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A Yank at Oxford

  • 1938
  • Approved
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Maureen O'Sullivan and Robert Taylor in A Yank at Oxford (1938)
A brash young American aristocrat attending Oxford University gets a chance to prove himself and win the heart of his antagonist's sister.
Play trailer3:36
1 Video
60 Photos
DramaRomanceSport

A brash young American aristocrat attending Oxford University gets a chance to prove himself and win the heart of his antagonist's sister.A brash young American aristocrat attending Oxford University gets a chance to prove himself and win the heart of his antagonist's sister.A brash young American aristocrat attending Oxford University gets a chance to prove himself and win the heart of his antagonist's sister.

  • Director
    • Jack Conway
  • Writers
    • Malcolm Stuart Boylan
    • Walter Ferris
    • George Oppenheimer
  • Stars
    • Robert Taylor
    • Vivien Leigh
    • Lionel Barrymore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Conway
    • Writers
      • Malcolm Stuart Boylan
      • Walter Ferris
      • George Oppenheimer
    • Stars
      • Robert Taylor
      • Vivien Leigh
      • Lionel Barrymore
    • 23User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Videos1

    Original Trailer
    Trailer 3:36
    Original Trailer

    Photos60

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    Top cast39

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    Robert Taylor
    Robert Taylor
    • Lee Sheridan
    Vivien Leigh
    Vivien Leigh
    • Elsa Craddock
    Lionel Barrymore
    Lionel Barrymore
    • Dan Sheridan
    Maureen O'Sullivan
    Maureen O'Sullivan
    • Molly Beaumont
    Edmund Gwenn
    Edmund Gwenn
    • Dean of Cardinal
    Griffith Jones
    Griffith Jones
    • Paul Beaumont
    C.V. France
    C.V. France
    • Dean Snodgrass
    Edward Rigby
    Edward Rigby
    • Scatters
    Morton Selten
    Morton Selten
    • Cecil Davidson, Esq.
    Claude Gillingwater
    Claude Gillingwater
    • Ben Dalton
    Tully Marshall
    Tully Marshall
    • Cephas
    Walter Kingsford
    Walter Kingsford
    • Dean Williams
    Robert Coote
    Robert Coote
    • Wavertree
    Peter Croft
    • Ramsey
    Noel Howlett
    Noel Howlett
    • Tom Craddock
    Edmund Breon
    Edmund Breon
    • Captain Wavertree
    Derek Aylward
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    William Bailey
    William Bailey
    • Racetrack Timekeeper
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jack Conway
    • Writers
      • Malcolm Stuart Boylan
      • Walter Ferris
      • George Oppenheimer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.61.4K
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    Featured reviews

    6HotToastyRag

    Taylor fans, check this out

    When all-star athlete Robert Taylor gets accepted to go to Oxford, his entire small American town is extremely proud of him. His newspaper owner father Lionel Barrymore prints glorious articles, and he gets a great sendoff when he sails off the continent. In England, he gets an entirely different welcome. His classmates tease and haze him, he makes a bad impression with the dean, Edmund Gwenn, and he gets entangled in a love affair with a married woman.

    Vivien Leigh didn't seem to get the memo that she was in a different movie from Gone With the Wind. She played every line and expression as if she were Scarlett O'Hara, and her character wasn't much different, either. In this movie, she plays an unsatisfied wife who makes a sport out of seducing young college boys. She flirts constantly, and the only saving grace is that she's not the leading lady in this movie. Maureen O'Sullivan, who would have been equally as good - if not better - as Scarlett O'Hara, is Robert Taylor's real love interest.

    I've never really been a Robert Taylor fan, but this was a fun movie of his to watch. He shows off his athletic prowess in running, rowing, and cycling. What an athlete! If you've got a crush on him, you've got to check him - I mean, this movie, out.
    10Ron Oliver

    Robert Taylor Invades Merrie Old England

    A skilled, albeit highly egocentric young athlete becomes A YANK AT OXFORD when he accepts a scholarship to the English university. Romance and various personal problems help punch a hole through his self-conceit.

    Robert Taylor gets to show-off his athletic prowess (running, rowing) in this pleasant, lightweight film. Produced by MGM's British division, it is an enjoyable look at a privileged world about to be changed forever by World War Two.

    Taylor does a fine job in the title role, but he is also aided immensely by excellent co-stars from both sides of the Atlantic: Lionel Barrymore, giving another acting lesson as Taylor's peppery, loyal father; lovable Edmund Gwenn, as the long-suffering Dean of (fictional) Cardinal College, Oxford; beautiful Maureen O'Sullivan, as Taylor's English girlfriend; and enchanting Vivien Leigh, one year before her tremendous success in GONE WITH THE WIND, as a philandering young wife with an eye for male students.

    Equally impressive is a gaggle of less well known British actors: stalwart Griffith Jones, as Taylor's main college rival; Robert Coote, as a cheery student forever looking for new ways to get sent down; Walter Kingsford, as a benevolent dean; ancient C. V. France as a delightfully forgetful academician; and cuddly Edward Rigby as Taylor's elderly attendant.

    Claude Gillingwater appears as Barrymore's caustic banker. Movie mavens will recognize Ethel Griffies as an Oxford proctor.
    8neithernor2000

    The Mocking of a Long Distance Runner

    In 1938, when the Great Depression had ended and a World War was about to begin, it was easy for elitist British college students to make fun of a transplanted American athlete. But the romantic counterpoint to the culture clash works very well thanks to the great chemistry between Robert Taylor and Maureen O'Sullivan.

