Film Review
If J. M. Barrie's class conscious stage play
The Admirable Crichton had the
capacity to shock audiences when it was first seen at the turn of the
20th century the same can definitely
not
be said of this staid but likeable film adaptation. Tame almost
to the point of docility, Lewis Gilbert's film contributes barely a
spent cartridge to the class war that was raging (or at least rumbling
on) in Britain in the 1950s. Taken at face value the film is
easily written off as an inconsequential crowdpleaser (it was one of
the most successful British films of the year), an attractively shot
period piece with a stunning exotic location and a cast so likeable you
end up wishing you could adopt half of them. Viewed from a more
ironic perspective the film appears to make the grimmest
prognostication of the British class system, namely that it will be
with us always as every British subjects would seem to be singularly
endowed with a sense of his or her place in the scheme of things.
The darling of the decade (but soon forgotten afterwards), Kenneth More
is admirably suited to play the supremely efficient butler Crichton
(who would incidentally become the inspiration for the character Kryten
in the BBC television sitcom
Red
Dwarf). More's effortless satin-tongued smoothness makes a
jarring contrast with Diane Cilento's slightly over-enthusiastic
imitation of a common urchin maid, who ends up sounding more like the
Artful Dodger choking on a bag of marbles than Eliza Doolittle.
Martita Hunt brings a touch of class in role that was so obviously
intended for Edith Evans and a bare-chested Gerald Harper crops up to
threaten More's supremacy in the smoothness stakes, a decade before his
British television successes
Adam
Adamant Lives! and
Hadleigh.
Another great star of stage and screen (now immortalised as Truly
Scrumptious in
Chitty Chitty Bang
Bang), Sally Ann Howes is at her most radiant here, out-classing
the film's notional female lead Cilento with the kind of
celluloid-scorching glamour which, at the time, was rarely found
outside the upper echelons of the Hollywood set. It is the most
sumptuous cast, which is well-served by Wilkie Cooper's equally
sumptuous colour photography. The only let down is a script that
fails to sparkle and Gilbert's generally complacent direction, although
neither of these greatly dims the film's entertainment value.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Lewis Gilbert film:
Carve Her Name with Pride (1958)
Film Synopsis
England, 1905. The Earl of Loam and his three eligible young
daughters owe the smooth functioning of their household to their
hyper-efficient butler, Crichton. An outspoken egalitarian he may
be but the Earl is incensed when one of his daughters becomes mixed up
with the suffragettes. To avoid a scandal, the Earl agrees to
Crichton's suggestion that the family should take a long yachting
holiday in the South Seas. Disaster strikes when the yacht's
engines explode and the passengers are forced to take to the
lifeboats. Crichton ends up being stranded on a desert island
with the Earl, his three daughters, two effete young noblemen and
tweeny Eliza, the lowliest servant in the Earl's household.
Without Crichton's instinctive knack for survival his uppercrust
masters would soon have perished and it is fitting that he should
acquire the most respected position on the island, that of
Governor. Two years pass and the islanders could not be happier
in their improvised paradise. But then a ship appears on the
horizon and Crichton has a terrible decision to make...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.