10 reviews
Extraordinary that there had been two silent and one talkie versions earlier - a testament to the strength of the original play. It raised the, for its time, very controversial question of "The Single Standard": should women have the same freedoms as men? By 1952 however the boldness and independence of the central character's actions had been largely overtaken by changes in society especially the sexual licence during wartime, consequently it had lost its controversial edge.
In this production the drama revolves more round the parents - they were of a generation that still held to Edwardian values even if their offspring didn't. Shorn of its controversial edge but retaining the questions of differences of class or rather money, the part that does remain is a well played modest domestic drama involving the parents.
As another reviewer has pointed out the Lancashire mill girl daughter speaks and dresses like a débutante, indistinguishable from her upper class love "rival" - film companies apparently at the time obliged actresses to lose all trace of regional or working class accents. Small wonder the revolution of kitchen sink realism in play and film occurred within less than 4 years.
The earlier versions including the silent ones are rated higher than this probably because they were closer to the time when the story would have been controversial and highly charged. However now is probably the time for a period revival with its theme of a strong and independently minded working class young woman defying convention and self-interest.
In this production the drama revolves more round the parents - they were of a generation that still held to Edwardian values even if their offspring didn't. Shorn of its controversial edge but retaining the questions of differences of class or rather money, the part that does remain is a well played modest domestic drama involving the parents.
As another reviewer has pointed out the Lancashire mill girl daughter speaks and dresses like a débutante, indistinguishable from her upper class love "rival" - film companies apparently at the time obliged actresses to lose all trace of regional or working class accents. Small wonder the revolution of kitchen sink realism in play and film occurred within less than 4 years.
The earlier versions including the silent ones are rated higher than this probably because they were closer to the time when the story would have been controversial and highly charged. However now is probably the time for a period revival with its theme of a strong and independently minded working class young woman defying convention and self-interest.
- trimmerb1234
- Aug 9, 2007
- Permalink
I saw a documentary a few years ago about The Battle of Britain featuring RAF fighters and the control room whose personnel guided pilots to intercept German raiders.In this film was an officer who looked strangely familiar and it was not until I saw "Hindle Wakes" 1952 that I recognised actor Ronald Adam.In films he was usually cast as authority figures in the armed services, or a director of a hospital, as in "Green for Danger" (1946).It was not until I read the iMDB biography that it confirmed it was the same person who despite acting, writing plays. theatre management , was actually in both the RAF and its earlier incarnation the Royal Flying Corps.This film from 1952 depicts the danger for "nice girls" in spending a night with a man friend when it seemed they were then honour bound to marry the man.They did have condoms then but the censor would never have passed such a script.The producer had to suggest intimacy between the sexes showing in one scene the couple booking a hotel room with the next scene bright and early next morning.How quaint but society has moved on in the last 66 years!I spotted a young comedienne Rita Webb playing a landlady a foil for Spike Milligan in his comic routines, Bill Travers from "Born Free" and from an earlier generation Mary Clare who played "The Baroness" in Hitchcock's acclaimed "The Lady Vanishes" (1938).This was my first viewing of this film which I saw on "Talking Pictures" channel 81 and I awarded it 6/10.
- howardmorley
- Aug 20, 2018
- Permalink
It's the end of the work cycle, and the staff at a factory in Lancashire head to Blackpool for the weekend. Passions arise.
It's an ok watch, I'd say it's perhaps a little slow, it does take a long time to get going. Some of the dialogue is a bit off, such as 'your daughter is dead, but don't take on.'
It's an interesting recollection on just how women were seen, and treated in society, it seems so archaic now. Yes it's about the clashes in culture, but it's more than that, it's an interesting snapshot.
Some nice filming, and some intriguing stock footage, look how many people are in that dance hall. Unfortunately the boat scene is absolutely hilarious, it just doesn't work.
Lisa Daniely is very good as Jenny, what a remarkable beauty she was. Her and Mary don't seen like factory girls, they are way too eloquent and refined.
Two people to look out for, Rita Webb, amusing as The Landlady, and of course Joan Hickson, also amusing as the bedraggled mother.
