Film Review
A very strong candidate for the best of the films made by Ealing Studios,
Kind Hearts and Coronets is one of
the all-time classics of British comedy, a superlative blend of social
satire and black comedy with an irresistible appeal. Hardly
anything evokes the dignified yet slightly musty aura of the English
stately home and the iniquities of the British class system more
forcefully than this deliciously subversive film.
It was this film which catapulted Alec Guinness to stardom for his
portrayal of the eight members of the D'Ascoyne family, a tour de force
performance which established his reputation as a supremely talented
character actor. Guinness had previously won acclaim for
his role as Fagin in David Lean's
Oliver
Twist (1948) and would feature in many subsequent Ealing films,
notably
The Lavender Hill Mob (1951),
The Man in the White Suit (1951)
and
The Ladykillers (1955), before
becoming a major star of British cinema.
Whilst Alec Guinness is the film's biggest draw, he is not its lead
actor. That honour was conferred on Dennis Price, whose Louis
Mazzini is as genteel and well-spoken a serial killer you could
possibly home to meet. He's the kind that would offer you a
champagne cocktail and quote a few lines from Milton whilst tying the
rope around your neck. Joan Greenwood is the seductively
villainous Sibella, a smoulderingly earthy femme fatale counterpoint to
Price's icily reserved English gentleman. Watching Greenwood and
Price play off each other is like watching a beautifully choreographed
fencing match.
The inspiration for
Kind Hearts and
Coronets was Roy Horniman's novel,
Israel Rank, in which the leading
character was half-Jewish. Fearing that the idea of a Jewish
murderer was just too much for public sensibilities at the time, the
film's authors made the character half-Italian instead, the rationale
being presumably that an Italian serial killer would be considerably
less offensive than a Jewish one. The title of the film comes
from Alfred Lord Tennyson's 1842 poem,
Lady Clara Vere de Vere ("Kind
hearts are more than coronets, And simple faith than Norman
blood..."). The location used for Chalfont, the family home of the
D'Ascoynes, was Leeds Castle in Kent, England.
Although it is often grouped with the other Ealing comedies,
Kind Hearts and Coronets stands
apart as something quite different. It has a much darker tone
than the other comedies, which matches its subject perfectly - the
amorality of the central character being a brilliant caricature of how
the aristocracy were regarded, as aloof, emotionally barren and a law
unto themselves. The humour, which is drier than a Scotsman's
drinks cabinet, has more than a touch of the Oscar Wildes, relying more
on sophisticated word play than quick one-liners and pratfalls.
All this goes to make
Kind Hearts
and Coronets the most enjoyable, intellectually rewarding and
popular of British film comedies.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Robert Hamer film:
The Long Memory (1952)
Film Synopsis
In the early 1900s, Louis Mazzini, tenth Duke of Chalfont, finds
himself in prison, condemned for murder. On the eve of his
execution, he begins to write an account of how he came to arrive at
such a sorry end. The story begins many years ago when his
mother, an offshoot of the aristocratic D'Ascoyne family, was cruelly
banished to darkest suburbia for marrying beneath her. His
father dying shortly after his birth, Louis grew up in virtual poverty
and his mother died at an early age. When the D'Ascoynes refused
even to allow his mother to be buried in the family vault, Louis swore
that he would take revenge, by killing each of the eight members of the
family that stood between him and the title of Duke of Chalfont...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.