A Cockney family. (3 sisters, a brother-in-law and a niece) inherit a ramshackle Devon farm. The rest of the family doesn't want to leave London, but one of the male relatives insists and of... Read allA Cockney family. (3 sisters, a brother-in-law and a niece) inherit a ramshackle Devon farm. The rest of the family doesn't want to leave London, but one of the male relatives insists and off they go to face the unknown.A Cockney family. (3 sisters, a brother-in-law and a niece) inherit a ramshackle Devon farm. The rest of the family doesn't want to leave London, but one of the male relatives insists and off they go to face the unknown.
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This is a Comedy movie. Comedy movies are my least favourite. The movie is about the wrangles of a family when the last Will & testimony of a deceased family member is misplaced in the home. This is not about forging ahead with 'mind over matter'.
As a standalone movie in its own right, it's rubbish & doesn't even deserve 1/10 star. However, it gets 3/10 Stars from me because I think this movie would do better as a pop-up recommendation on websites that 'do' Wills.
Distributing 'propaganda', also springs to my mind. I think this would make a very good propaganda movie that highlights the importance of making a 'Will' & even more importantly leaving that 'Will' in the capable hands of a legal beaver - (the rodent kind) - or a legal maverick such as a solicitor/lawyer etc.
As a standalone movie in its own right, it's rubbish & doesn't even deserve 1/10 star. However, it gets 3/10 Stars from me because I think this movie would do better as a pop-up recommendation on websites that 'do' Wills.
Distributing 'propaganda', also springs to my mind. I think this would make a very good propaganda movie that highlights the importance of making a 'Will' & even more importantly leaving that 'Will' in the capable hands of a legal beaver - (the rodent kind) - or a legal maverick such as a solicitor/lawyer etc.
Cole's Flash Harry (of St Trinian's) is often seen as the forerunner for his iconic Arfur Daley character, but his role here seems even more like him; the quick banter, the sly penny-pinching with a wink etc.
Generally, the film feels like a stage play. Once the 'townies go rural' joke has been established (rocky ride to the farm, sleep on straw beds etc) the rest of it mainly concerns who owns the right to the place. It's 3 against 1 in the family as they all want to sell it and Leslie Dwyer wants to stay there, farm and escape life in the big smoke. It's a good central role for him and a sweet bit of romance with long-term housekeeper Kathleen Harrison. Dandy Nichols is reliably enjoyable and watch for a young Edward Woodward - i actually didn't realise it was him until the end credits!
Overall, it's no classic Ealing satire or Will Hay romp and despite characters being perhaps a little obvious and the script over-wordy - it is still quite a cosy kind of film.
Generally, the film feels like a stage play. Once the 'townies go rural' joke has been established (rocky ride to the farm, sleep on straw beds etc) the rest of it mainly concerns who owns the right to the place. It's 3 against 1 in the family as they all want to sell it and Leslie Dwyer wants to stay there, farm and escape life in the big smoke. It's a good central role for him and a sweet bit of romance with long-term housekeeper Kathleen Harrison. Dandy Nichols is reliably enjoyable and watch for a young Edward Woodward - i actually didn't realise it was him until the end credits!
Overall, it's no classic Ealing satire or Will Hay romp and despite characters being perhaps a little obvious and the script over-wordy - it is still quite a cosy kind of film.
Adapted by R.F.Delderfield from his own stage farce and directed without much enthusiasm by Vernon Sewell. Despite quite a few shots of a wintry-looking Devon it still manages to feel studio-bound.
Full of vaguely naughty references to things like illegitimacy, chamber pots and the 'News of the World'. Interest is provided amidst a cast of veterans by two newcomers in their twenties: Edward Woodward (leaner and with a a higher hairline than he had twenty years later) repeating his stage role, and a caustic young Thelma Ruby, now at 95 the final surviving member of the cast.
Full of vaguely naughty references to things like illegitimacy, chamber pots and the 'News of the World'. Interest is provided amidst a cast of veterans by two newcomers in their twenties: Edward Woodward (leaner and with a a higher hairline than he had twenty years later) repeating his stage role, and a caustic young Thelma Ruby, now at 95 the final surviving member of the cast.
