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IMDbPro

It's Never Too Late to Mend

  • 1937
  • 1h 10m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
302
YOUR RATING
It's Never Too Late to Mend (1937)
Drama

An evil prison administrator cruelly abuses the inmates at his prison, until one day the tables are turned.An evil prison administrator cruelly abuses the inmates at his prison, until one day the tables are turned.An evil prison administrator cruelly abuses the inmates at his prison, until one day the tables are turned.

  • Director
    • David MacDonald
  • Writers
    • H.F. Maltby
    • Charles Reade
  • Stars
    • Tod Slaughter
    • Jack Livesey
    • Marjorie Taylor
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    302
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David MacDonald
    • Writers
      • H.F. Maltby
      • Charles Reade
    • Stars
      • Tod Slaughter
      • Jack Livesey
      • Marjorie Taylor
    • 16User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos39

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    Top Cast13

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    Tod Slaughter
    Tod Slaughter
    • Squire John Meadows
    Jack Livesey
    Jack Livesey
    • Tom Robinson
    Marjorie Taylor
    • Susan Merton
    Ian Colin
    • George Fielding
    Lawrence Hanray
    Lawrence Hanray
    • Lawyer Crawley
    D.J. Williams
    • Farmer Merton
    Roy Russell
    • Rev. Mr. Eden
    John Singer
    • Matthew Josephs
    • (as Johnny Singer)
    Cecil Bevan
    • Prison Inspector
    • (uncredited)
    Leonard Sharp
    Leonard Sharp
    • Henry Bradshaw
    • (uncredited)
    Douglas Stewart
    • Prison Inspector
    • (uncredited)
    Mavis Villiers
    Mavis Villiers
    • Betty
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Vyvyan
    • Innkeeper
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • David MacDonald
    • Writers
      • H.F. Maltby
      • Charles Reade
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    5.9302
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    Featured reviews

    8chrismartonuk-1

    Tod has a whip-round

    ITS NEVER TO LATE TO MEND is the most traditional of Tod's revived melodramas. It has all the elements and archetypes we expect from the genre. Tod is his usual villainous Squire self. His often comical facial features are better suited to being bewhiskered and having a bushy moustache to twiddle menacingly. As ever, he has his lecherous eye on a virtuous local maiden - Susan, daughter of Farmer Merton. She seeks the penurious local tenant farmer George Fielding (Meadows, Fielding, a slimy solicitor who aid's Tod's schemes called Crawley - the names are not exactly subtle). Tod must be the only wealthy bastard in cinema who never attracts women! But after a failed attempt to convict George for poaching, the young man leaves the country to seek his fortune Down Under. The opening titles reveal Charles Reade's and Queen Victoria's roles in prison reform and it is in the scenes where Tod visits the local gaol in his capacity of Justice of the Peace that we get to enjoy the full magnitude of his hammy villainy. His inspection of the ranks of his "naughty children" and his mocking remarks are a sadistic joy and one can imagine the audience at the Elephant and Castle theatre chuckling along as he speaks. Black comedy is also present in the Uriah Heep-like performance of one convict who makes a great show of demonstrating his penitence but, we see later, has stolen something from the Governor's office. However, the treatment of the 15-year old convict is genuinely disturbing as is John Singer's anguished breakdown.

    The tension is diffused by the lack of a strong protagonist for the Squire. George Fielding is sidelined in Australia for the bulk of the narrative - returning only for the climax. The Prison Chaplain provides only token resistance to Tod's reign of terror at the gaol but appears like the 7th cavalry at the end. The main adversary is local poacher Tom Robinson - gallantly taking the blame instead of George for Tod's trumped-up poaching charge. Tom's decline from the jaunty, confident rogue of the opening scenes to a shell of his former self in prison is quite chilling, but the spiritual comfort the Chaplain lends him means a reversion to his old self.

