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IMDbPro

Les Naufragés de la vie

Original title: Love on the Dole
  • 1941
  • Approved
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
645
YOUR RATING
Deborah Kerr and Clifford Evans in Les Naufragés de la vie (1941)
Drama

During the Depression in England, a young lady from Lancashire decides to be a rich bookmaker's mistress, just to help the rest of her unemployed family.During the Depression in England, a young lady from Lancashire decides to be a rich bookmaker's mistress, just to help the rest of her unemployed family.During the Depression in England, a young lady from Lancashire decides to be a rich bookmaker's mistress, just to help the rest of her unemployed family.

  • Director
    • John Baxter
  • Writers
    • Walter Greenwood
    • Ronald Gow
    • Barbara K. Emary
  • Stars
    • Deborah Kerr
    • Clifford Evans
    • George Carney
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    645
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Baxter
    • Writers
      • Walter Greenwood
      • Ronald Gow
      • Barbara K. Emary
    • Stars
      • Deborah Kerr
      • Clifford Evans
      • George Carney
    • 17User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos44

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    Top cast34

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    Deborah Kerr
    Deborah Kerr
    • Sally Hardcastle
    Clifford Evans
    Clifford Evans
    • Larry Meath
    George Carney
    George Carney
    • Mr. Hardcastle
    Mary Merrall
    Mary Merrall
    • Mrs. Hardcastle
    Geoffrey Hibbert
    • Harry Hardcastle
    Joyce Howard
    Joyce Howard
    • Helen Hawkins
    Frank Cellier
    Frank Cellier
    • Sam Grundy
    Martin Walker
    Martin Walker
    • Ned Narkey
    Maire O'Neill
    Maire O'Neill
    • Mrs. Dorbell
    Iris Vandeleur
    • Mrs. Nattle
    Marie Ault
    Marie Ault
    • Mrs. Jike
    Marjorie Rhodes
    Marjorie Rhodes
    • Mrs. Bull
    Sebastian Cabot
    Sebastian Cabot
    • Man in Crowd at Betting Payout
    • (uncredited)
    Terry Conlin
    • Ted Munter
    • (uncredited)
    A. Bromley Davenport
    • Pawnbroker
    • (uncredited)
    Peter Gawthorne
    • Police Supt
    • (uncredited)
    Muriel George
    Muriel George
    • Landlady
    • (uncredited)
    Philip Godfrey
    • Charlie - Sam Grundy's Assistant
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John Baxter
    • Writers
      • Walter Greenwood
      • Ronald Gow
      • Barbara K. Emary
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.6645
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    Featured reviews

    8chris_gaskin123

    A look at life in North West England in the Depression

    Love On the Dole gives you an idea on what life was like in the North West in 1930, during the Depression. This is quite a good movie.

    It focuses on a family of four where the dad works in a coal mine. The daughter works in a mill and falls in love with a factory worker, but is killed after getting involved in a fight during a demonstration. She then meets someone else and she gets him to give jobs to her dad and brother, who have both been made redundant.

    This movie reminds me of early episodes of Coronation Street that I've seen, even though it was made long before that soap was first broadcast (and both long before I was born!).

    The cast includes Deborah Kerr and Clifford Evans.

    If you like old British movies, this is recommended.

    Rating: 3 and a half stars out of 5.
    7frankiehudson

    Love on the Dole, on the Dole

    This is a typical BBC2 or Channel 4 afternoon offering: British, black and white, at least 40 years old and just what you'd watch if you are indeed on the dole.

    It reminds me of This Happy Breed (1944), featuring working class people and their daily struggle for survival in a class-ridden society, only this time it's the Great Depression in the Welsh valleys. They face temptations, peer hostility if they do not conform to the norm, and total frustration (though in this case alleviated by a seaside visit to Blackpool, that epitome of Englishness).

    It is actually a very political film, containing a violent clash between the unemployed demonstrators and the stubborn, violent police. Presumably the prime minister of the day - Winston Churchill - would have loved this film as he battered the workers himself a few times.

    John Baxter, the director, was never a household name, probably because of his strange, expressionist editing which is unusual for any British film, let alone this offering from the war years. However, there are some advanced - for 1941 - special effects.

    The film could have benefited from some outside, location shooting down in south Wales, too. Somewhere like Ferndale, perhaps.
    8JurorNumberThirteen

    Honesty at last

    Absolutely stunning movie, finally a true representation of life of the working families of the 30's. A scandal that they could not get this film made in the 30's because it's story was regarded as sordid and dangerous by the board of censors. If like me you come from working class families who lived through that era, the stories this film tells are true. The movie must have been shockingly brutal to the establishment and credit to the producer's for taking it on. The downside to the movie is the acting and the direction. The accent's are awful but actors then had to have a clipped middle england accent to get work. I loved the film especially the 4 old ladies holding court on the street. Special mention must go to Marjorie Rhodes character, Mrs Bull who's savage honesty of each situation was a breath of fresh air in the acrid atmosphere of relentless poverty.
    6boblipton

    Hard Times In Lancashire

    Twenty-year-old Deborah Kerr has the biggest role in this movie about a poor family and the people around them. It was her second movie appearance -- another had wound up on the cutting-room floor -- and she is affecting amidst the turbulent tale of a girl working in the cotton mills while her father, George Carney, and brother, Geoffrey Hibbert, can barely keep their heads above water on their meager wages. Then times get worse, and the men wind up on the dole....

    It's the beginning of the Kitchen Sink dramas of the 1950s, arising out of the Manchester School, so there's a trip to Blackpool, and a pending marriage with socialist Clifford Evans, and gossiping neighbors, and even police striking down marchers protesting the dole getting cut. Director John Baxter spent most of his career directing unpretentious entertainment, and while he manages the personal tragedies well, there's no real sense of anything larger, just the grind, grind, grind of poverty in the depths of the Great Depression; but perhaps there's nothing more required to make the larger point.
    6malcolmgsw

    Couldnt be made when relevant

    There were a number of potential films that were unmade until war was declared,and this was one.Directed by one of the great British directors,John Baxter.Starring Deborah Kerr on her way to the top,without as claimed in another review a cockney accent.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      There was considerable difficulty getting the film released in the US. The Production Code Administration found "insufficient compensating moral values for illicit sex", and objected to the profanity and use of vulgar expressions, and even favourable reviews in the Irish Catholic press failed to sway their opinion. In 1945, Anglo-American agreed to record additional dialogue suggesting that Sally and Grundy were married, cut eighteen pages of the script and the scene where Mrs Hardcastle bathes her husband.
    • Goofs
      Unlike many of the other characters, Deborah Kerr does not have a Lancashire accent.
    • Quotes

      Sally: I thought I'd have been married by now.

      Mrs. Bull: Huh! You've not missed much by missing that. Yer marry for love an' find you've let yourself in for a seven day a week job with no pay. An' yer don't find it out 'till it's too late.

    • Connections
      Featured in Empire of the Censors (1995)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 14, 1944 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Love on the Dole
    • Filming locations
      • Blackpool, Lancashire, England, UK(Pleasure Beach/illuminated trams)
    • Production company
      • British National Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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