Derek Bond, Cedric Hardwicke, Mary Merrall, Based-on-19th-Century-Literature • Drama • Melodrama, Leslie Norman
The Ealing Comedies were a series of film comedies produced by Ealing Studios during the period 1947 to 1957. Whisky Galore (1949; U.S. title Tight Little Island) and The Lavender Hill Mob (1951) are other well-known productions in the Ealing style.
Alec Guinness, Alfie Bass, Stanley Holloway, Alexander Mackendrick
Alec Guinness, Joan Greenwood, Cecil Parker, Alexander Mackendrick
With cinemas already experiencing declining audience numbers (Ealing Studios would be sold to BBC TV two years later), the narrative provides food for thought on the social and even psychological effect of mass media in the home. [Film Movement Classics] Passport to Pimlico … Here Ealing provides a comedic but cynical eye regarding the effect of television on the masses. A sequel was released in 2009 and a third film in this rebooted series has been announced. Ealing Studios was the name of a British film production company best known for a series of comedy films produced in the decade after the end of World War II. Unfortunately I'm not allowed to upload most of them. Vintage Classics Ealing Comedy Collection [DVD] [2017] Dennis Price. When a freighter containing 50,000 cases of whiskey runs aground Captain Waggard (Basil Radford) of the Home Guard tries to take control and protect the lost cargo but the islanders seize a great many cases. The story opens in Copenhagen in the year 1776 on the wedding night of the King and Princess Caroline Mathilde. Ealing Studios was by no means a hotbed of free-marketers. Despite mixed reviews upon its release this reboot of the franchise centring on the disreputable and unruly girls’ school carries all the escapist madness and rebellious eccentricity founded in the Ealing favourites of old. Ealing Studios' output from the 1940s and 1950s helped define what was arguably the golden age of British cinema. 4.6 out of 5 stars 323. The script was... more on Wikipedia 5 Ealing Studios Comedy Collection (The Maggie / A Run for Your Money / Titfield Thunderbolt / Whisky Galore! Ealing Studios also returned to producing feature films, releasing titles such as Lucky Break, The Importance of Being Earnest, Valiant, Dorian Grey and the St. Trinians’ Films. Ealing Studios is the oldest working film studio in the world.
If you are a fan of older British films, then you know all about Ealing Studios, probably the greatest of the UK movie companies. For modern audiences it also provides an idea of what life was like for those first homes in a street to have a television. •
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Ealing Studios and its films; themes and issues in Ealing films; Ealing studios and British cinema of the 1940s and 1950s. Ealing Studios’ output from the 1940s and 1950s helped define what was arguably the golden age of British cinema. Ealing Studios are synonymous with the comedy films produced there in the 1940s and 1950s, but for over thirty years they were the home of filmed productions at the BBC.
8 offers from £13.41. The narrative sees the ‘little men’ (the islanders) taking on authority figures, the whiskey drinking montage is screen gold and evidences the joyous and rebellious escapism Ealing offered (and still offers) its audiences. Built in London in 1931 Ealing studios are perhaps most immediately associated with producing a string of cosy black and white comedies in the late 1940’s and early 1950’s. Mervyn Johns, Roland Culver, Mary Merrall, Anthology Film • British Noir • Film Noir, Alexander Mackendrick
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Ealing Studios Comedy Collection on DVD. The main bulk of the story is told in flashback as Mazzini composes his memoirs from death row, charting his exploits as he kills off the eight remaining members of the D’Ascoyne family (each played by Alec Guinness) one by one. Featuring contributions from Ealing regulars such as screenwriter T.E.B.
Initially the new set provides joy and popularity until the novelty wears off and he is compelled to move it on to his neighbours who in turn fall foul of the favour it brings and pass it on again.
Cabin boy Dougie (played by Tommy Kearins in his only film role) helps keep the heart of this humanistic story pumping.
John Mills, Diana Churchill, Harold Warrender, Adventure • Adventure Drama • Based-on-a-True-Story, Basil Dearden
When Marshall realises he’s been made to look a fool he does everything he can to stop MacTaggart. Listed are those which best introduce a newcomer to the world of Ealing, while allowing those already acquainted to appreciate the studio’s work with added insight.
