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Le chapelier et son château

Original title: Hatter's Castle
  • 1942
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
421
YOUR RATING
Deborah Kerr, James Mason, and Robert Newton in Le chapelier et son château (1942)
Drama

James Brodie (Robert Newton) is the only hatter in a small area in Scotland. Ruthless in business as well as at home, he is a tyrant to his family and intimidating to everyone he knows. But,... Read allJames Brodie (Robert Newton) is the only hatter in a small area in Scotland. Ruthless in business as well as at home, he is a tyrant to his family and intimidating to everyone he knows. But, when his mistress convinces him to give her "step-brother" Denis (former boyfriend) a job... Read allJames Brodie (Robert Newton) is the only hatter in a small area in Scotland. Ruthless in business as well as at home, he is a tyrant to his family and intimidating to everyone he knows. But, when his mistress convinces him to give her "step-brother" Denis (former boyfriend) a job at the hat shop, tragedy starts creeping towards all involved with Brodie.

  • Director
    • Lance Comfort
  • Writers
    • A.J. Cronin
    • Paul Merzbach
    • Rudolph Bernauer
  • Stars
    • Robert Newton
    • James Mason
    • Deborah Kerr
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    421
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lance Comfort
    • Writers
      • A.J. Cronin
      • Paul Merzbach
      • Rudolph Bernauer
    • Stars
      • Robert Newton
      • James Mason
      • Deborah Kerr
    • 18User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast23

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    Robert Newton
    Robert Newton
    • James Brodie
    James Mason
    James Mason
    • Dr. Renwick
    Deborah Kerr
    Deborah Kerr
    • Mary Brodie
    Emlyn Williams
    Emlyn Williams
    • Dennis
    Enid Stamp-Taylor
    Enid Stamp-Taylor
    • Nancy
    Beatrice Varley
    Beatrice Varley
    • Mrs. Brodie
    Henry Oscar
    Henry Oscar
    • Grierson
    Lawrence Hanray
    Lawrence Hanray
    • Dr. Lawrie
    Brefni O'Rorke
    Brefni O'Rorke
    • Foyle
    Claude Bailey
    • Paxton
    George Merritt
    George Merritt
    • Gibson
    Roddy Hughes
    Roddy Hughes
    • Gordon
    Stuart Lindsell
    • Lord Winton
    David Keir
    • Perry
    Aubrey Mallalieu
    Aubrey Mallalieu
    • Clergyman
    Mary Hinton
    Mary Hinton
    • Lady Winton
    Ian Fleming
    Ian Fleming
    • Sir John Latta
    Tony Bateman
    • Angus Brodie
    • (as Anthony Bateman)
    • Director
      • Lance Comfort
    • Writers
      • A.J. Cronin
      • Paul Merzbach
      • Rudolph Bernauer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.9421
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    Featured reviews

    7AlsExGal

    This is a difficult film to watch...

    ... not because it is dull or bad, but because the main character, James Brodie (Robert Newton) has no redeeming values whatsoever. He is a cruel vile man, a complete narcissist. People are either customers, servants, or enemies to him. Everyone else is invisible to him.

    Brodie is a Scottish hatter in Victorian times. He has a sickly wife that he constantly belittles, a grown teen daughter Mary (Deborah Kerr) that he practically keeps prisoner, and a son Angus that he sees as an extension of himself, so he puts tremendous pressure on the boy to excel in school to show off to his rivals. Brodie also lives in a large castle, "Hatter's Castle", it is called derisively by the town, because it is just ridiculously large and medieval for a simple merchant to be living there. But because his customers tend to be important men, Brodie sees himself as important. Oh, and he has a mistress. And this mistress' brother-in-law, Dennis, needing a job, and Brodie granting that job, brings chaos into Brodie's family and business. For one thing, Dennis is not exactly a brother-in-law, and also he is a slimy little weasel, the likes of which a brute like Brodie would never expect would get the better of him.

    James Mason, as a physician, is one of the few nice and normal characters in the cast, if you can believe that. He has very few scenes. There is a really good rendition of the Tay Bridge railroad disaster of 1879, and it is too bad that the film's physical condition is so rough, because it would be great to see in detail. In fact, this film is just crying out for a restoration. What you can see of the art design is impressive. It would be wonderful to see it in its original glory. A clearer print might even raise its appraisal another star. Mainly, though, this is Robert Newton's film. He does a splendid job of playing a despicable human being. I cringed every time he entered a room, and he made me want to stick around to the end to see what happened to his character. Recommended.
    10happytrigger-64-390517

    "You spoiled my appetite" : the hatter is a hater

    "Daughter of Darkness" convinced me that Lance Comfort is a great director. "Hatter's Castle" strongly confirms it, it's a drama about a cruel tyran spoiling everybody's life, from his hatter's business to his family.

