The parson of a small rural community knows he is dying and this makes him reconsider his life so far and what he can still do to help the community.The parson of a small rural community knows he is dying and this makes him reconsider his life so far and what he can still do to help the community.The parson of a small rural community knows he is dying and this makes him reconsider his life so far and what he can still do to help the community.
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- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 nomination total
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Few contemporary films address religion with any sense of the nuances inherent in a belief in the supernatural. This film does so, and does so in ways so lovely that when it comes to its rather abrupt ending you're left saying "Wow...that was really interesting."
Donat plays the classic English parson, a role unchanged since Trollope, poor, scrimping, of moderate talents but immense goodness. When forced to face his own mortality, he becomes happier than ever before, since he can act with his beliefs out there for all to see.
The film also addresses the very common idea that a life of religion is one of rules alone, and demolishes it brusquely. The religious life is not one of rules but one of freedom. Freedom from many things, but freedom to do others. It is compellingly summarized in his brief but heartfelt sermon that is eagerly misinterpreted by the masses. But it is the message Jesus offered 2000 years ago. If you believe, and act on that belief, rules no longer are important. That is the ultimate freedom, and why Donat can be so happy while under a death sentence.
Fine film, understated yet potent.
Donat plays the classic English parson, a role unchanged since Trollope, poor, scrimping, of moderate talents but immense goodness. When forced to face his own mortality, he becomes happier than ever before, since he can act with his beliefs out there for all to see.
The film also addresses the very common idea that a life of religion is one of rules alone, and demolishes it brusquely. The religious life is not one of rules but one of freedom. Freedom from many things, but freedom to do others. It is compellingly summarized in his brief but heartfelt sermon that is eagerly misinterpreted by the masses. But it is the message Jesus offered 2000 years ago. If you believe, and act on that belief, rules no longer are important. That is the ultimate freedom, and why Donat can be so happy while under a death sentence.
Fine film, understated yet potent.
A nice drama about a Vicar whose daughter has the chance to study music in London, but money is tight. Robert Donat plays the vicar, and there is a wonderful joke about 'The 39 Steps' in opening part of this movie and Kay Walsh plays the vicar's wife. The acting is good, as is the plot. Film fact - The daughter is played by Adrienne Corri whose most infamous film role was the rape victim in Kubrick's 'A Clockwork Orange'.
The story's so simple and so human. It's one of no events whatsoever but it grips from the start. This is one of four on an Ealing Rarities collection, Vol 11, and it's worth the cost for this alone. I'd just finished being bored to tears by Avengers Assemble (I'd not seen that in the cinema) and then decided to put this on. Donat's never been better. The script, By Eric Ambler, is beautifully structured. It's also a fast film, it never lags, because every scene is useful and does real work. It's impassioned as well. Don't miss this one. In colour. And you can see the location, Lund in Yorkshire, hasn't changed that much. The pub's still there as is the church.
A cruelly ironic title, since Robert Donat - still only in his forties but looking sixty - is visibly dying, thus reinforcing - in Charles Barr's words - the "moving kind of bleakness" of this Ealing cross between 'Le Corbeau' and 'Diary of a Country Priest'.
With a suitably melancholy score by Alan Rawsthorne; through the camera of Douglas Slocombe, Ealing's first production in the new marvel of 'Eastman Colour' (sic) handsomely creates on location in Lincolnshire the deceptively pretty little parish of Gilchester (as well as vividly displaying a young Adrienne Corri's Titian mane as Donat's vibrant young daughter), which beneath it's picturesque facade throbs with intrigue and venality; it's poisonous passions ignited by Donat's unguarded sermon addressed to his flock.
With a suitably melancholy score by Alan Rawsthorne; through the camera of Douglas Slocombe, Ealing's first production in the new marvel of 'Eastman Colour' (sic) handsomely creates on location in Lincolnshire the deceptively pretty little parish of Gilchester (as well as vividly displaying a young Adrienne Corri's Titian mane as Donat's vibrant young daughter), which beneath it's picturesque facade throbs with intrigue and venality; it's poisonous passions ignited by Donat's unguarded sermon addressed to his flock.
Lease of Life is an ironic title as this was the second to last movie made by its star, Robert Donat.
He plays the Reverend William Thorne, a vicar in a small Yorkshire village.
He and his wife Vera live a modest lifestyle on a vicar's salary. Their daughter Susan is a gifted pianist who is on the verge of a place at a music school in London. If she obtains a scholarship, her tuition fees will be paid but her parents will need to pay for her accomodation and they cannot afford it.
Suddenly Reverend Thorne falls ill and is told by the doctor that he has a year to live at the most.
Now looking at life differently. He gives a sermon at a cathedral which is different from his original intentions. It causes both consternation and praise as the Reverend wants people to disobeying rule and enjoying life a bit more.
He even makes the press headlines. In fact his wife Vera gets the wrong end of that sermon. As she borrows £100 that was given to the reverend on trust by a dying parishioner.
Donat is excellent. This is just a small scale soapy melodrama though. Not that exciting and the script needed much more work.
He plays the Reverend William Thorne, a vicar in a small Yorkshire village.
He and his wife Vera live a modest lifestyle on a vicar's salary. Their daughter Susan is a gifted pianist who is on the verge of a place at a music school in London. If she obtains a scholarship, her tuition fees will be paid but her parents will need to pay for her accomodation and they cannot afford it.
Suddenly Reverend Thorne falls ill and is told by the doctor that he has a year to live at the most.
Now looking at life differently. He gives a sermon at a cathedral which is different from his original intentions. It causes both consternation and praise as the Reverend wants people to disobeying rule and enjoying life a bit more.
He even makes the press headlines. In fact his wife Vera gets the wrong end of that sermon. As she borrows £100 that was given to the reverend on trust by a dying parishioner.
Donat is excellent. This is just a small scale soapy melodrama though. Not that exciting and the script needed much more work.
Did you know
- TriviaEarly on in the film, when Reverend William Thorne (Robert Donat) and his wife in the vicarage, they are discussing a book being returned to them. It's a copy of The 39 Steps (by John Buchan). Robert Donat (Rev Thorne) played Hannay in Alfred Hitchcock's 1935 film of The 39 Steps.
- GoofsWhen the the vicar's daughter leaves by train for an interview in London, the train leaves from an open through platform, but when she returns the train pulls into a mainline terminus station.
- Quotes
Vera Thorne: You can't have someone of Susan's talent teaching village children their five-finger exercises. It would be like harnessing a race horse to a farm cart.
- ConnectionsReferences Les 39 marches (1935)
- How long is Lease of Life?Powered by Alexa
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- Escândalo na Aldeia
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- Runtime
- 1h 34m(94 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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