing for a visit from Eleanor Roosevelt. So you might expect a celebratory story about a hard pressed but noble people. If so, you would be wrong.
Far from being noble, some of the village women are petty, gossipy, and borderline vicious. Many of course are not, but they are portrayed as normal, not noble. The story centers on the Ellis family, who have apparently moved to the village after failing elsewhere. The father, John Ellis (quite effectively portrayed by Eric Portman) is a failure in life, hanging on to his one moment of glory as an Army Captain in World War I. His wife, Flora Robson in another great performance, is long-suffering and supportive, and our hearts go out to her. Their daughter, Shelia Sim, must choose between two men: one an exciting young man her age and an older but settled man. What makes the decision difficult for her is that she has had too much of going without or just barely getting by so that she is strongly drawn security offered by the older man.
I find the remark of another viewer about obvious sets odd. Though there are some scenes like this, I found the black and white outdoor scenes quite impressive and striking. Even some scenes, such as two men talking in a field, that could have been filmed on a set were actually filmed outdoors. I was especially struck by the scenes where the father wanders the country at night, emotionally if not physically lost, while his daughter searches for him.
The movie does end on a triumphant note with Mrs. Roosevelt's visit, but if you want to see this as propaganda I guess the message would be that even these flawed people are worthwhile. For me this film was a well made, well written, well acted, interesting and moving character study.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाAccording to an article in the April 30, 1945 edition of the Monthly Film Bulletin (a B.F.I. publication), the running time of British-released prints was one hour and 20 minutes, suggesting a considerable amount of footage was cut before its release in the U.S.
- गूफ़Towards the end when Flora Robson is talking Eric Portman into seeing Eleanor Roosevelt's visit to the village, she places her hand on his right shoulder, then her hand is on the top of his arm and then back on his shoulder again.
- भाव
John Ellis: I *will* not be bullied in my own house.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटAt the very end, there is a dedication to the womens institutes, in appreciation for the contributions they have made to the war effort through their crafts.
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Corazones intrépidos
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- Denham, Uxbridge, Buckinghamshire, इंग्लैंड, यूनाइटेड किंगडम(exteriors and surrounding area)
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- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 20 मिनट
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- 1.37 : 1
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