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The Rat

Film still

The Rat - 1925 | 74 mins | Crime, Drama | B&W

The Production Team

Director: Graham Cutts.
Producer: Michael Balcon.
Script: Graham Cutts. (based on a play by Ivor Novello and Constance Collier)
Cinematography: Hal Young.
Art Direction: C.W. Arnold.

The Cast

Ivor Novello - Pierre Boucheron
Marie Ault - Mere Colline
Hugh Brook - Paul
Esme Fitzgibbons - Madeleine Sornay
Iris Grey - Rose
Isabel Jeans - Zelie de Chaumet
James Lindsay - Detective Caillard

Plot Synopsis

Ivor Novello redeemed his reputation with the play The Rat, which he co-wrote with actress Constance Collier. It is the story of Pierre Boucheron, the 'swaggering, ultra-romantic hero of the Gallic underworld'. According to his creators, Boucheron was 'a character without one redeeming feature in his make-up'.

The original screen adaptation of The Rat was Novello’s first film for Gainsborough. Directed with verve by Graham Cutts, it is full of fights, exhilarating chases (at one point, Boucheron disappears down a manhole to escape the police), and boasts its own sultry tango sequence, all too clearly based on Valentino's tango in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921). (To help his partner dance more easily, Boucheron rips her skirt at the hip.) Most of the action unfolds in the White Coffin, a demi-monde bar populated by Bohemians and ruffians. The story, which involves Boucheron seducing a wealthy, bored aristocrat whose jewels he covets, is far-fetched enough to accommodate Novello's louche, anti-naturalistic style without undue embarrassment. After all, Boucheron is more pantomime hero than fully hewn character.