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7,1/10
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MA NOTE
Les habitants d'un quartier de Londres déclarent l'indépendance, après avoir découvert un ancien traité. Cela mène à la nécessité d'un "Passeport pour Pimlico".Les habitants d'un quartier de Londres déclarent l'indépendance, après avoir découvert un ancien traité. Cela mène à la nécessité d'un "Passeport pour Pimlico".Les habitants d'un quartier de Londres déclarent l'indépendance, après avoir découvert un ancien traité. Cela mène à la nécessité d'un "Passeport pour Pimlico".
- Nommé pour 1 Oscar
- 2 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe outdoor scenes were shot in Lambeth, a mile away from Pimlico. A set was built on a large World War II bombsite just south of Lambeth at the junction of Hercules Road. This site is now the location for municipal flats built in the 1960s. However, the buildings on the junction of Hercules Road and Lambeth Road can still be recognized from this movie, as can the railway bridge going over Lambeth Road, particularly from the scenes where food is thrown over the blockade.
- GaffesApprox 1 hour in, during the showing of the news reel, where they are throwing cans and buckets in the air and the phrase 'hitting the production target' is said, one of those people are hit by a falling item with visible distress.
- Citations
P.C. Spiller: Blimey, I'm a foreigner.
- Crédits fousDedicated to the memory of Clothing Coupons and Ration cards.
- Bandes originalesLa Guajira
(uncredited)
Commentaire à la une
A bustling and, it is implied, unscrupulous gaggle of Britons waddles its way into the freshly, sloppily partitioned nation of Burgundy. For the new Burgundians, opportunity knocks on one door, while confusion beats down another. The cacophonous Nazi explosion that created Burgundy (and buried Pimlico) is now rivaled by the vociferous crowd, swarming through the former British district like Bedouins over the dunes of Arabia.
T. E. B. Clarke's screenplay, "Passport to Pimlico," in its superior comedic handling of legal, logistical and practical civil nightmares, is one of best political parodies ever filmed. Like Clarke's later "The Lavender Hill Mob," "Passport" holds its knot to British underpinnings of dignity and grace under pressure; what remains so comedic about both stories, however, is the loss of such maintained hegemony. The direction, by veteran Henry Cornelius ("I Am a Camera," dramatic basis of "Cabaret"), is sure, confident in a way that resembles the careful work of a helmer filming a story of his own, which, in fact, he is (a conceptual collaboration with Clarke). It has been said that the two based their outline of "Passport to Pimlico" on the Canadian government's gift of a provincial `room' to the Netherlands.
"Passport" is a great, funny, touching film, well known to subject historians and critics, worthy of popular re-discovery.
T. E. B. Clarke's screenplay, "Passport to Pimlico," in its superior comedic handling of legal, logistical and practical civil nightmares, is one of best political parodies ever filmed. Like Clarke's later "The Lavender Hill Mob," "Passport" holds its knot to British underpinnings of dignity and grace under pressure; what remains so comedic about both stories, however, is the loss of such maintained hegemony. The direction, by veteran Henry Cornelius ("I Am a Camera," dramatic basis of "Cabaret"), is sure, confident in a way that resembles the careful work of a helmer filming a story of his own, which, in fact, he is (a conceptual collaboration with Clarke). It has been said that the two based their outline of "Passport to Pimlico" on the Canadian government's gift of a provincial `room' to the Netherlands.
"Passport" is a great, funny, touching film, well known to subject historians and critics, worthy of popular re-discovery.
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- How long is Passport to Pimlico?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 24 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Passeport pour Pimlico (1949) officially released in India in English?
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