Английская Википедия:Give Us the Moon
Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use British English Шаблон:Italic title Шаблон:Infobox film
Give Us the Moon is a 1944 British comedy film directed and written by Val Guest and starring Vic Oliver, Margaret Lockwood and Peter Graves.[1][2]
Lockwood had just become a star with The Man in Grey and did the film because she did not want to be typecast as a villainess.
Plot
Made in 1943–44, the film is set in a future peacetime Britain, after the end of World War II. Peter Pyke, the son of a millionaire hotel owner, had been a RAF pilot during the war but, much to the frustration of his hard-working father, he does not want to work for a living, and idles his time away while living in his father's hotel (named "Eisenhower Hotel"). So when Peter stumbles across a group of people, mainly White Russian émigrés who call themselves “White Elephants” and refuse to work or be of any use to society, he eagerly accepts their invitation to join them.
Cast
- Margaret Lockwood as Nina
- Vic Oliver as Sascha
- Peter Graves as Peter
- Roland Culver as Ferdinand
- Frank Cellier as Pyke
- Eliot Makeham as Lunka
- George Relph as Otto
- Max Bacon as Jacobus
- Alan Keith as Raphael
- Jean Simmons as Heidi
- John Salew as Landlord
- Iris Lang as Tania
- Gibb McLaughlin as Marcel
- Irene Handl as Miss Haddock
Production
The film is based on the 1939 novel The Elephant is White, written by Caryl Brahms and her Russian émigré writing partner S. J. Simon, but the story was moved from Paris in the 1930s to London in the late 1940s. Brahms and Simon provided additional dialogue to director Val Guest's screenplay.
Val Guest said Lockwood "had been dying to do comedy and I had a big fight to get, even Ted, to get her to do" the film. "It was a great departure for her, it opened her up.... She had an enormous sense of fun, real lavatory laugh, raucous, and the ideal partner for her, and a real charmer, and I wrote him into every film I did as a juvenile lead was Peter Graves who had this great Niven like quality, in fact he looked like Niven in those days, great throwaway charm and sophistication, so I wrote him into all those movies."[3] Jean Simmons was cast in one of her first roles.[3]
The film came in under budget.[4]
Release
The film opened at the New Gallery cinema in London on 31 July 1944, less than two months after D-Day and almost a year before the war would end in Europe. Film reviewers at the time were not very impressed - The Times reviewer found it to be "a film which opens well [but] ends not with the bang of vigorous cinematic invention but the whimper of overworked dialogue".[5] - but more recently the film has been described by one reviewer as "one of the most delightful comedies ever made".[6] Phil Hardy's The Aurum Film Encyclopedia classed the film as a utopian science fiction film but also claimed that "Vic Olivier" was the hotelier.
Val Guest said "it wasn't a successful picture, perhaps too sophisticated for what they wanted, the whole idea of a club of people who didn't want to work, they became a club, a white elephant club, and were earning by their wits."[3]
References
External links
Шаблон:Val Guest Шаблон:Gainsborough Pictures
- ↑ Шаблон:Tcmdb title
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ 3,0 3,1 3,2 Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег
<ref>
; для сносокandy
не указан текст - ↑ The Times, 31 July 1944, page 8: New Films In London Linked 2017-05-12
- ↑ The Wonderful World of Cinema, May 19, 2016: Oh! But You MUST See “Give Us the Moon”! Linked 2017-05-12
- Английская Википедия
- 1944 films
- 1940s English-language films
- Films directed by Val Guest
- Gainsborough Pictures films
- British black-and-white films
- British comedy films
- 1944 comedy films
- Films set in London
- 1940s British films
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- Википедия
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