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IMDbPro

Hindle Wakes

  • 1931
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
96
YOUR RATING
Belle Chrystall, Edmund Gwenn, and Sybil Thorndike in Hindle Wakes (1931)
Drama

A Lancashire mill girl has an illicit adventure with the owner's son while on holiday. Based on the once notorious Houghton play.A Lancashire mill girl has an illicit adventure with the owner's son while on holiday. Based on the once notorious Houghton play.A Lancashire mill girl has an illicit adventure with the owner's son while on holiday. Based on the once notorious Houghton play.

  • Director
    • Victor Saville
  • Writers
    • Stanley Houghton
    • Angus MacPhail
    • Victor Saville
  • Stars
    • Sybil Thorndike
    • John Stuart
    • Norman McKinnel
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    96
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Victor Saville
    • Writers
      • Stanley Houghton
      • Angus MacPhail
      • Victor Saville
    • Stars
      • Sybil Thorndike
      • John Stuart
      • Norman McKinnel
    • 4User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos

    Top cast17

    Edit
    Sybil Thorndike
    Sybil Thorndike
    • Mrs. Hawthorne
    John Stuart
    John Stuart
    • Alan Jeffcote
    Norman McKinnel
    Norman McKinnel
    • Nat Jeffcote
    Edmund Gwenn
    Edmund Gwenn
    • Chris Hawthorne
    Belle Chrystall
    Belle Chrystall
    • Jenny Hawthorne
    Mary Clare
    Mary Clare
    • Mrs. Jeffcote
    Muriel Angelus
    Muriel Angelus
    • Beatrice Farrar
    A.G. Poulton
    • Sir Timothy Farrar
    Ruth Peterson
    Ruth Peterson
    • Mary Hollins
    Lionel Roberts
    • Bob Parker
    Bob Johnson
    • Song Plugger
    Joyce Barnham
      Soe-Soe Bendon
        Peggy Cartwright
        Peggy Cartwright
          Pearl Hay
            John Longden
            John Longden
            • Boyfriend
            • (uncredited)
            Kenneth Milne-Buckley
              • Director
                • Victor Saville
              • Writers
                • Stanley Houghton
                • Angus MacPhail
                • Victor Saville
              • All cast & crew
              • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

              User reviews4

              6.696
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              Featured reviews

              6boblipton

              Does the Sound of Clogs on Cobbles Mean Anything to You?

              The first sound version of HINDLE WAKES is more concerned with the issues of the play than the famous visual extravaganza that the 1927 silent version directed by Maurice Elvey was. Nonetheless, it is carefully and beautifully shot by Mutz Greenbaum, with much side-lighting to make it all look modern and dramatic, and the credits are offered as woven on a loom. There are many wild shots to permit a moving camera, and a rapid pace of cutting when people are speaking to each other. Nor, despite the fact that the sound on the copy I viewed was not very good, was the foley work neglected. All in all, it was a topnotch effort from Victor Saville (who has sometimes been credited with the flair for Elvey's silent version; Saville was credited as a writer), even if the ending has been changed to soften the consequences for the parties involved.

              I have seen four or five versions of this play, and find this one strangely unfocused. Norman McKinnel's Nat Jefcote is rote, rather than moral, and John Stuart's Alan Jefcote... well, he's just an ass. Belle Chrystall, as the center of this storm, is fine, but it's never clear that, despite her big speech at the end, she's just a woman who has played her hand as well as she could, seen she is going to lose, and dropped out before she lost even more. Her willingness to get on with her life may be sensible, but compared with other versions of this story about how changing times and the rising ability of women to support themselves by their own efforts may change their choices, does it make it admirable?

              In the end, this story remains a drama of its own time and place, shocking and, indeed important for that moment. I have my doubts about its universality. Neither does this version help sustain it.
              6malcolmgsw

              picture of a vanished age

              At the time this film was made it was the custom for whole towns to shut down their factories for one week in the summer so that the staff could go on holiday,unpaid,to Blackpool or Scarborough and other popular seaside towns.This film centres around the activities of a young couple and its effect on their respective families.Despitebeing directed by Victor Saville there is very little that is cinematic about this film.It feels like it is merely a filmed stage play.It is interesting to see a middle aged Sybil Thorndike with a leading role.Her film career was very sporadic.Edmund Gwenn is his usual bluff Northern type.The main interest is in a historic sense.Seeing a period and attitudes which seem centuries ago not a mere 74 years

              Storyline

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              Did you know

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              • Trivia
                "Hindle Wakes" derives its title from a very ancient Anglo-Saxon custom. Nowadays these old festivals take the form of fairs, surviving mostly in Lancashire. (Otago Daily Times, ((Otago, NZ)) 24 January 1934)
              • Quotes

                Jenny Hawthorne: I've been to Blackpool with Mary Hollins!

                Chris Hawthorne: No, you've not.

              • Crazy credits
                The opening credits appear as if woven on a loom.
              • Connections
                Version of Hindle Wakes (1918)

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              Details

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              • Release date
                • August 26, 1933 (Australia)
              • Country of origin
                • United Kingdom
              • Language
                • English
              • Filming locations
                • Gainsborough Studios, Shepherd's Bush, London, England, UK(as Gaumont Studios)
              • Production company
                • Gainsborough Pictures
              • See more company credits at IMDbPro

              Tech specs

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              • Runtime
                1 hour 19 minutes
              • Color
                • Black and White

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              Belle Chrystall, Edmund Gwenn, and Sybil Thorndike in Hindle Wakes (1931)
              Top Gap
              By what name was Hindle Wakes (1931) officially released in Canada in English?
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