Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAn incompetent solicitor unwittingly becomes party to a bank robbery.An incompetent solicitor unwittingly becomes party to a bank robbery.An incompetent solicitor unwittingly becomes party to a bank robbery.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Harry Adnes
- The Pawnbroker
- (sin créditos)
Gordon Begg
- Aldrich, The Butler
- (sin créditos)
Mickey Brantford
- Jimmy Burbank
- (sin créditos)
Pam Downing
- Lady Smoking at Table
- (sin créditos)
Lilli Palmer
- Undetermined
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
"where There's a Will' has an early Thirties look to it. The jazz in the background really gives it an old-time feel overall. I would have liked to have seen more Graham Moffat who plays the smart alec office boy. Will Hay is always a victim of circumstances and mistaken identity. In this film he plays a heavy-drinking and down-at-the-heels lawyer who is not doing well and is the shame of his family. However, his fortunes begin to turn when he gets involved with three American crooks. The blond who plays the leading lady is hot stuff. Will Hay is the British answer to W.C. Field. His movies are always very enjoyable if you're willing to give them a chance.
"Where There's a Will" mightn't go down as one of Will Hay's best films but he maintained my interest throughout. The material is rather inconsistent and the direction sluggish. Marcel Varnel would have been far better a choice.
The scene with Hay and the butler getting drunk is very well done and the film does build to a good climax. Graham Moffatt has nothing to do, no point in him being included. Luckily, this would all change for the better before long.
I'm not sure why there were American actors cast for the film, the people of the United States wouldn't understand Will Hay's humor as it's distinctly British.
Director William Beaudine has over 300 credits,including Will Hays first film Dandy Dick.The problem with this script was the including of American gangsters,partly Hays fault as a co writer
There are some funny scenes such as those with Graham Moffatt.
5sol-
Will Hay's funniest films were generally written by Marriott Edgar and Val Guest, with Marcel Varnel in the director's chair. Working with William Beaudine as director and a different team of writers, it is perhaps not surprising that this is not one of Will Hay's better films. There are some funny moments to be had, whenever young Graham Moffatt is on screen in particular, but in general little imagination can be seen in both the screenplay and Beaudine's vision of the material.
Nearly half an hour passes before the crime plot at the centre of the film starts to develop, with nothing but jokes to sustain it for the first third of its duration. The film not only progresses slowly because of this, it also has no real atmosphere either. The characters are all stereotypes too: the clever and dumb criminals, the altruistic daughter, the disapproving family members, although given a couple of exceptions for Moffatt's office boy and Martin, the easily drunken butler.
What the film does do very well is jokes that rely on how scenes are cut together in order for them to work. For example, one character says "I wonder what is holding him up", which is followed by a shot in another scene of the man she was talking about literally held up by some rope or cloth. It is hardly a poor film, although the coincident reliance plot is nothing to boast about. It is an amusing one and a half hours, but nothing hysterically funny, nor anything thought provoking or particularly clever.
Nearly half an hour passes before the crime plot at the centre of the film starts to develop, with nothing but jokes to sustain it for the first third of its duration. The film not only progresses slowly because of this, it also has no real atmosphere either. The characters are all stereotypes too: the clever and dumb criminals, the altruistic daughter, the disapproving family members, although given a couple of exceptions for Moffatt's office boy and Martin, the easily drunken butler.
What the film does do very well is jokes that rely on how scenes are cut together in order for them to work. For example, one character says "I wonder what is holding him up", which is followed by a shot in another scene of the man she was talking about literally held up by some rope or cloth. It is hardly a poor film, although the coincident reliance plot is nothing to boast about. It is an amusing one and a half hours, but nothing hysterically funny, nor anything thought provoking or particularly clever.
Will Hay films seem to get less funnier as the years roll by.
Maybe the memory cheats and you just realise he was probably never that funny in the first place.
In Where There's a Will he has a short routine with the rotund Graham Moffatt who plays the office boy who reads western comics.
Hay plays Benjamin Stubbins an incompetent solicitor with no clients, plenty of debt and fond of a drink. His daughter lives in a stately home with wealthy in laws who pretend to her that her father is doing well.
Stubbins is taken in with a wealthy American who gives Stubbins an advance to trace his family roots. The American and his gang plan to rob a bank and Stubbins office is conveniently located and they just want him out of the way.
Once Stubbins discovers what is happening it is too late and his fingerprints are all over the bank safe.
This really is atrocious stuff, painfully unfunny. Some knockabout stuff at the end redeems it somewhat.
The only people who are going to like this movie are those who think. If it's old, in black and white. It must be a classic!
Maybe the memory cheats and you just realise he was probably never that funny in the first place.
In Where There's a Will he has a short routine with the rotund Graham Moffatt who plays the office boy who reads western comics.
Hay plays Benjamin Stubbins an incompetent solicitor with no clients, plenty of debt and fond of a drink. His daughter lives in a stately home with wealthy in laws who pretend to her that her father is doing well.
Stubbins is taken in with a wealthy American who gives Stubbins an advance to trace his family roots. The American and his gang plan to rob a bank and Stubbins office is conveniently located and they just want him out of the way.
Once Stubbins discovers what is happening it is too late and his fingerprints are all over the bank safe.
This really is atrocious stuff, painfully unfunny. Some knockabout stuff at the end redeems it somewhat.
The only people who are going to like this movie are those who think. If it's old, in black and white. It must be a classic!
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis is the first of six films in which Graham Moffatt appeared with Hay.
- Citas
Benjamin Stubbins: A merry Christmas, girls and boys / I've brought you jewels, instead of toys / In spite of what you think / it seems to me I've earned a drink.
- Bandas sonorasGood Kong Wenceslas
(uncredited)
Traditional
Sung by the police carollers
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 20min(80 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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