Fanny's father dies in a fight. Her family runs a brothel. Her real father is a politician. She falls for his advisor Harry. Lord Manderstoke's interference causes conflicts between classes.... Read allFanny's father dies in a fight. Her family runs a brothel. Her real father is a politician. She falls for his advisor Harry. Lord Manderstoke's interference causes conflicts between classes. Tragic events occur due to the Lord's schemes.Fanny's father dies in a fight. Her family runs a brothel. Her real father is a politician. She falls for his advisor Harry. Lord Manderstoke's interference causes conflicts between classes. Tragic events occur due to the Lord's schemes.
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Featured reviews
Romantic Realism
This movie's also a soap opera, with secret lives behind respectable facades, illicit affairs, illegitimacy, fights, murder, dueling, true love vs. Family duty, enough to keep you entertained.
You also get some good acting by Phyllis Calvert in the title role, Stuart Granger as the hero of the story and James Mason playing the role he plays so well, that of the villain. Who can forget him answering the question of the woman (Fanny's former employer and also her adulterous stepmother, played by Margaretta Scott) who threw away her comfortable life for him when she asks if he feels any love for her at all? He looks into her eyes, kisses her hand and says, "No." That's James, alright!
The ending is a bit hokey but what the heck?
This one's worth checking out!
Doesn't age well? I beg to differ.
Ironically, the viewers who air such views suffer from the very thing they accuse the movie of: being stuck in their own era. Perfect example, the reviewer who called this movie "stilted and rather tame." If you watch it on its terms, it is neither. Another began the review, "This is a story that doesn't age well," then proceeded to praise the presentation of the protagonist: "With every revelation, she has to make a choice about whether to live her life honestly or prudently." That is a timeless theme.
"Fanny by Gaslight" is admirable as cinema as well: finely paced and structured by director Anthony Asquith; beautifully shot by Arthur Crabtree (a Hitchcock protégée); and with sensitive portrayals by all the actors, even minor roles.
A highly enjoyable guilty pleasure.
Uncensored delight
Of course it is Phyllis Calvert as Fanny who dominates the film, ably supported by a well-chosen supporting cast. I much regret that my favorite contemporary British director, Ken Russell, was never able to realize his last major project -a new version of "Moll Flanders", but seeing this 1944 costume picture some 80 years after courtesy of YouTube makes up for it thanks to a very fine British print.
An old fashioned romance...and a very good one at that.
This film is a lovely story...very much like an old fashioned love story. This is NOT meant as an insult...such stories can be very satisfying if well written and the characters enjoyable...which they definitely are here.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was originally banned in the USA because it transgressed the Hays Purity Code.
- Quotes
Clive Seymour: Fanny. I don't know how to begin to tell you this. I promised your mother. William Hopwood was not your father.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: LONDON
1870
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Ultimate Film (2004)
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Details
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1





