May 24, 2012

Films

Tawny Pipit – 1944 | 81 mins | Comedy | B&W

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Plot Synopsis

Tawny Pipit

1944’s Tawny Pipit is a whimsical comedy gently poking fun at British officialdom and the eccentricities of village life. A convalescing WWII airman and his nurse discover a pair of rare tawny pipits, known to have bred only once before in England, nesting in a Cotswolds meadow. The nurse’s ornithologist uncle arrives to take charge and, afraid of having the valuable eggs stolen, villagers post a round-the-clock guard. But the threat of egg thieves is only part of the dilemma; soon army tanks on manoeuvres and farmers wishing to plough the land threaten the bird’s sanctuary. Finally, the Ministry of Agriculture has to be called in to save the birds.

Production Team

Bernard Miles: Director
Charles Saunders: Director
Alex Vetchinsky: Art Direction
Ray Sturgess: Cinematography
Eric Cross: Cinematography
Douglas Myers: Editing
Muir Mathieson: Music Direction
Noel Mewton-Wood: Original Music
Bernard Miles: Producer
Charles Saunders: Script

Cast

Bernard Miles: Col Barton-Barrington
Rosamund John: Hagel Broome
Niall MacGinnis: Jimmy Bancroft
Jean Gillie: Nancy Forester
Lucie Mannheim: Russian Sniper
Christopher Steele: Reverend Kingsley
Brefni O’Rorke: Uncle Arthur
George Carney: Whimbrel
Wylie Watson: Croaker



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