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Owd Bob

  • 1938
  • Approved
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
133
YOUR RATING
Will Fyffe, Margaret Lockwood, and John Loder in Owd Bob (1938)
ComedyDramaFamily

A story about Cumbrian shepherds and their skilled sheepdogs. Grumpy old McAdam with aggressive Black Wull and civilized David Moore with educated Owd Bob compete to win the sheepdogs's cup.... Read allA story about Cumbrian shepherds and their skilled sheepdogs. Grumpy old McAdam with aggressive Black Wull and civilized David Moore with educated Owd Bob compete to win the sheepdogs's cup. David also tries to win McAdam's daughter's heart.A story about Cumbrian shepherds and their skilled sheepdogs. Grumpy old McAdam with aggressive Black Wull and civilized David Moore with educated Owd Bob compete to win the sheepdogs's cup. David also tries to win McAdam's daughter's heart.

  • Director
    • Robert Stevenson
  • Writers
    • Alfred Ollivant
    • J.B. Williams
    • Michael Hogan
  • Stars
    • Will Fyffe
    • John Loder
    • Margaret Lockwood
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    133
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Stevenson
    • Writers
      • Alfred Ollivant
      • J.B. Williams
      • Michael Hogan
    • Stars
      • Will Fyffe
      • John Loder
      • Margaret Lockwood
    • 6User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos

    Top cast18

    Edit
    Will Fyffe
    Will Fyffe
    • Adam McAdam
    John Loder
    John Loder
    • David Moore
    Margaret Lockwood
    Margaret Lockwood
    • Jeannie McAdam
    Graham Moffatt
    • Tammas
    Moore Marriott
    Moore Marriott
    • Samuel
    Wilfred Walter
    • Thwaites
    • (as Wilfrid Walter)
    Elliott Mason
    • Mrs. Winthrop
    • (as Eliot Mason)
    A. Bromley Davenport
    • Magistrate - Mr. Parker
    • (as Bromley Davenport)
    H.F. Maltby
    • Sergt. Musgrave
    Edmund Breon
    Edmund Breon
    • Lord Meredale
    Wally Patch
    • Bookmaker - Unlucky Joe
    Alf Goddard
    • Barry Davis
    Marie Ault
    Marie Ault
    • Mrs. Sanderson
    • (uncredited)
    Jack May
    Jack May
    • Man Outside Courtroom
    • (uncredited)
    John Rae
    • Farmer
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Rolfe
    • Contest Announcer
    • (uncredited)
    Leonard Sharp
    Leonard Sharp
    • Bookmakers Assistant
    • (uncredited)
    D.J. Williams
    • Shepherd
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Robert Stevenson
    • Writers
      • Alfred Ollivant
      • J.B. Williams
      • Michael Hogan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews6

    6.3133
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    Featured reviews

    10robert-temple-1

    A lost world of real people and real dogs

    This is one of the finest British films of the 1930s. The film is dominated by the magnificent character performance of the elderly Will Fyffe, who sweeps all before him like a Cumberland King Lear, raging and commanding all around him, hoodwinking people, drinking like ten troopers, bullying, swaggering, and loving his dog. No one in the film can hate him, no matter how hard they try. The charming Margaret Lockwood, as fresh as a virginal dairymaid, plays his daughter, and keeps him in order most of the time, whilst bewitching the viewers and John Loder, who marries her. The film is about country characters in the fells, and their sheepdogs. Three dogs get starring roles, and deserve Dog Oscars. This is a dog-lover's dream, a film which is not a sloppy overly-sentimental dog picture made in Hollywood, but a real film about genuine working dogs who earn their love and respect. Graham Moffatt and Marriott Moore are in there amongst the farm characters, to full and hilarious effect. Never was such a gathering of such superb rough countrymen brought together in a single film. Thomas Hardy would have felt right at home, got out his pipe, and joined them for a whisky in the pub, when it wasn't being wrecked in a fight. The most striking thing of all about this wonderful evocation of a lost era is that, despite the fact that so many of the characters are slightly and affectionately caricatured for purposes of fun, they are all such perfectly defined individuals. This film was made before everybody was the same. Do you remember, are you old enough, when people differed and had actual personalities? The very last of such people are dying off now, and in ten or at most twenty years, there will not be a single such country character left alive anywhere. To those of us who have known plenty of them, this film is their splendid epitaph. The pity is that, of future generations, all who might see this film as a museum piece one day will assume it to be invented and preposterous, something that was just made up for entertainment. They will not realise that people just like this really existed once, and they were just as funny, outrageous, impossible, infuriating, and delightful as in this amazing film. But at least there are still dogs to remind us of the lost and forgotten masters who once loved them and worked with them as we see here.
    7Translation-1

    Charming family entertainment

    The lives and loves of Cumbrias sheep-farmers, their women and, indeed, their dogs (Owd Bob of the title being one such) in the early Twentieth Century are depicted with warmth and humour in this gentle Ealing style comedy-drama adapted from Alfred Ollivants immortal canine classic and directed by future Disney stalwart Robert Stevenson (Mary Poppins, The Love Bug etc).