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Ealing made more comedies than these - altogether, some 30 of the studio's 95 features were comic - and in its later years there were attempts to refresh the brand, with vehicles for international star David Niven(The Love Lottery, d. Crichton, 1954) and for newcomers Benny Hill(Who Done It?, d. Dearden, 1956) and Harry Secombe(Davy, d. Three films from Ealing's zenith year, 1949, anchor the collection. But the marriage was a political alliance, and the … Dirk Bogarde, Jack Warner, Jimmy Hanley, British Noir • Crime Thriller • Crime, Robert Hamer
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A comedy praised for Alec Guinness’s multiple roles (initially he was only supposed to play four). Here Ealing mocks an increasingly materialistic and bureaucratic world; the locals may scoff at MacTaggart but take added delight in seeing the wealthy American (who owns four baths) and the shipping company fooled by him. or Create A New Account ►, Robert Hamer
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A piece of timely foreshadowing from the studio, the film was released a decade before the notorious report by Dr Beeching led to the closure of many small branch lines in the U.K. Stanley Holloway, George Relph, Naunton Wayne, Charles Frend
To mark the event, restored versions of some of Ealing's greatest comedies are being released (yet again) in British cinemas. Sign In Now ►
Hue and Cry (1947) is generally considered to be the earliest of the cycle, and Barnacle Bill (1957) the last,[1] although some sources list Davy (also 1957) as the final Ealing Comedy.Many of the films were built around a repertory group of actors, screenwriter, directors and technicians. Prior to 1932 and after 1956, the company's films were made at studios other than Ealing. Here Ealing puts the audience in on the inside of a crime ‘with no real victim’ – as the criminals put it – pointing out all the money stolen from the security van will be insured, justifying a notion of rebellion against the system. When Mrs Wilberforce discovers their loot they eventually plot to kill her. The Maggie (1954) (U.S title: High & Dry). See more ideas about Ealing, British films, Film studio. •
Eventually the lives of a whole social circle are blighted by the device.
When Dean left in 1938 to be replaced by Michael Balconfrom MGM, about 60 films had been made at the studios.
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He was joined on the management level by Stephen Courtauld and Reginald Baker. In 1931, they built Ealing Studios, transferring all production there in December of that year. •
Basil Radford, Catherine Lacey, Bruce Seton, Henry Cornelius
In 1949, Ealing Studios released four comedy films in close succession and the classic British film institution of the Ealing Comedies was firmly established. Includes comic wartime propaganda film The Big Blockade and comic adventure story Midshipman Easy (1935), plus dramas Brief Ecstasy (1938) and The Four Just Men (1939). Starring:
Jack Hawkins, Denholm Elliott, Donald Sinden, Charles Crichton
It should be noted that the original St Trinian’s films of the 50’s and 60’s were produced by British Lion (a seldom screened fifth film in 1980 was produced at Bray Studios). Charles Crichton, 1953.
Alec Guinness, Irene Browne, Maurice Denham, Charles Crichton
A 1957 sequel set on the same island and produced by Rank is less well known. Arguably the widest known of the Ealing comedies and boasting an impressive cast including: Alec Guinness, Peter Sellers and Herbert Lom (popular Brit comedy actors Frankie Howerd and Kenneth Connor also appear in a farce sequence). The Lavender Hill Mob 1951, 81 min. •
The centenary of the UK's famous Ealing Studios is being celebrated with the cinema re-release of six classic Ealing comedies on Friday. Starring:
This is a live online course. Starring:
Michael Redgrave, Sheila Sim, Denholm Elliott, John Landis
The site was first occupied by Will Barker Studios from 1902. It’s noteworthy that five of the most libertarian films ever made were produced by Britain’s Ealing Studios in the brief period, 1949-1957. A final twist sees him walk free or so he thinks. Starring:
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Rockets Galore! Charles Crichton • Starring: Alec Guinness, Alfie Bass, Stanley …
Jean Kent, Stanley Holloway, Tommy Trinder, Charles Frend