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Trouble in the Glen

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
271
YOUR RATING
Trouble in the Glen (1954)
Comedy

Major Jim "Lance" Lansing, an American ex-pilot of the U.S. Air Corps, returns to Scotland after the war and finds much trouble in the glen where he settles because of the high-handed activi... Read allMajor Jim "Lance" Lansing, an American ex-pilot of the U.S. Air Corps, returns to Scotland after the war and finds much trouble in the glen where he settles because of the high-handed activities of the local laird, Sandy Mengues, a wealthy South American who, with his daughter Ma... Read allMajor Jim "Lance" Lansing, an American ex-pilot of the U.S. Air Corps, returns to Scotland after the war and finds much trouble in the glen where he settles because of the high-handed activities of the local laird, Sandy Mengues, a wealthy South American who, with his daughter Marissa, has returned to the land of his forefathers. Led by Lansing, the people eventually ... Read all

  • Director
    • Herbert Wilcox
  • Writers
    • Frank S. Nugent
    • Maurice Walsh
  • Stars
    • Margaret Lockwood
    • Orson Welles
    • Forrest Tucker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    271
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Herbert Wilcox
    • Writers
      • Frank S. Nugent
      • Maurice Walsh
    • Stars
      • Margaret Lockwood
      • Orson Welles
      • Forrest Tucker
    • 10User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos26

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Margaret Lockwood
    Margaret Lockwood
    • Marissa Mengues
    Orson Welles
    Orson Welles
    • Sanin Cejador y Mengues
    Forrest Tucker
    Forrest Tucker
    • Maj. Jim 'Lance' Lansing
    Victor McLaglen
    Victor McLaglen
    • Parlan MacFarr
    John McCallum
    John McCallum
    • Malcolm MacFarr
    Eddie Byrne
    Eddie Byrne
    • Dinny Sullivan
    Archie Duncan
    Archie Duncan
    • Nolly Dukes
    Gudrun Ure
    Gudrun Ure
    • Dandy Dinmont
    • (as Ann Gudrun)
    Moultrie Kelsall
    Moultrie Kelsall
    • Luke Carnoch
    Maggie McCourt
    • Alsuin
    • (as Margaret McCourt)
    Alex McCrindle
    Alex McCrindle
    • Keegan
    Mary Mackenzie
    • Kate Carnoch
    Peter Sinclair
    • Angus - the Ghillie
    Jack Watling
    Jack Watling
    • Sammy Weller
    Janet Barrow
    • Bishop's Wife
    • (uncredited)
    Madge Brindley
    Madge Brindley
    • Old Tinker Woman
    • (uncredited)
    Jimmy Cains
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    Albert Chevalier
    • Bishop
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Herbert Wilcox
    • Writers
      • Frank S. Nugent
      • Maurice Walsh
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    5.3271
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    Featured reviews

    6bkoganbing

    The Touch Of Ford

    To understand why Trouble In the Glen was brought to the screen at all is to remember this is also the studio that produced The Quiet Man which was taken from another Maurice Walsh story.

    John Ford wanted to do the film for years and went with Republic Pictures because he didn't have to pay for John Wayne's services. Still the penny pinching founder and head of Republic, Herbert J. Yates drove Ford crazy with his budget cutting here and there. It was a miracle the film was made at all and on location.

    So when The Quiet Man becomes a big artistic and commercial triumph, now Yates must be thinking himself a genius so why not assemble the same team, but without that troublesome John Ford. Go to Herbert Wilcox to produce and direct and we can even get Orson Welles who'll do just about anything to finance his projects. Since we'd now have to pay John Wayne a big salary since he's no longer under contract to Columbia, we'll get a second line actor like Forrest Tucker for his role.

    I can see all the wheels turning in Mr. Yates's mind as he probably plunged enthusiastically into Trouble in the Glen which can be described as a Scottish version of The Quiet Man. The problem is that it really did need the touch of John Ford to make it a great film.

    As it is it's not a bad film, Orson Welles and Victor McLaglen are at their scene stealing best. Forrest Tucker and Margaret Lockwood who is Welles's daughter are an attractive pair of romantic leads. The film is about an heir to a Scottish estate returning from South America and taking over the family place, but then getting into a quarrel with the locals and cutting them off from the use of a road running through his property. Forrest Tucker is like John Wayne, the stranger from America who has ties to the place also that we don't really learn about until almost the end of the film.

    Trouble in the Glen has the same kind of beautiful location cinematography that The Quiet Man has. But it really needed someone like John Ford at the helm.
    Oct

    Citizen Laird Meets a Quiet Man

    Republic Pictures's biggest hit was "The Quiet Man", John Ford's Irish blarneyfest. Two years later its writer, Frank S Nugent, tried to work that magic on the Scottish Highlands. But "Trouble in the Glen" only had the prolific hack Herbert Wilcox at the helm, and his winning streak with Anna Neagle had gone phfft.