    Tom thwarts Meadows' attempts to steal George's newfound fortune. As with MARIA MARTEN, Tod has an alarming tendency to go insane at the inopportune moments - usually while holding his enemies at gunpoint as occurs here at the climax His raving madness as he is led away is genuinely alarming and the closing shot is of him relentlessly repeating the films's title as he works away on the "wheel".
    6Red-Barracuda

    A more serious-minded Slaughter vehicle

    Never Too Late is a typical Tod Slaughter vehicle in some ways but is also certainly the most serious-minded of his films. In it, once again, Slaughter lusts after a woman young enough to be his daughter, while concocting up a dastardly scheme to take her fiancé out of the picture. This kind of specific plot-line underpinned the majority of Slaughter's other Victorian melodramas. Where this one deviates from the norm is that it also incorporates a plot thread that takes a withering look at the prison system in Britain of that time. It shows life in these prisons to be a succession of horrors, with the inmates treated appallingly and the governors acting immorally. It's this social awareness that is a little unusual for a Slaughter melodrama but it does quite effectively make its point about the unpleasantness of the system.

    Slaughter himself is once again very much the star draw though, here he plays a character called Squire John Meadows and it's a role that once again allows this great - now pretty obscure – actor to flex his acting chops. His style is the opposite of subtle and is hammy to the max. But it is difficult to play this over-the-top so well and it's a testament to Slaughter's abilities that his fully committed performances are so engaging to watch. In this one, it's perhaps his final moments that stand out the most, where, as he is dragged away by the authorities, he screams insanely at the young woman he has lusted after that her fiancé will leave her! It's a bizarre and manic display and a great way for his unhinged character to bow out of the film. On the whole, this is yet another example of why this great British actor should be rediscovered and reappraised.
    Michael_Elliott

    Good 'Ol Slaughter

    Never Too Late (1937)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Insane, over the top and sometimes hilarious Tod Slaughter movie. Slaughter plays a psychotic Justice of the Peace who falls in love with a farmer's daughter but she wants nothing to do with him. She's in love with another guy but Slaughter will go to all ends to make sure they don't marry. Slaughter has the nickname "The British Bela Lugosi" due to his over the top performances but I personally find this an insult to Lugosi and American horror films. Lugosi went over the top quite a bit but never in the way Slaughter does, which makes his films watchable but also hurts them. His over the top style kills the melodrama in the film but it helps the campy horror side. The highlight of the film has to be the prison torture stuff because it's just so damn funny due to Slaughter's wildness.
    7orsonwelles

    Underrated pre-Lean British classic

    This is an underrated portrait of the Victorian prison system and the chaplain who tried to change it. An evil squire(Tod Slaughter) sends an innocent man to the British version of Alcatraz in order to get his filthy mitts on a beautiful girl. The cinematography is what makes this film so memorable. The effective use of light and shadow to accentuate the misery and suffering of the inmates, many of which are victims of a corrupt system, foreshadows a style utilized in many venerable products of English postwar cinema such as David Lean's Oliver Twist(1948) Some modern critics have panned this and many other Tod Slaughter films due to the melodramatic, stagey acting. While films like The Demon Barber of Fleet Street(1936) barely hold up today, Never Too Late is the exception because it is well-acted and photographed and is relevant to the global problem of human rights abuses that in these supposedly progressive times has still to be wiped out. After viewing this, I can see why Queen Victoria passed so many prison reform bills after seeing this story done on stage.
    6planktonrules

    a silly film that is STILL a lot of fun.

    If you are looking for subtlety, then I suggest you look elsewhere. However, if you don't mind watching an uneven but enjoyably silly film, then "Never Too Late to Mend" is right up your alley! The film's plot is bizarrely entertaining and downright ridiculous at the same time! The film begins about the year 1840. Squire Meadows is intent on marrying Susan—the trouble is that she already loves another, George Fielding. So what is this good Justice of the Peace to do—he'll scheme, steal and even kill to have Susan! And, through most of the film he does just that. It's all VERY florid and silly but entertaining at the same time. Some of the most ludicrous of these scenes are in the prison that the Squire runs—which is like a house of horrors.

    The bottom line is that if you want a realistic or well made film, then this is not it. No, it's silly from start to finish but oddly satisfying. Worth seeing just because it's so bad and doesn't even try to be better!

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    Related interests

    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Featured in Doom Asylum (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      Symphony No. 1
      (uncredited)

      Music by Franz Schubert

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 1937 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Never Too Late to Mend
    • Filming locations
      • Sound City, Shepperton, Surrey, England, UK
    • Production company
      • George King Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 10m(70 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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