Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn evil prison administrator cruelly abuses the inmates at his prison, until one day the tables are turned.An evil prison administrator cruelly abuses the inmates at his prison, until one day the tables are turned.An evil prison administrator cruelly abuses the inmates at his prison, until one day the tables are turned.
John Singer
- Matthew Josephs
- (as Johnny Singer)
Cecil Bevan
- Prison Inspector
- (uncredited)
Leonard Sharp
- Henry Bradshaw
- (uncredited)
Douglas Stewart
- Prison Inspector
- (uncredited)
Mavis Villiers
- Betty
- (uncredited)
Jack Vyvyan
- Innkeeper
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- ConnexionsFeatured in Doom Asylum (1987)
Commentaire en vedette
In It's Never Too Late to Mend, Tod Slaughter plays yet another despicable villain, Squire John Meadows, who doesn't exactly twirl his moustache, but does stroke it quite a bit. The squire has his beady eyes set on pretty Susan Merton (Slaughter's regular co-star Marjorie Taylor), but she is in love with penniless farmer George Fielding (Ian Colin). Not one to give up, the squire tries to have Fielding (wrongly) arrested for poaching, but the farmer's best friend Tom (Jack Livesey), who George once rescued from a frozen lake, owns up to the crime to repay his debt.
Before the squire can come up with another dastardly scheme, George sets sail to Australia to make his fortune, promising Susan that he will return to marry her in two years. While George is away, the squire, who is justice of the peace and runs the local prison with an iron rod, makes life a misery for poor Tom; he also intercepts and destroys letters between George and Susan, and spreads rumours that George has found a wife in Australia. With Susan's father's approval, the wicked man proposes marriage to Susan, but is shocked to learn that George has returned from Oz and is now a wealthy man...
Once again, it is Slaughter's pantomime performance that makes this film so watchable: he is the epitome of slimy Victorian villainy, rubbing his hands with glee and chuckling with laughter as he treats other humans with utter disdain. In the prison, he delights in punishing 15-year-old Matty Josephs, imprisoned for stealing bread to feed his starving mother, and insists on personally lashing inmates with the 'cat'. Those who complain are thrown in 'the hole', a windowless cell where the occupant slowly loses their mind. If he were alive today, Tod would be perfect to play Dick Dastardly in a live-action Wacky Racers.
Based on a book by Charles Reade, which exposed the dreadful conditions in Victorian prisons and prompted reform, It's Never Too Late to Mend is a condemnation of corporal punishment, and a morality play with religious overtones, Tom helped through his darkest hour by the prison chaplain, and the sadistic squire winding up as an inmate in his own hell-hole (you reap what you sow). Ultimately, though, it's another opportunity to witness one of cinema's greatest unsung actors, the wonderfully wicked Tod Slaughter, at his very best.
6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for IMDb.
Before the squire can come up with another dastardly scheme, George sets sail to Australia to make his fortune, promising Susan that he will return to marry her in two years. While George is away, the squire, who is justice of the peace and runs the local prison with an iron rod, makes life a misery for poor Tom; he also intercepts and destroys letters between George and Susan, and spreads rumours that George has found a wife in Australia. With Susan's father's approval, the wicked man proposes marriage to Susan, but is shocked to learn that George has returned from Oz and is now a wealthy man...
Once again, it is Slaughter's pantomime performance that makes this film so watchable: he is the epitome of slimy Victorian villainy, rubbing his hands with glee and chuckling with laughter as he treats other humans with utter disdain. In the prison, he delights in punishing 15-year-old Matty Josephs, imprisoned for stealing bread to feed his starving mother, and insists on personally lashing inmates with the 'cat'. Those who complain are thrown in 'the hole', a windowless cell where the occupant slowly loses their mind. If he were alive today, Tod would be perfect to play Dick Dastardly in a live-action Wacky Racers.
Based on a book by Charles Reade, which exposed the dreadful conditions in Victorian prisons and prompted reform, It's Never Too Late to Mend is a condemnation of corporal punishment, and a morality play with religious overtones, Tom helped through his darkest hour by the prison chaplain, and the sadistic squire winding up as an inmate in his own hell-hole (you reap what you sow). Ultimately, though, it's another opportunity to witness one of cinema's greatest unsung actors, the wonderfully wicked Tod Slaughter, at his very best.
6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for IMDb.
- BA_Harrison
- 17 nov. 2020
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 10 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was It's Never Too Late to Mend (1937) officially released in Canada in English?
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