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Red Ensign |
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Red Ensign - 1934 | 89mins | Drama | B&WThe Production TeamDirector: Michael
Powell. Producer: Jerome Jackson. Executive Producer: Michael Balcon. Script: Jerome Jackson, L. du Garde Peach and Michael Powell. Cinematography: Leslie Rowson. Editing: Geoffrey Barkas. Art Direction: Alfred Junge. Costume Designer: Gordon Conway. Sound: A. Birch. |
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The CastLeslie Banks
- David Barr Carol Goodner - June MacKinnon Frank Vosper - Lord Dean Alfred Drayton - Manning Donald Calthrop - MacLeod Allan Jeayes - Emerson Campbell Gullan - Hannay Percy Parsons - Casey John Laurie - Wages accountant |
Plot SynopsisDavid Barr is a ship builder aiming to launch a new
type of vessel. When the board of directors back out of financing the
project, Barr puts forward his own money but is later caught forging
his chairman's signature on a cheque and is sent to gaol. On his release,
the ship is finally launched and he is reunited with his fiancée
June who stood by him.
A third film in quick succession starring Leslie Banks, again with an original screenplay by Powell and Jackson based on a newspaper article, Red Ensign was more fondly recalled by Powell than many of his works of this period. Set in a Clyde shipyard, Powell surrounded his star with authentic Scottish actors and proudly boasted of 'the elaborate staging of the shipyard, the big, sweeping exteriors (filmed on location in Glasgow), the high standard of the performances and the sincerity of the actors, the overall seriousness of my approach to directing our story', the effect of which was that 'people just didn't know what to make of (it).' Released on home video in 1992, Red Ensign was loosely remade by British National in 1943 as The Shipbuilders, directed by John Baxter and starring Clive Brook. |
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