    Canny auld Scot, Adam MacAdam (Will Fyffe), and incomer David Moore (John Loder), engage in a battle of wits as they prepare their sheepdogs, Black Wull and Owd Bob respectively, for competition in a forthcoming sheepdog trial. To add spice to the tale, it turns out that one of the dogs might be a sheep-worrier, and, be warned, its a real heart-breaker when the guilty mutt is eventually identified and dealt with in the customary fashion. Pass the Kleenex please!

    The romantic interest is provided by a young and extremely lovely Margaret Lockwood who, throughout the film, exudes natural charm from every pore. Later the same year, she would, deservedly, find international fame as the dazzling star of Hitchcocks The Lady Vanishes though here, playing MacAdams gorgeous, headstrong daughter Jeannie, her very considerable acting skills are not greatly stretched.

    To summarize, a light-hearted, mildly sentimental piece of good, old-fashioned entertainment of the type we see far too little of these days. Definitely worth a watch.. especially for sheepdog fanciers!

    (Trivia - John Loder later married Hollywood star Hedy Lamarr who,in my opinion, bore a striking resemblance to Margaret Lockwood).
    8boblipton

    Fyffe Loses The Cup, But Wins The Laurels

    John Loder is the new shepherd in town, and his border collie, Owd Bob, is a wonder. The next croft over is run by Will Fyffe, and his black dog has won the annual cup for sheep dogs every year. However, sheep have been found with their throats torn out, and Fyffe's animal is accused.... and when Owd Bob wins the cup and Loder wins Fyffe's daughter, Margaret Lockwood, Fyffe goes to pieces.

    It's a marvelous performance by Will Fyffe, and Robert Stevenson's direction is spot on. There's a half hour spent on the competition, and it's a fascinating and beautiful event, shot in Exmoor in Somerset, a far piece from the Cumbrian background of the Alfred Ollivant novel it's based on. While the other performers seem to offer standard characters, Fyffe's scoundrel is always compelling.
    6howardmorley

    Another Fyffe/Lockwood, Father/Daughter Pairing

    In "Rulers of the Sea" filmed in the USA in 1939, the successful pairing of Will Fyffe and Margaret Lockwood was again tested as father and daughter, presumably because of the success of their similar on screen partnership in "Owd Bob" filmed the previous year in the U.K. Margaret was so photogenic in 1938 and had considerable acting skills and in "Owd Bob" perfectly affects a charming lowland Scottish accent playing a dutiful daughter to her widower father,Will McAdam (Will Fyffe).Her "love interest" is David Moore (John Loder) who plays a Cumberland sheep farmer whose prize sheepdog gives the film its title.John was in real life probably most famous for marrying another raven haired beauty, Hedy Lamarr.

    This a gentle story about Cumberland hill sheep farmers with a "who done it" theme relating to how sheep are being prematurely killed by a wild beast that needs to be tracked down.The suspicion eventually rests either on "Owd Bob" or "Black Wull" the prize sheep dog owned by Will Fyffe.Dog lovers will love this film but I thought that the dog trial competition scenes could have done with some editing as they seemed rather prolonged.In return another sub-plot could have been woven into the main fabric of the story/screenplay.For that reason I rated it 6/10.

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    Family

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      When a crowd gathers outside of Adam's cottage he fires 3 shots at them in quick succession from a double barreled shot gun.
    • Quotes

      Adam McAdam: It's like pouring salt into an open stab. The wound itself I can bear - I've borne a thousand in the score of years that I've lived in this glen. But there's not one man amongst ye who hasnae had his hand against me. And what will you say aboot me when I'm gone. Ye'll say he was a drunkard? I am. Ye'll say that he was a sinner? I am. He was everything he shouldnae be, and we're glad that he's gone.

    • Connections
      Remade as Thunder in the Valley (1947)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 6, 1940 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • To the Victor
    • Filming locations
      • Gainsborough Studios, Islington, London, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Gainsborough Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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