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Synopsis

Zestful adaptation of Mark Twain’s classic satirical short story. Ronald Neame‘s fluid direction is full of vigour and Geoffrey Unsworth’s attractive TechniColour cinematography wholly captures Victorian-era England.

London, 1900. Two old, eccentric, and extremely wealthy brothers, Oliver and Roderick Montpelier (Ronald Squire, Wilfred Hyde-White), draw a currency note for a million pounds from the Bank of England. They need it to settle an argument. One of them believes that such a note would be useless to any poverty-stricken man; the other believes that just by possessing it one could live like a lord. They decide to test their theories, and select a penniless young American seaman, Henry Adams (Gregory Peck), to keep the note intact for 1 month. Initially the plan is a great success, when Adams visits a café and produces the note to pay his bill; pandemonium sets in and he becomes regarded as an eccentric American millionaire.

Adams never has to spend a penny because his credit rating is so good and is soon living in a luxurious hotel suite, wearing expensive suits and mentioned in the Court Circular. No one asks that he pay bills, these are forwarded for later payment. A mischievous fellow hotel guest steals the note when Adams takes over his room, but later returns it when debt collectors line up demanding to see the note. He returns the note to the brothers and goes off to marry his fiancée (Jane Griffiths), his future assured. —Britmovie.co.uk

Director

Original

Ronald Neame

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

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9Aug11

It's almost like it could have been made in 1980s America.

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