Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueGrant is the news editor of London's "Daily World". On a very complicated day, two news stories come to a dramatic climax. Interwoven with these is the problem of Grant's personal life which... Tout lireGrant is the news editor of London's "Daily World". On a very complicated day, two news stories come to a dramatic climax. Interwoven with these is the problem of Grant's personal life which looks likely to become yet another news item.Grant is the news editor of London's "Daily World". On a very complicated day, two news stories come to a dramatic climax. Interwoven with these is the problem of Grant's personal life which looks likely to become yet another news item.
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This is a wonderful film of almost documentary character showing the life at a newspaper editorial office with Jack Hawkins in charge, happening to all kinds of incidents that have to be followed up and covered, an ordinary day's work for an editor, and it is not easy. There are several very different stories that develop at the same time with that in common that none of them turns out as expected. A young widow (Eva Bartok) is at the Old Bailey charged with murder of her husband, who was dying anyway - it appears to have been some kind of a killing by mercy. A young mother with five kids is lying at the hospital on the operation table with no certain outcome of the operation. A scientist in a high position of nuclear physics is eager to have his message spread by the newspaper to the world while he conveys atomic secrets to the enemy. And Jack Hawkins' wife is leaving him after having been left alone too much.
So there are four different dramas (at least) on the hands of the editorial, and they keep developing to major crises all four of them. The most interesting drama is that of the widow Eva Bartok. Jack Hawkins puts his most critical journalist Michael Goodliffe on the case, which leads to a dramatic climax after everything has gone wrong, questioning for serious the ethics and morals of journalism and showing upsetting interiors of inside stories. Finally there is the ultimate Front Page Story as an air crash consumes all public interest at the cost of what really matters concerning human values... It seldom happens that I want to see a film over again at once, but this was one of them.
So there are four different dramas (at least) on the hands of the editorial, and they keep developing to major crises all four of them. The most interesting drama is that of the widow Eva Bartok. Jack Hawkins puts his most critical journalist Michael Goodliffe on the case, which leads to a dramatic climax after everything has gone wrong, questioning for serious the ethics and morals of journalism and showing upsetting interiors of inside stories. Finally there is the ultimate Front Page Story as an air crash consumes all public interest at the cost of what really matters concerning human values... It seldom happens that I want to see a film over again at once, but this was one of them.
Despite some soap-opera melodramatics and a bit of speech-making at the end, this is in an extremely well made film, directed expertly by Gordon Parry with a excellent cast of British character actors in all the supporting roles. The Fleet Street office seems particularly convincing compared to the cliche Front Page atmosphere of most newspaper American films. Jack Hawkins is the star; his usual dependable self, the epitome of the decent Englishman, torn between his conscience and the demands of daily journalism. The various sub-plots are nicely woven together, and the pace never lets up. A first rate job of entertaining filmmaking.
I have always felt you can't go wrong with a Jack Hawkins film and this very pleasing very British offering
really proves my point as he leads and shines above a competent group of familiar players. It's all very
early 1950's ; an era I look back on with nostalgia even though I was just a child. The men all wear hats
and coats and the women all wear hats,coats,gloves and furs. Everyone smokes all over the place which
may turn people off these days but it was very sophisticated at the time and we were oblivious to the
harm it might do. Great scenes of post-war London are a nice added touch. The various story-lines have
already been explained and they are smoothly inter-woven giving us a real feel for the frenetic environment
of a newspaper office. It's mostly credible and the sort of film you can enjoy watching repeatedly.
By 1953, reporters weren't kings of the 'Fourth State', but mere princes, nevertheless the newsroom was still their mighty palace. 'Front Page Story' presents a whole day in such a domain, with the helmsman: editor John Grant.
The movie is a mediocre 'soap opera' though, with four separated stories of a bittersweet ending: the crisis of Grant's marriage, a woman undergoing a trial for committing euthanasia, a mad scientist accused of espionage, and five kids who end up orphaned after losing their mother and being evicted from their home. Although it's decently filmed and has great scenes at 'Fleet Street' and 'Trafalgar Square', the movie has a poor script, riddled with cliches.
The movie is a mediocre 'soap opera' though, with four separated stories of a bittersweet ending: the crisis of Grant's marriage, a woman undergoing a trial for committing euthanasia, a mad scientist accused of espionage, and five kids who end up orphaned after losing their mother and being evicted from their home. Although it's decently filmed and has great scenes at 'Fleet Street' and 'Trafalgar Square', the movie has a poor script, riddled with cliches.
Jack Hawkins was a solid actor who carries this in star fashion. I'm a fan of this era of britfilm. I'd move it to 7 but dated plot elements make it a reccommendation. only for 50's enthusiasts.
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDuring the scene with Dr. Brukmann in the park as he walks up to the schoolgirls, a brief snippet of the music piece "Funeral March for a Marionette" appears on the film soundtrack. This may well be the last time the piece could be used in a film without an immediate connection to Alfred Hitchcock, since only a year after this film was released, the theme became famous in the opening credits sequence of "Alfred Hitchcock Presents".
- GaffesThe aircraft which Susan was going to fly on, but doesn't, is a Douglas DC-3 before take-off and something quite different after it's crashed.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Those British Faces: A Tribute to Jack Hawkins 1910-1973 (1993)
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 39 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Front Page Story (1954) officially released in Canada in English?
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