IMDb RATING
7.1/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Edward Machin, an Edwardian-era young rogue of lowly origin, decides he must do what he can to raise his living standards in order to see the world and shape his own destiny.Edward Machin, an Edwardian-era young rogue of lowly origin, decides he must do what he can to raise his living standards in order to see the world and shape his own destiny.Edward Machin, an Edwardian-era young rogue of lowly origin, decides he must do what he can to raise his living standards in order to see the world and shape his own destiny.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 nomination total
John Adams
- Customs Official
- (uncredited)
Peter Copley
- P. Shillitoe
- (uncredited)
Mark Daly
- Lord Mayor
- (uncredited)
Arthur Dibbs
- Doorman
- (uncredited)
Deidre Doyle
- Widow Hullins
- (uncredited)
Henry Edwards
- Mr. Cotterill
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
7.12K
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Featured reviews
Excellent
Very well adapted from the novel by Arnold Bennett, this is a warm and witty comedy about the rise of a washerwoman's son from obscurity to becoming the Mayor. In a series of episodes Edward Henry (Denry as his mother called him) Machin demonstrates his acumen in business, his eye for the main chance, noticing what Shakespeare called the 'tide in the affairs of men that leads on to fortune'. (Literally in one episode!)
In all of his this you can not help liking Denry, especially as he is perfectly played by Alec Guinness. As the narrator says, he is not dishonest, he just likes to give providence a helping hand. As Denry grows older Guinness wonderfully captures each facet of his character. He is well supported by the other cast members, each one also perfect for their roles. It is hard to think of a better cast film, even down to the small roles.
The film captures well the look of the Potteries. The small houses, the pottery kilns, the canal. This place is living and breathing, populated by interesting people. An excellent film, splendid in all departments and well worth seeing many times.
In all of his this you can not help liking Denry, especially as he is perfectly played by Alec Guinness. As the narrator says, he is not dishonest, he just likes to give providence a helping hand. As Denry grows older Guinness wonderfully captures each facet of his character. He is well supported by the other cast members, each one also perfect for their roles. It is hard to think of a better cast film, even down to the small roles.
The film captures well the look of the Potteries. The small houses, the pottery kilns, the canal. This place is living and breathing, populated by interesting people. An excellent film, splendid in all departments and well worth seeing many times.
Up The Ladder Of Success
The Card must have been an interesting if somewhat painful film for Alec Guinness to make. This might have been the most autobiographical piece of work Guinness ever did.
In The Card Guinness plays the son of washerwoman who learned early on to keep an eye out for the main chance and always strive to improve yourself by whatever means. In real life Guinness's mother should only have been a washerwoman In fact she was a prostitute who never married his father, whomever that could have been. In real life Guinness overcame bigger obstacles than his character in The Card ever did.
But I'm sure he drew from real life in playing Denny Machin. Guinness in 91 minutes goes from a humble clerk to a position of real power in his area of England. The story is how he did it, the legal and extralegal methods employed and the people he used. When you think about it, The Card is a kinder, gentler version of Room At The Top.
Guinness courts two women on his way up, Valerie Hobson the widow of a local lord and dancing instructor Glynis Johns. Glynis is quite the climber herself as we learn when the story unfolds. In fact she nearly steals the film from Guinness, no easy task.
The Card which was released in the USA under the title of The Promoter is a good followup to such other Guinness everyman roles like he had in The Lavendar Hill Mob. The screenplay is quite good, I was kept very entertained seeing how Guinness could always make lemonade out of lemons. Definitely required viewing for Alec Guinness's legion of fans.
In The Card Guinness plays the son of washerwoman who learned early on to keep an eye out for the main chance and always strive to improve yourself by whatever means. In real life Guinness's mother should only have been a washerwoman In fact she was a prostitute who never married his father, whomever that could have been. In real life Guinness overcame bigger obstacles than his character in The Card ever did.
But I'm sure he drew from real life in playing Denny Machin. Guinness in 91 minutes goes from a humble clerk to a position of real power in his area of England. The story is how he did it, the legal and extralegal methods employed and the people he used. When you think about it, The Card is a kinder, gentler version of Room At The Top.