I've seen a layer version of it, and that was much better. This was ok, if a bit of a slog. 5/10.
It's an ok watch, I'd say it's perhaps a little slow, it does take a long time to get going. Some of the dialogue is a bit off, such as 'your daughter is dead, but don't take on.'
It's an interesting recollection on just how women were seen, and treated in society, it seems so archaic now. Yes it's about the clashes in culture, but it's more than that, it's an interesting snapshot.
Some nice filming, and some intriguing stock footage, look how many people are in that dance hall. Unfortunately the boat scene is absolutely hilarious, it just doesn't work.
Lisa Daniely is very good as Jenny, what a remarkable beauty she was. Her and Mary don't seen like factory girls, they are way too eloquent and refined.
Two people to look out for, Rita Webb, amusing as The Landlady, and of course Joan Hickson, also amusing as the bedraggled mother.
I've seen a layer version of it, and that was much better. This was ok, if a bit of a slog. 5/10.
- Sleepin_Dragon
- Nov 13, 2020
- Permalink
An experienced British cast star in this melodrama of a young mill-working girl on a seaside holiday with her friend. After a night at a dance hall, she hooks up with the son of a local mill owner and they have a clandestine time. All goes well until her friend is killed in a (frankly hilarious) boating accident, their tryst is discovered and they have to deal with the consequences. It's quite a nicely filmed period piece illustrating working class 1950s England and revealing the last vestiges of class-based snobbery; but the script is weak and wordy. Joan Hickson stands out as the matriarchal mother of the girl and Ronald Adam as the rather pompous father of the boy.
- CinemaSerf
- Feb 23, 2023
- Permalink
One would watch this film today more out of historical interest, i.e. as a document of its time, than as a piece of entertainment. It shows the moral standards of the time (and how they were changing) and the way people used to have fun. This was visibly pre-television. One of the depicted ways to have fun features so prominently that I suspect an early form of 'product placement' - the Wintergarden in Blackpool.
Most characters of the film are nauseatingly stereotypical (with a pre WW2 feeling - they seem dated even by 1952 standards), the only exception being the female lead. Sadly though, Lisa Daniely's accent is ridiculously posh for a supposed working class girl.
On the plus side, the film has a more realistic feel than most of its contemporaries. This is a consequence of the real world settings and because the director refused to glamourise anything; clothes, sets, behaviour all appear real - there are also no cop-outs at the end.
Most characters of the film are nauseatingly stereotypical (with a pre WW2 feeling - they seem dated even by 1952 standards), the only exception being the female lead. Sadly though, Lisa Daniely's accent is ridiculously posh for a supposed working class girl.
On the plus side, the film has a more realistic feel than most of its contemporaries. This is a consequence of the real world settings and because the director refused to glamourise anything; clothes, sets, behaviour all appear real - there are also no cop-outs at the end.
Beautiful film, well acted and great to watch. Wonderful British character actors, all having a great time. All the factories up north and Scotland I think, had their two week break at Blackpool - not at once I hope.
I loved the scene when the crowd are on the platform heading for the train and Bill Travers chats to a girl and puts his hand somewhere he shouldn't - she makes a cheerful reprimand, hand removed and he's leant his lesson.
Loved seeing Britain's history, loved the dance hall scenes.
I loved the scene when the crowd are on the platform heading for the train and Bill Travers chats to a girl and puts his hand somewhere he shouldn't - she makes a cheerful reprimand, hand removed and he's leant his lesson.
Loved seeing Britain's history, loved the dance hall scenes.
The movie captures many social conventions of 1950s Britain.
Two conventions from this movie captured my imagination:
(a) The idea that the first gal/guy you slept with - if found out - your parents would force your hand to marry them. I think youngsters today could learn a thing or 2 about responsibilities & about being responsible - for better or for worse.
(b) England/Great Britain 'had' so much to offer.
Nowadays holidaying in & around the UK is such a big deal, but there is still plenty to sea - (see) - & do.
Today a lot of seaside towns are being left for London or the next biggest town commuters, and their hotels & resorts are being turned into apartments & flats.