I suppose most of us, if told we had inherited something, would find our eyes light up. Not so much this family of East London Cockneys who have inherited a run-down old farm in Devon after it's owner had a rather terminal encounter with a land mine. It is about as far away from London as they can go without a passport (assuming any of them actually had one). Upon arrival, they discover it's pretty much a dump and they are keen to just be rid of the place - and, fortunately, there are no shortage of folks wanting to obtain the land. Snag is, one of the family - "Alfie" (Leslie Dwyer) decides that he is tired of working in a bathhouse, and his niece "June" (Ann Hanslip) who is equally fed up with the relentless drudge of 1950s London life decides to help him make a go of the enterprise. What now ensues are a series of enjoyable escapades as they are, quite literally, fleeced by the locals, the ever pervasive Ministry and are soon ruing the day they ever saw the place. It is one of these gently internecine dramas, with everyone trying to pull a flanker before an ending that is as inevitable as it is enjoyable. It's maybe its a bit too basic, this - charming, yes - but the script and characterisations are little better than adaptations that might have worked (or, maybe did) better on the wireless. Still, it is quite a fun tale that raises a smile and makes you rethink that expression about gift horses.
This film has no connection with the Will Hay film, WHERE THERE'S A WILL (1936). This is an amusing fifties British comedy, for those who like such things, and the exteriors were really shot on a run-down, scruffy farm, not just in a studio. The story concerns the inheritance of a farm by the relatives of a childless farmer who apparently dies intestate. The relatives are all London cockneys, and there are numerous jokes and sight gags (endlessly tromping through mud and stroking pigs) about how ill at ease they are in a farmyard setting. The deceased farmer's housekeeper is charmingly played in a fey manner by Kathleen Harrison. She has lived there for 25 years and had expected to inherit the place herself, but as no will can be found, she soldiers on as the housekeeper for the new and rowdy incomers. Later on, the will is found is an unexpected place. However, I will not spoil the story by explaining all the ins and outs, and how they are all surprisingly and unexpectedly resolved. This is a very light film, the humour is gentle and slow, and there are no Hollywood-style wisecracks, nor is there much pace. It is mildly amusing, not riotously funny. Those who are interested in knowing more about fifties Britain can always profit by seeing such films as these, hearing the topical subjects of the day mentioned in passing, seeing somebody make her way to the outhouse with a lamp in her hand, understanding how few comforts there were at the time and how little anyone expected any, and gathering from the behaviour of the characters what things tended to be like then, allowing of course for all the exaggerations necessary for a film comedy. The film was directed by Vernon Sewell, who was not noted for anything in particular, though he directed 39 films between 1933 and 1972. If this film drags a bit and does not seem to be written for the screen, that is because it was not written for the screen. It is based on a play by R. F. Delderfield (1912-1972), who adapted it for the screen himself, but not very well, so that it is rather stagey and you can imagine a proscenium just out of shot. Delderfield is best known for his Horseman Trilogy of novels, the initial parts of which, dealing with the period ending in 1919, were made into a 13-part TV series in 1978 entitled A HORSEMAN RIDING BY, of which I have an old video and I expect I will watch and review it one of these days. (The latter part of that trilogy was never filmed.) This film contains the first screen performance by the actor Edward Woodward (1930-2009), who later rose to prominence and appeared in 99 films. Leslie Dwyer (1906-1986) is the amusing and engaging lead, and he eventually appeared in 120 films. Hence, many favourites of future British films and TV series, including Dandy Nichols, are to be found in this sleepy offering which is suitable for a rainy afternoon by the fire, for those of a homey disposition who might be inclined to have a full teapot nearby snuggling under its cosy and a slice of homemade Victoria Sponge cake ready to hand.
Did you know
- TriviaThe first film of Edward Woodward.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits listed on removable credit cards.
- ConnectionsRemake of Follow the Plough (1953)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Da li postoji testament
- Filming locations
- Staverton Bridge Station, Dart Valley Railway, Devon, England, UK(Family arrive in Devon.)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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