Musical taken from J. B. Priestley's novel about three musicians joining together to save a failing concert party, the Dinky Doos.Musical taken from J. B. Priestley's novel about three musicians joining together to save a failing concert party, the Dinky Doos.Musical taken from J. B. Priestley's novel about three musicians joining together to save a failing concert party, the Dinky Doos.
Photos
Lawrence Hanray
- Mr. James Tarvin
- (as Laurence Hanray)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe final shots feature rare archive footage of the R.M.S. Empress of Britain leaving Southampton for Quebec. Launched in 1930 to promote transatlantic routes to Canada, rather than New York City, she was sunk by submarine U-32 on October 10, 1940 off the east coast of Ireland. At 42,348 gross tons, she was the largest liner sunk during World War II, and the largest ship ever sunk by a U-boat. Due to earlier attacks, she was under tow with only a skeleton crew, and there were no casualties.
- Quotes
Miss Elizabeth Trant: You know, I'm going to run this concert party.
Inigo Jollifant: Don't tell me?
Miss Elizabeth Trant: [Speaking of the café owner] That woman decided me. Do you think I'm crazy?
Inigo Jollifant: Mad as a hatter, heh, heh. But who cares? After all, we're all rogues and vagabonds together, aren't we?
- ConnectionsFeatured in Heroes of Comedy: Max Miller (1995)
Featured review
I always preferred this film to the book although Priestley was an accessible and clever writer his sub-Dickens style and standard left wing leanings (ie support of state capitalism and not socialism) put me off a little. And of course on a much more important if shallower level to me the 25 year old Jessie Matthews was the main thing in here!
Four separate people in provincial Britain are on the tramp to somewhere after leaving their homes, jobs etc to search for life and adventure. They all converge at Rawsley in the Midlands on a jolly pierrot troupe on its last legs called the Dinky Doos, join them and eventually turn their fortunes around as The Good Companions after it starts raining. There's an endless great British cast, most notably simple Jess Oakroyd from Bruddersford (surely Bradford/Huddersfield?) who was played by avuncular Edmund Gwenn with an OTT Yorkshire accent and talented Inigo Jollifant by angular John Geilgud with an OTT Cambridge accent. The rising star of the troupe Susie Dean was played by lovely Jessie Matthews who had two spellbinding songs, Three Wishes sung with Geilgud and a magically tear-struck Let Me Give My Happiness To You the money shots are her close ups during this! There was a fine orchestral accompaniment throughout and with only occasionally hokey lapses the production was superb. The solitary message is plain: working together to overcome adversity for a common purpose - even though the ending is altered from the book the various outcomes are the same.
Altogether a memorable film for the non-serious looking for innocuous entertainment from another world, the serious should stick to the book as Priestley's works are Art. Absolutely!
Four separate people in provincial Britain are on the tramp to somewhere after leaving their homes, jobs etc to search for life and adventure. They all converge at Rawsley in the Midlands on a jolly pierrot troupe on its last legs called the Dinky Doos, join them and eventually turn their fortunes around as The Good Companions after it starts raining. There's an endless great British cast, most notably simple Jess Oakroyd from Bruddersford (surely Bradford/Huddersfield?) who was played by avuncular Edmund Gwenn with an OTT Yorkshire accent and talented Inigo Jollifant by angular John Geilgud with an OTT Cambridge accent. The rising star of the troupe Susie Dean was played by lovely Jessie Matthews who had two spellbinding songs, Three Wishes sung with Geilgud and a magically tear-struck Let Me Give My Happiness To You the money shots are her close ups during this! There was a fine orchestral accompaniment throughout and with only occasionally hokey lapses the production was superb. The solitary message is plain: working together to overcome adversity for a common purpose - even though the ending is altered from the book the various outcomes are the same.
Altogether a memorable film for the non-serious looking for innocuous entertainment from another world, the serious should stick to the book as Priestley's works are Art. Absolutely!
- Spondonman
- Jul 28, 2007
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Spelet kan börja
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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