Film Review
A classic of British cinema,
The
Lavender Hill Mob is one of a series of enormously popular
comedies that came out of Ealing Studios in the 1950s - others include
Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949) and
The Ladykillers (1955).
It is a slick, well-paced parody of the caper movie, combining
imaginative direction, a sublime script and some magnificent comic
performances. Like many of Ealing's comedies, its portrayal
of English life in the 1950s is quaint yet well-observed, and at times
subtly subversive, taking in punctilious elderly landladies,
excruciatingly dim policemen and sympathetic crooks, as well as the
usual tongue-in-cheek references to the vagaries of the British class system.
The film brings together four of Britain's best-loved performers: Alec
Guinness, Stanley Holloway, Sid James and Alfie Bass. Of these,
Guiness had the most distinguished career, on stage and screen, ranging
from Shakespeare to popular comedy to his most famous role as Obi-Wan
Kenobi in the original
Star Wars
films. Guiness was nominated for the Best Actor Oscar for his
role in this film, but lost out to Gary Cooper (who won with
High Noon). After this, his
first major film role, Sid James would soon become a household name for
his work on Tony Hancock's BBC radio show and his association with the
long-running series of
Carry On
films. The film has one other very notable credit: Audrey
Hepburn appears briefly in the opening scene, as a small girl - it was
her first role in a major film.
What makes
The Lavender Hill Mob
such a memorable and enduring film is, above all else, its excellent
screenplay, written by Tibby Clarke, one of Ealing's foremost
screenwriters. This was the second of three successful
collaborations between Clarke and director Charles Crichton - the
others being
Hue and Cry
(1947) and
The Titfield
Thunderbolt (1953). Clarke won an Oscar in 1952 for his
work on this film.
With such a great screenplay in his back pocket, Charles Crichton could
hardly fail to deliver a first rate comedy. As it turned out,
Crichton went the extra mile (or two) and squeezed every last drop of
comedy from the script. His classy direction gives us some
moments of sheer genius. First there is the dizzying chase down
the Eiffel Tower, which has a distinctly Hitchcockian feel to it, as
well as bring utterly hilarious. Then there is the madcap
sequence at the ferry port, where two Brits fail, despite their best
efforts, to get past the assembled might of French officialdom at its
worst (that's one joke that will never go out of fashion). To
round it off, there is a spectacular car chase at the end of the film,
a brilliant parody of a similar sequence in another classic British
film,
The Blue Lamp (1950).
Plans are afoot for a remake of
The
Lavender Hill Mob, directed by Dean Parisot and scheduled for
release in 2009. No matter how good this film is (and, to
be fair, it may well turn out to be a blinder), we can be pretty
confident that it will not be as great or as loved as the original
film. The version with Alec Guiness and Stanley Holloway
is, quite simply, inimitable and, unlike so many British comedies of
its time, it continues to be an immensely enjoyable romp, for all age
groups, right across the world.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Charles Crichton film:
The Titfield Thunderbolt (1953)
Film Synopsis
For twenty years, Henry Holland has been an unassuming bank employee
overseeing the delivery of gold bullion. Although he has a
reputation for scrupulous honesty, he has been secretly concocting a
plan to steal the gold so he can enjoy a comfortable retirement.
The only unsolved problem is how to smuggle the gold out of the country
once it has been stolen. He finds the perfect solution when he
meets Alfred Pendlebury, a manufacturer of tourist trinkets. With
the help of two small-time crooks, Lackery and Shorty, Holland and
Pendlebury steal a consignment of gold bullion, melt it down and recast
it in the shape of paperweight models of the Eiffel Tower. They
have no difficulty shipping the gold to France, but when he arrives in
Paris to oversee the last stage of the operation, Holland finds that
six of the Eiffel Tower models have been sold by mistake - to a party
of English schoolgirls...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.