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His Lordship

  • 1932
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
83
YOUR RATING
His Lordship (1932)
ComedyMusical

Bert Gibbs becomes a Lord but agrees to pose as the fiance of a movie star to please his mother.Bert Gibbs becomes a Lord but agrees to pose as the fiance of a movie star to please his mother.Bert Gibbs becomes a Lord but agrees to pose as the fiance of a movie star to please his mother.

  • Director
    • Michael Powell
  • Writers
    • Oliver Madox Hueffer
    • Ralph Smart
  • Stars
    • Jerry Verno
    • Janet McGrew
    • Ben Welden
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    83
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Powell
    • Writers
      • Oliver Madox Hueffer
      • Ralph Smart
    • Stars
      • Jerry Verno
      • Janet McGrew
      • Ben Welden
    • 5User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos

    Top cast13

    Edit
    Jerry Verno
    Jerry Verno
    • Bert Gibbs
    Janet McGrew
    • Ilya Myona
    Ben Welden
    Ben Welden
    • Washington Roosevelt Lincoln
    Polly Ward
    • Leninia
    Peter Gawthorne
    • Ferguson, the Butler
    Muriel George
    Muriel George
    • Mrs.Emma Gibbs
    Michael Hogan
    • Comrade Curzon
    V.C. Clinton-Baddeley
    • Comrade Howard
    Patrick Ludlow
    • Hon. Grimsthwaite
    Valerie Hobson
    Valerie Hobson
    • Last Face in Montage
    • (uncredited)
    Anna Lee
    Anna Lee
    • Scrub Girl Chorine
    • (uncredited)
    Ray Noble
    Ray Noble
    • Orchestra Leader
    • (uncredited)
    Ian Wilson
    Ian Wilson
    • Man Listening to the Speech
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Michael Powell
    • Writers
      • Oliver Madox Hueffer
      • Ralph Smart
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews5

    5.783
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    Featured reviews

    7davidmvining

    Powell does Lubitsch

    Michael Powell changes production companies and makes his first surviving musical, a fun and amusing, almost delightful, comedy of manners that uses the ideas of class as jumping grounds for light comedy and no more. Satirical in intent but musical in execution, His Lordship feels like a Lubitsch homage, especially Love Parade, his first musical, and Powell pulls it off quite well.

    Bert Gibbs (Jerry Verno) is a plumber by trade by holds possession of a peerage making him the Right Honorable Lord Thornheath. It was a title granted to his father for decades of loyal service, an honor that killed him because it was a betrayal of his working class roots. It's also a title that Bert shuns because he's walking out with a girl, Lenina (Polly Ward), who's dedicated to the socialist cause, our opening scene watching as Bert agrees to join the Legion of Liberty headed by two conmen, Comrade Curzon (Michael Hogan) and Comrade Howard (V. C. Clinton-Baddeley), but it's really only for the girl. He's presented with a path to wealth when the movie star Ilya (Jante McGrew) tracks him down through her ex-husband and publicist, Washington Roosevelt Lincoln (Ben Welden), looking for any lord to marry for some publicity.

    So, this is essentially a pro-English, pro-working class musical comedy where Bert navigates the Russian conmen (who have a number singing to each other about how corrupt they are) and the American movie star to keep his innocence and honor. It's all presented through this lightly comic tone done to a fair bit of perfectly acceptable musical numbers with Verno at the center of most of it.

    For a film that's so short (just over an hour) and so much going on, it's actually somewhat impressive that we never really feel like anything is getting a major short shrift. It helps that it's a comedy so our two Russian comrades who insist that they're not foreign but born in England despite their outrageous accents not feeling like much more than caricatures can work as long as they entertain. And that's really what they are: caricatures of a critique against communist revolutionaries in England at the time, begging for and obsessed with money while advocating for a classless society without it while outright admitting to themselves that they just make everything up. It works in the context of pitting Bert in the middle of the socialists and the capitalists to reach for the basic humanity of his situation (in song).

    The other side of the coin, Ilya, is where the film spends most of the second half as Bert agrees to the situation after Lenina chucks him because she finds out about his hidden peerage, and he gets his whirlwind romance with the movie star. It's all done as one musical number sung by Lincoln, set in one room as a pliant set of reporters and photographers document the changes in clothes and backdrops, documenting their torrid romance that's playing out farcically before them including a fight in a nightclub with another suitor for Ilya and even a hunting trip to the Scottish highlands. Comedies are often built of moments, and the moments here are really quite fun.