    Lensed in sludgy brown Trucolor, "Trouble in the Glen" plays like an Ealing comedy sans asperity, fading quickly into the Celtic twilight from which Brigadoon rises once a century. Orson Welles is a returning laird whose years in South America presumably explain his swarthy skin tones if not his blue-grey bouffant wig. Welles was already a podgy Hollywood outcast wandering the European co-production badlands, scrounging, spending and sometimes shooting: he was between "Othello" and "Mr Arkadin" at this juncture. He relies on his magnificent organ voice and eyes that gleam in the gloom (as in "Jane Eyre") to sustain his turn as a tyrant, at odds both with his glenfolk tenantry and with a roving gang of tinkers. The head "tink" is the terminally fuddled Victor McLaglen, another Ford veteran.

    Stuffing casts with faded US talent to win a Stateside circuit release was standard operating procedure for the struggling Britflick biz of the early 1950s. Besides Citizen Kane and Sgt Quincannon, "Trouble in the Glen" toplines the colourless Forrest Tucker. Like John Wayne in "The Quiet Man", Nugent makes him a Yank on a sentimental journey. Like Wayne, he banters or scraps with the locals and tames a spirited filly: Maggie Lockwood, the laird's daughter, in reality four years older than Orson! Her cut-glass accent matches neither Welles's nor the area's Scotch English. There is also a winsome, bedridden little girl for Tucker to set on her feet.

    The subplot concerns unjust suspicions that the tinkers stole a deer. Has there ever been a movie in which gypsies or traveling people actually did the crimes of which they are accused?
    5MovieAddict2016

    A poor film

    U.S. Air Corps Major Lance Lansing (Forrest Tucker) returns to Scotland after WWII to a small glen, where he makes his home due to the laird, Sanin Mengues (Orson Welles), a wealthy South American who's returned to his ancestors' land with his daughter, Marilla (Margaret Lockwood).

    Everyone in the glen tries to persuade Mengues to bring piece to their homes, only to have Lansing and Parlan (Victor McLaglen), the Mengues foreman, get in a fight together.

    This was listed in my UK TV schedule as a good film and they have it a three-star rating. They made it sound like it was a film about Orson Welles visiting Scotland after the war, which is far from the actual plot.

    Welles really chews up the scenery - in a bad way. He's funny but also quite annoying and seems out of place. Lockwood is given little to do but be pretty. Tucker is so-so.

    I was disappointed because I was expecting something entertaining and "classy," whereas instead I got a boring, dull and sappy "nice" movie without any real positive traits.

    It's not terrible, it's just not very good.
    6ukmike2000-760-188409

    Not Orson's finest

    Quite entertaining in a 1950's style.

    Classed a comedy but not a rib-tickler.

    Orson plays the Laird, a wealthy South American. Of course he comes over as .......Orson Welles.

    There is a smattering of bagpipes, and the usual strained Scots accents, irritating or part of the charm - depending on your views. Mischief, poaching, local rivalries, an invalid girl and Margaret Lockwood all thrown into the mix. (Ms Lockwood looking particularly vivacious.)

    Location Note: As Forrest Tucker arrives in the "Scottish" village in an early scene, the live location is actually in front of the Church House Inn, in Harberton, near Totnes, South Devon.
    ptb-8

    The Loud Man?

    Made with massive profits as a sort of sequel to Republic's mega hit of 1952 THE QUIET MAN, this easy to love piece of B pic blarney shows just how stupendously successful THE QUIET MAN actually was. A lot of very profitable films in the UK ran into a law that saw the rentals marooned there and not able to be returned to the USA, in fact Disney and MGM made many films in the UK to soak up the rentals held in a bank trust there by this law. For once in it's budget constricted life the Kingdomof Repubic made soooo much money there they could'nt get it all home and were basically happily forced to make another version of THE QUIET MAN which I am sure suited them fine anyway. Obviously not as big nor as successful as that film, TROUBLE IN THE GLEN was the sort of charming rustic family film made regularly in the UK anyway. GEORDIE is a good example. TROUBLE has a great cast and a few surprises (such as Orson Welles) to add prestige..or maybe he was a Republic favourite after MACBETH. Anyway, TROUBLE is quaint robust fun and just like a hybrid of THE QUIET MAN and their own truly superb Americana drama made in 1956 COME NEXT SPRING and.... LISBON.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Serving as an uncredited assisting cinematographer on this film was Gilbert Taylor, 23 years later the director of photography for Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977). Also, the featured cast includes both Alex McCrindle and Eddie Byrne who in the iconic blockbuster would respectively play General Dodonna and General Willard, two rebel leaders on the Yavin moon base during the battle against the first Death Star. Dodonna is the one who greets Princess Leia upon her arrival, and Willard is the one detailing the attack to the fighter pilots, ending his talk with the first time anyone in the series ever said "May the Force be with you."
    • Connections
      Featured in Scotland on Screen (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Song of the Broken Clan
      (uncredited)

      Music and Lyrics by Anthony Collins

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 3, 1954 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Envis som synden
    • Filming locations
      • High Canons, Buckettsland Lane, Well End, Hertfordshire, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Herbert Wilcox Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)

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