    A memorable quote from this enjoyable period piece needs to be acknowledged. In a morning after scene, Robert Taylor says to Maureen O'Sullivan: "Don't wipe the sleep from your eyes. It's a beautiful sleep." The scriptwriter responsible for that line was F. Scott Fitzgerald.
    8bkoganbing

    An Adjustment Of Image.

    After his early days at MGM when Robert Taylor was marketed as a modern romance magazine cover, it was perceived by Louis B. Mayer that Taylor needed an adjustment of image to expand his casting potential. It was perceived by Taylor as well who was not happy with some of the snide powder puff comments he was getting in some quarters.

    Accordingly A Yank At Oxford was an original screenplay written specifically for him in mind. As Taylor in real life was an athletic sort, the casting was no stretch that way.

    In his part as an American on scholarship to Oxford Taylor was going into Tyrone Power's territory of the hero/heel. Taylor was more often a nice guy 100% in this stage of his career. But he does very well with the part.

    Arriving at Cardinal College in Oxford, Taylor doesn't do much for Anglo-American relations with his braggadocious ways. He makes particular enemies with three classmates, Griffith Jones, Robert Coote, and Peter Croft. But he also backs his brag up and when he meets Maureen O'Sullivan who is Jones's sister who planes out the rougher side of Taylor.

    The film was produced by MGM and shot over in the United Kingdom with the real Oxford locations used. Take a look at the writing credits of this film. I'm quite flabbergasted that so many talented hands went into the screenplay. Usually that means a muddled mess, but it all works here.

    Several of the players had only worked in British cinema before and A Yank At Oxford was America's first look at a lot of them. Most importantly Vivien Leigh. She had a really interesting part as the wife of a bookstore owner. Her husband is a good deal older than her and she amuses herself with her pick of the young Oxford students. She sets her cap at one point for both Taylor and Jones and it's on her flirtatious ways that the plot hinges. Her naughty flirt in this film may very well have made one David O. Selznick cast her as the ultimate young flirt in Gone With The Wind.

    A Yank At Oxford was remade almost 50 years later as Oxford Blues with Rob Lowe in the lead. As an actor in his Brat Pack days, Lowe was cast in a lot of parts that would have gone to a Robert Taylor or Tyrone Power. Still A Yank At Oxford became one of Robert Taylor's most popular roles with the general public and with his enduring legion of fans.
    7AlsExGal

    It would have been practically treasonous to make this same movie 3 years later

    This film is a humorous examination of the differences between American and British college youth just prior to WWII with an American take on the situation. Robert Taylor plays Lee Sheridan, an American who comes to Oxford to study and also to run track and field. He runs into difficulty with everything from the English driving on "the wrong side of the road" to the British valuing tradition and teamwork over rugged individualism. Not helping matters is that Lee is a swaggering over-confident albeit talented braggart by the standards of any nation. To complicate matters, Lee's chief rival on the track team is the brother of a girl (Maureen O'Sullivan) in whom Lee is romantically interested.

    To make such an "American fish in British waters" film just three years later after the war broke out and the US and England were allies would have been practically a precode in the eyes of the censors, even though cultural differences are always a problem, especially where boisterous youths are involved. It's an enjoyable little film featuring a young Vivien Leigh as she was waiting to become Scarlett O'Hara, and some fine character actor work from Edmund Gwenn as a dean who is still lovable as always even though he is openly contemptuous of Lee whose forward ways leave him shocked and flustered.

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    Sport

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      In a scene shortly after arriving at Oxford, Sheridan meets with his assigned tutor, who asks him, "What are you reading?" by which he means what is your field of study. Sheridan, confused, replies, "Well, I am reading 'Gone With The Wind', but I am only halfway through it." Vivien Leigh, also in this movie, would of course portray Scarlett in Gone with the Wind (1939) which was released the year after this movie. Reportedly, it was known as early as 1937 from a David O. Selznick memo that Leigh had secured the role.
    • Quotes

      Elsa Craddock: [In the Dean's office, confessing] Oh Marmaduke, how can you? We were foolish, but it was only a flirtation.

      Wavertree: [confused] I'm awfully sorry sir, but I'm afraid this is all rather beyond me...

      Dean of Cardinal: [impatiently] Now don't lie to me sir, Mrs. Craddock has freely confessed everything!

      Wavertree: Everything?

      Dean of Cardinal: Everything!

      Elsa Craddock: Everything!

      Wavertree: [catching on] Oh... oh, she has! Oh... heh heh... oh, whoo! What a relief, sir! Now I need lie no more!

      Dean of Cardinal: Ah, then you admit it!

      Wavertree: Yes, rah-ther sir! Every time! I'd have told you in the first place sir, but we Wavertrees always protect the lady in the case!

      Elsa Craddock: [somewhat sarcastic] He has a natural power over women. Try to use it for good, Marmaduke.

    • Connections
      Featured in Vivien Leigh: Scarlett and Beyond (1990)
    • Soundtracks
      Academic Festival Overture Op. 80
      (1880) (uncredited)

      Written by Johannes Brahms

      Played as background for the first scene showing the college sign

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 18, 1938 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • En yankee i Oxford
    • Filming locations
      • Denham Studios, Denham, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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