    And, of course, Bert maintains his good, common sense, down to earth yeomanry by backing out, winning Lenina back, and still getting paid for his trouble anyway. It's not a challenging work. It doesn't have anything much to say about the class situation that it throws out main character into, preferring to set up the irony of his situation (his peerage and his discomfort with it) and then just use the rest for light satirical jabs at just about everyone. And the package delivers quite nicely.

    Early sound is the era I find the most interesting, so I should note the increasingly complex sound design that Powell is embracing. Musicals are hard, especially with primitive sound technology, because sound is at the center of it all, needs to balance instrumentation with vocals, and tends towards a fair amount of editing, especially if you include dance, which Powell does here. Not everything feels closely modern or refined, but there's a lot of complicated moves, including cuts within dialogue, keeping soundtracks from one shot over another, and letting the music take over the soundtrack completely that don't feel like revolutionary moves from the advances he had made on Hotel Splendide, but they do feel like next steps, making the mixes more complicated and delicately assembled. It's a technical step up that can't be ignored.

    So, the movie is fun. It's disposable and amusing, a bit derivative of Lubitsch (Bert and Lenina's number near the beginning feels a whole lot like "Let's Be Common" from Love Parade), but that's not something to just discard. That sort of entertainment can still entertain nearly 100 years later, and I think it does.
    9gavin-83

    Anarchic take on celebrity culture, 1930s style!

    Watched on youtube today, and I found this a revelation. Jerry Verno is incredibly likeable as a young plumber who just happens by chance to also be a Lord (not something he is keen on). For the first two thirds of the movie Verno is almost ever present as a calm at the centre of a whirl of comedic intrigue. His performance is very natural and not over-played like many contemporaries.

    Indeed Michael Powell pulls very good performances from much of the cast, most notably Muriel George and Ben Welden as a vigorous publicity agent. The music is enjoyable, the choreography on a shoestring eyecatching and the pace of the movie exhilirating.

    Even an autogyro to look out for at the climax. But Jerry steals it for me...wish movies had made better use of him.
    5boblipton

    Every Cockney A Lord

    Cockney plumber Jerry Verno finds out from his mother that he's a peer. This causes girlfriend Janet McGrew to wonder what else he's been hiding from her, and a couple of revolutionaries how to blackmail him. Meanwhile, American movie star Polly Ward and her publicity man and ex-husband Ben Weldon want to hire him for a publicity romance.

    This early Michael Powell quota quickie zips along, with four songs in production numbers, a Scottish butler and an autogyro. The Americans are heartless, money-tossing, publicity mad maniacs, the revolutionaries have a song about how they are liars and thieves, and it's all utter nonsense. Verno was a jack of all trades in show business, and would work until his death in 1975, just shy of his 80th birthday. He soon would be limited to bit parts, but Michael Powell would use him occasionally, most notably as the doorkeeper inTHE RED SHOES. Keep an eye open during the montage ending the first musical number; it ends with a shot of 15-year-old Valerie Hobson in her screen debut.
    7malcolmgsw

    Breezy Quota Qickie

    This film was discovered in a vault at Pinewood some years ago having long thought to be lost.It is one of 19 quota quickies directed by Michael Powell.However he does not refer to the film at all in either of his autobiographies.An example of the disdain in which the films were held particularly by the people who made them.Perhaps if they had had the chance to actually watch them again they would revise their views.This is an extremely bright and engaging film from beginning to end.Unlike many quota films it turns its limitations to its advantage.The cast is for one a great surprise.Jerry Verno shows what he can achieve in a lead role.Not something he would get any chance of in his subsequent career,his girlfriend Polly ward ended up playing in George Formby films and her film career petered out in the 40s.Peter Gawthorne normally seen as an officer here plays a singing butler.Muriel George plays her usual maternal part but again she bursts into song.Ben Weldon as the manager is also given a leading role in which he excels unlike the second or third hood in a Warner's gangster film.the actress who plays the movie star is at least to me a complete unknown and this would appear to be her only film role which is a shame. The musical numbers tie in with the plot in a way that may be copying films such as "Love Me tonight".It is clear that the musical numbers are being photographed and recorded simultaneously as that was the practice of the time.Not till the later thirties did playback become the standard.At the end of the film there is featured an early version of a helicopter.All in all this is one of the best quota quickies i have ever seen.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Julie Andrews in La Mélodie du bonheur (1965)
    Musical

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      A print of this film was found after none were known for 65 years.
    • Soundtracks
      We'll Furnish It with Love
      Written by Leslie Holmes and Clay Keyes

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 5, 1932 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Sua signoria
    • Filming locations
      • Nettlefold Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Westminster Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 19m(79 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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