I could only give this eight because I only watched half an hour of it, but what a laugh! I loved every brief minute. It was nostalgic, with its depiction of a Blackpool in its heyday, and I guffawed heartily at the cut-glass accents of the mill-workers. Paul Whitehouse could not parody this, because it does the job itself. The raised eyebrows from the concierge when the unmarried (gasp!) couple book into the Llandudno hotel as Mr and Mrs are priceless. I look forward to seeing the film in full so as to discover if there is a moment to top the scene at the swimming pool. Let me set it: you have two brylcreemed Lotharios at the open-air baths in hot pursuit of the two ladies they met at the Winter Gardens the night before. The ladies - in their demure fifties fashion - spot them and make haste to flee the gents' advances pronto. They retreat to where no gent may set foot, and when Gent 2 asks Gent 1 where did they go, Gent 1 points to the sign about the womens' changing room that reads: "Ladies' Boxes". PRICELESS!! How keen we gents are to get into ladies' boxes. What-ho!
- i_ashworth
- Sep 13, 2009
- Permalink
A decent insight into the social life and attitudes of the 40's 50's in Britain. However it's let down by some ridiculous casting, namely the gorgeous Lisa Daniely cast as a Lancashire Mill workers daughter with an accent straight out of a Surrey finishing school.
Lisa Daniely is a mill girl in the Lancashire town of Hindle. On the week of her annual holiday, she goes with a friend to Blackpool, where she encounters Brian Worth, the son of owner of the mill where she works -- and an old friend of her father, Leslie Dwyer. She goes with him for a week at a hotel. When this is discovered, confusion and morality break loose.
It's at least the sixth screen version of Stanley Houghton's 1912 play; I count three earlier movie versions, and a couple of TV adaptations. This one spends a third of its length with cameraman Geoffrey Faithfull making what looks to be an advertising movie for Blackpool's tourist industry.
Unfortunately, when it comes to the story, its point and its position as a key work in the Manchester school, it's not so good. Miss Daniely doesn't even attempt a Lancashire accent, and those who insist on doing "the right thing" seem old-fashioned and small-minded. There's no sense of morality to be punctured, just reflex action and self-interest; even Ronald Adams as Jeffcote, who's meant to be proponent of the old morality, is largely reduced to a straw man. He tells his old friend Dwyer that the man who's wronged Miss Daniely will do the right thing before discovering it's his own son, and his insistence after discovering it seems a bit insincere for all its swiftness.
This is the sixth or seventh version of this show I have seen, including a later television version from the 1970s and a couple of stage versions. It suffers from its post-war attitude that of course, the times they are a-changing, and there's no real sense, even as she speaks the lines, that Miss Daniely has a skilled trade that makes her independent of any man. She's simply looking for a better one than the weak and self-indulgent Worth, one who will adore her utterly, and perhaps give her a black eye.
It's at least the sixth screen version of Stanley Houghton's 1912 play; I count three earlier movie versions, and a couple of TV adaptations. This one spends a third of its length with cameraman Geoffrey Faithfull making what looks to be an advertising movie for Blackpool's tourist industry.
Unfortunately, when it comes to the story, its point and its position as a key work in the Manchester school, it's not so good. Miss Daniely doesn't even attempt a Lancashire accent, and those who insist on doing "the right thing" seem old-fashioned and small-minded. There's no sense of morality to be punctured, just reflex action and self-interest; even Ronald Adams as Jeffcote, who's meant to be proponent of the old morality, is largely reduced to a straw man. He tells his old friend Dwyer that the man who's wronged Miss Daniely will do the right thing before discovering it's his own son, and his insistence after discovering it seems a bit insincere for all its swiftness.
This is the sixth or seventh version of this show I have seen, including a later television version from the 1970s and a couple of stage versions. It suffers from its post-war attitude that of course, the times they are a-changing, and there's no real sense, even as she speaks the lines, that Miss Daniely has a skilled trade that makes her independent of any man. She's simply looking for a better one than the weak and self-indulgent Worth, one who will adore her utterly, and perhaps give her a black eye.