Guinness courts two women on his way up, Valerie Hobson the widow of a local lord and dancing instructor Glynis Johns. Glynis is quite the climber herself as we learn when the story unfolds. In fact she nearly steals the film from Guinness, no easy task.
The Card which was released in the USA under the title of The Promoter is a good followup to such other Guinness everyman roles like he had in The Lavendar Hill Mob. The screenplay is quite good, I was kept very entertained seeing how Guinness could always make lemonade out of lemons. Definitely required viewing for Alec Guinness's legion of fans.
Enjoyable English post war comedy.
'The Card' was just what war-worn Britain needed in the early fifties. This innocent, cheeky and humorous talkie would have had the cheap seats in fits!
Alec Guinness plays Edward Henry 'Denry' Machin, a young ambitious chancer who is just about likable enough to get away with the stunts he pulls on his way up the ladder of social and business success. He pounces on each and every opportunity and risks everything he has... and each venture seems to work out very well.
Edward is a very 'English' working class hero and is the sum of many parts. There's some Charlie Chaplin, some Arthur Askey and even some George Cole in the mix. At first, he seems to be rather effete and almost effeminate... he's definitely a mother's boy, though his stubborn mother wouldn't know it!
The story is buoyed by a mass of top class British talent. Already famous Petula Clark plays Nellie but she's always in the shadow of the magnificent Glynis Johns. Her blistering on screen feline sexuality is just pure magic.
Edward Chapman plays a jealous adversary. Chapman was an extraordinarily busy actor throughout his long career but is probably best remembered for playing opposite Norman Wisdom as Mr Grimsdale.
Joan Hickson shows up as a dissatisfied and grouchy property owner. She went on to find her greatest professional success towards the end of her life playing Miss Marple in the best of any Agatha Christie series ever made... in my humble opinion!
Towards the end, there's even a beautiful cameo by Wilfrid Hyde-White. And there are a lot more names for 'spotters' to enjoy, too.
The story is mostly good-natured silliness with no real plot to think about and there are some great outdoor shots of post-war England for good measure.
At this time of writing (2017), there's a good copy of this available to watch on YouTube... so do yourself a favour... unwrap that choc-ice and get over there!
Alec Guinness plays Edward Henry 'Denry' Machin, a young ambitious chancer who is just about likable enough to get away with the stunts he pulls on his way up the ladder of social and business success. He pounces on each and every opportunity and risks everything he has... and each venture seems to work out very well.
Edward is a very 'English' working class hero and is the sum of many parts. There's some Charlie Chaplin, some Arthur Askey and even some George Cole in the mix. At first, he seems to be rather effete and almost effeminate... he's definitely a mother's boy, though his stubborn mother wouldn't know it!
The story is buoyed by a mass of top class British talent. Already famous Petula Clark plays Nellie but she's always in the shadow of the magnificent Glynis Johns. Her blistering on screen feline sexuality is just pure magic.
Edward Chapman plays a jealous adversary. Chapman was an extraordinarily busy actor throughout his long career but is probably best remembered for playing opposite Norman Wisdom as Mr Grimsdale.
Joan Hickson shows up as a dissatisfied and grouchy property owner. She went on to find her greatest professional success towards the end of her life playing Miss Marple in the best of any Agatha Christie series ever made... in my humble opinion!
Towards the end, there's even a beautiful cameo by Wilfrid Hyde-White. And there are a lot more names for 'spotters' to enjoy, too.
The story is mostly good-natured silliness with no real plot to think about and there are some great outdoor shots of post-war England for good measure.
At this time of writing (2017), there's a good copy of this available to watch on YouTube... so do yourself a favour... unwrap that choc-ice and get over there!
How can anyone not enjoy it?
This terrific 1952 British black and white movie directed by Ronald Neame (with an inspired casting of a young Alec Guinness as Arnold Bennett's wonderful character, the upwardly-mobile Denry Machin), loses none of the story's magic and captures the flavour of the period (from about 1888 and onwards) and the Potteries (North Staffordshire, England) absolutely perfectly. The ballroom scene (among many others) is an utter delight.