    All casting is fantastic : James Mason as the young true lover of Deborrah Kerr (as the tyran's daughter, in her fifth movie), Emlyn Williams as the bad man, Enid Stamp-Taylor as the badman' and the tyran's mistress. And the best of course is Robert Newton as the tyran, he pronounces each line cruelly with sadistic expression, destroying eveything and everybody : a total complete toxic person (one of his best performance with "Oliver Twist" and "Long John Silver"). In the first sequence with Robert Newton, I was puzzled how it reminded me of another tyran, and I rapidly thought of Opale played by Jean-Louis Barrault in "le Testament du docteur Cordelier" 17 years later.

    Cinematography is of course virtuoso with intelligent travellings avoiding editing, having several informations in the same sequence with two faces shot in depth of field, brilliantly rare.
    9miked-26800

    Great performance by Robert Newton

    Basically the plot is based on a domineering, egocentric small business owner who's arrogance eventually destroys his family and ultimately himself. An old style melodrama which won't be to everyone's taste but a real classic if you like films of this type. A brilliant performance from Robert Newton who is menacingly over the top without becoming hammy. Good supporting performances from fine actors including a very young James Mason.
    3louiseculmer-85734

    Absurdly over the top melodrama

    Robert Newton plays James Brodie, a hatter who is consumed by the desire for power and importance. He has built himself a large grand house (the Hatter's Castle of the title) He bullies his wife and children, tyrannises over his employees, and is horrible to everyone who he encounters. His daughter ( Deborah Kerr) is loved by the handsome young local doctor James Mason, who (of course) Newton hates. Newton has a mistress, the lovely Enid Stamp-Taylor, who persuades him to give a job to her 'step brother' (actually former lover) played by the splendidly slimes Emlyn Williams. This of course leads to trouble and not just for Newton. The character of James Brodie is so unrelentingly horrible that I was unable to take him seriously. Especially absurd is the idea that he won't have servants and expects his wife to do all the housework - nobody with social pretensions in the Victorian era would have thought of not having servants, they were simply essential.
    8bkoganbing

    Brodie family values

    Although future mega stars James Mason and Deborah Kerr appear in Hatter's Castle, the film truly belongs to star Robert Newton. Most people today are familiar with Newton in his later pirate roles like Blackbeard or Long John Silver which allow full expression for his florid style. In Hatter's Castle Newton is kept in check by the director until the climax which calls for nothing less than what Newton was known to deliver on the screen.

    Newton dominates Hatter's Castle playing a haberdasher with lots of pretensions. He's made a lot of money at business and that's what he's all about. His business, his family are all merely extensions of himself and his drive for what he considers respectability. He's going to have the grandest house for miles around, something they would call a castle back in the day, Hatter's Castle. With a house that would support a lord, can a peerage be far behind. That's what he's ultimately aiming for.

    Newton's family, his props are his doormat of a wife Beatrice Varley who is dying from cancer and Newton wants to hear none of it and his children Deborah Kerr and Anthony Bateman. There are traces of incestuous longing for Kerr with Newton as he allows her no male companionship whether it's earnest young doctor James Mason who secretly treats Varley on the side and sneaky and sniveling clerk Emlyn Williams who also has ambitions. Newton also has mistress Enid Stamp-Taylor and their carrying on is an open scandal around the town. I'm sure Newton figures if that was good enough for all the lords and ladies in olden and modern times it's good enough for him. Of course they already had their titles, something he overlooks.

    In the end it all blows up around him. Emlyn Williams really loses it all in the famous Tay railroad bridge disaster where a bridge over the Tay River to Dundee collapses and a train goes over with it with all crew and passengers lost. This might be the only film that deals with that tragedy and A.J. Cronin did incorporate it in his novel. Good special effects for its time in the British cinema.

    The bare essentials of Cronin's work is incorporated here. The plot of the novel was shorn of several subplots and characters the most prominent was another son for Mr.&Mrs. Brodie. Speaking of which young Anthony Bateman should be given kudos for a very nice portrait of a shy young kid trying so hard to please his uncaring father.

    After almost 80 years Hatter's Castle holds up well today. Honestly I can't think of a cast to match this one for a remake. Especially for Robert Newton.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The Tay Bridge was a real bridge that collapsed in Dundee, Scotland, during a violent storm on 28 December 1879. (No passengers and crew on board a crossing train survived the disaster). Though long since replaced, some ruins of the structure can still be seen at the location as of 2009.
    • Goofs
      When the real Tay Bridge collapsed, it was the center section, which was made of high girder through trusses. However, the film shows the low deck trusses collapsing.
    • Quotes

      Lord Winton: After all, it's not essential to belong to the peerage, is it?

    • Connections
      Featured in Film Preview: Episode #1.3 (1966)
    • Soundtracks
      There Is a Tavern in the Town
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Arranged by Horace Shepherd

      Sylvester Music Ltd

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 2, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hatter's Castle
    • Filming locations
      • D&P Studios, Denham, Uxbridge, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Grafton Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 42 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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