Film Review
One of the greats of British comedy,
The
League of Gentlemen distinguishes itself with its impeccable
ensemble cast which includes some of the most talented performers in
British cinema at that time. Jack Hawkins, Roger Livesey and
Richard Attenborough all play on their familiar screen personae - the
first an unflappable commanding officer, the second a Blimpish ditherer
and the third a womanising spiv. All give great entertainment
value, but probably not as much as the sight of Nanette Newman luxuriating in her
bath.
The League of Gentlemen was
the first of half a dozen films to be produced by the short lived
company Allied Film Makers. Bryan Forbes, who both scripted and
appeared in the film, would subsequently go on to pursue a successful
career as a director, debuting with another British classic,
Whistle Down the Wind
(1961). Richard Attenborough would also achieve great acclaim
when he
turned to directing in the late 1960s, delivering such highly regarded
works as
Oh! What a Lovely War
(1969),
A Bridge Too Far
(1977) and
Gandhi (1982).
Directed by Basil Dearden,
The
League of Gentlemen has the feel of an Ealing comedy and calls
to mind those other great British caper movies,
The Lavender Hill (1951) and
The Italian Job (1969).
It differs from these other crime classics in that the humour is more
of the dead pan variety, making this a sophisticated parody of British
life in the aftermath of post-war austerity.
© James Travers (London) 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Basil Dearden film:
Victim (1961)
Film Synopsis
Seven men, from very different walks of life, are surprised when they
receive a book containing half of a five pound note and an invitation
to a luncheon. The only thing they have in common is that they
are all ex-army officers who have fallen on hard times. At the
luncheon, they are greeted by Lieutenant-Colonel Norman Hyde, a man
they have never seen before, who offers them each a one hundred
thousand pound share in the spoils of a bank robbery, if they decide to
join him in the venture. Hyde, who is embittered over having been
forced into early retirement, tells his new comrades that their
military training will be put to good use in the scheme that he has
concocted. The plan, he assures them, is foolproof. Nothing
could possibly go wrong...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.