Set in the early 1900s, Denry Machin (Alec Guinness) is an impoverished young wheeler-dealer determined to be the master of his own destiny. After giving his exam results a slight ‘lift’, he immorally climbs his way up the employment and social ladder, charming everyone as he goes. He ends up as a successful loan shark riding aboard a horse and cart, affectionately known as ‘The Card’. Before long he’s running a pleasure boat, sponsoring the local football team, and Bursley’s youngest ever Mayor. His demeanour means that his love life is as full as his social calendar, but his comparative ineptitude with women causes him to remain bewitched by Ruth Earp (Glynis Johns), an impoverished piano teacher and tenant. With gold digger Ruth, the Countess of Chell (Valerie Hobson) and impoverished Nellie Cotterill (Petula Clark) the three women in Denry’s life – in a short time he’s married and has climbed to the top of the social ladder. —Britmovie.co.uk
Ronald Neame was the son of photographer/director Elwin Neame and the actress Ivy Close. He joined Elstree Studios in 1927 as a messenger and call boy, moved up to stills photographer, and was an assistant cameraman on Alfred Hitchcock’s Blackmail (1929), the first English sound film. He served as a camera operator in the early ‘30s, and was elevated to director of photography in 1934. His most important films as cinematographer were Pygmalion (1938), Major Barbara (1939), In Which We Serve (1942), and One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1942). In 1943, Neame formed a partnership with editor-turned-director David Lean and producer Anthony Havelock-Allan in Cineguild, an independent production company set up with support from England’s Rank Organisation, through which the David Lean movies This Happy Breed, Blithe Spirit, Brief Encounter, Great Expectations, Oliver Twist, and The Passionate Friends were made. Neame turned to directing in the late ‘40s with Take My Life (1947), and after… read more