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Lease of Life |
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Lease of Life - 1954 | 94mins | Drama | ColourThe Production TeamDirector: Charles
Frend. Producer: Michael Balcon. Associate Producer: Jack Rix. Script: Eric Ambler. Cinematography: Douglas Slocombe. Art Direction: Jim Morahan. Editing: Peter Tanner. Music: Alan Rawsthorne.. |
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The CastRobert Donat - Rev. William Thorne Kay Walsh - Mrs Thorne Adrienne Corri - Susan Thorne Denholm Elliot - Martin Blake Walter Fitzgerald - Dean Cyril Raymond - Headmaster Reginald Beckswith - Journalist Richard Wattis - Solicitor Frank Atkinson - Verger Frederick Piper - Jeweller |
Plot SynopsisCharles Frend's 1954 film took as its basis from a serious domestic subject. Lease of Life concerns a Yorkshire vicar given twelve months to live, and the effect this has on his faith and his family. Robert Donat played the central character with his usual care, overcoming the drawbacks of his theatrical technique by sheer strength of personality. Kay Walsh as his wife had to cope with a somewhat implausible part, as Eric Ambler's screenplay failed to supply sufficient motivation for her to misappropriate £100 left in the vicar's care, and Adrienne Corri, a sensitive and beautiful actress who had made an exotic debut in Jean Renoir's The River, seemed palpably miscast as the daughter who wants to take up a London piano scholarship. A more central weakness in the film is that a controversial sermon
which plays a crucial part in the plot is unremarkable even by the standards
of the day, and it is hard to see why, except for plot purposes, it
should have caused offence. But in spite of these reservations, Lease
of Life was a sensitively organised film, admirably sketching in the
routine of a North Country vicar's daily round in a rural parish, and
the EastmanColour photography by Douglas Slocombe succeeded in evoking
the pastoral English charm of the settings. Although by no means a film
to he ashamed of, Lease of Life lacked a quality that could have made
it, by virtue of its theme, distinguished. |
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