The beautiful Valerie Hobson as the "Countess of Chell" is enchanting. Glynis Johns as the frivolous and extravagant social-climbing dance instructress is equally lovely. Edward Chapman as Mr Duncalf is at his usual pompous best. A marvellous supporting cast puts in a stalwart performance and are all on top form, and the acting by all involved is superb (although Petula Clark is a little too reserved and somewhat bland), but after all that, the star of the show surely has to be Joey the Mule.
I don't intend to give you the storyline as enough reviewers have done that already. Suffice it to say that of all the transferences of classic stories to the screen, this must be one of the best, and I defy anyone (young or old) who may watch it, not to enjoy it (even though it is in black and white), and unfortunately, even with colour and much improved modern techniques, marvellous movies like this just aren't made anymore.
The beautiful Valerie Hobson as the "Countess of Chell" is enchanting. Glynis Johns as the frivolous and extravagant social-climbing dance instructress is equally lovely. Edward Chapman as Mr Duncalf is at his usual pompous best. A marvellous supporting cast puts in a stalwart performance and are all on top form, and the acting by all involved is superb (although Petula Clark is a little too reserved and somewhat bland), but after all that, the star of the show surely has to be Joey the Mule.
I don't intend to give you the storyline as enough reviewers have done that already. Suffice it to say that of all the transferences of classic stories to the screen, this must be one of the best, and I defy anyone (young or old) who may watch it, not to enjoy it (even though it is in black and white), and unfortunately, even with colour and much improved modern techniques, marvellous movies like this just aren't made anymore.
THE CARD (Ronald Neame, 1952) ***
Alec Guinness' reputation as a serious actor tends to overshadow the subtle but deftly comic early work he was involved in, even when the films themselves (especially his handful of Ealing classics) are highly-regarded. This was another fine (and reasonably popular) vehicle for him in which he plays a go-getter(!) who uses his wits – and the helping hand lent him by Fate – to rise the ranks in British society from a washer-woman's son to, ultimately, Mayor of his town. In this respect, the film reminded me of two similar efforts i.e. NOTHING BUT THE BEST (1964) and THE RISE AND RISE OF MICHAEL RIMMER (1970) – which I owned but had not yet checked out (and which I then promptly opted to include in my ongoing Christmas schedule); of course, thematically, it is not unlike Ealing's own KIND HEARTS AND CORONETS (1949; in which Guinness had memorably played eight murder victims)...but the approach here is altogether more genteel and nostalgic (even if there are a few undeniable belly-laughs along the way), thus lacking the pointed satirical barbs which distinguished the earlier (and later) films. Anyway, the star delivers an entirely disarming performance and the film – augmented by its charming period setting – proves a most delightful concoction. He is abetted besides by three splendid leading ladies in Glynis Johns (surprisingly playing haughty), Valerie Hobson (obviously aristocratic, her feathers apparently not even unruffled by a pratfall!) and Petula Clark (not yet the chart-topping singer and, tackling the role of a commoner, is naturally Guinness' eventual choice of partner). Foremost among the supporting cast, then, is Edward Chapman – later a stooge in many a Norman Wisdom comedy – as Guinness' disgruntled former employer, but several other familiar faces crop up throughout (Peter Copley, Michael Hordern, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Frank Pettingell, etc). For the record, this was the first of four appearances by the star in films directed by Neame (apart from two the latter had produced for David Lean); of these, the only one I have yet to watch is another comedy, THE HORSE'S MOUTH (1958), which I might as well get to now rather than later...
Did you know
- TriviaBursley, the town where this movie takes place, is a fictionalized version of Burslem, one of the constituent towns that make up Stoke-on-Trent, also known as the "Potteries" or, as in the movie, "the city of five towns".
- GoofsWhen Denry looks at the invitation to the dance he has received in the mail at home, is name is written completely different than when he filled it out himself at work previously.
- Quotes
Mrs. Machin: You can live where ya like... but i'm stayin' here.
- How long is The Promoter?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Posetnica
- Filming locations
- Llandudno, Conwy, Wales, UK(where Denry goes on vacation)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 25m(85 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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