French Leave (1930 film)

Not to be confused with French Leave (1937 film).
French Leave

Directed by Jack Raymond
Produced by Henry Defries
Sam Harrison
Written by Reginald Berkeley (play and screenplay)
W.P. Lipscomb
Starring Madeleine Carroll
Sydney Howard
Arthur Chesney
Cinematography Bernard Knowles
Production
company
D&H Productions
Distributed by Sterling Films
Release dates
21 August 1930 (London) (UK)
Running time
100 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

French Leave is a 1930 British comedy film directed by Jack Raymond and starring Madeleine Carroll, Sydney Howard and Arthur Chesney.[1] It was made at Elstree Studios.[2] It is based on a play by Reginald Berkeley, a "light comedy in three acts", set during the First World War.[3] It was remade in 1937 by Norman Lee.[4]

Plot

During World War I, Captain's wife Dorothy Glenister finds it hard being separated from her husband, so she travels to France to the village where he's stationed. Dorothy disguises herself as the daughter of a local, which leads to complications when she's suspected of being a German spy.

Cast

Critical reception

The New York Times called it "a moderately amusing British picturization of the stage farce, "French Leave," with the charming Madeleine Carroll... the photography is sometimes none too clear, but the voices are nicely recorded" ;[5] while more recently, TV Guide thought it a "lame comedy...Long and tedious at 60 minutes; the original British cut ran 100 minutes." [6]

References

  1. "French Leave (1930)".
  2. Wood p.69
  3. Wintour, Barry (25 April 2014). "Britain and the Great War, 1914-1918: A Subject Bibliography of Some Selected Aspects". Lulu.com via Google Books.
  4. "French Leave (1937)".
  5. http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9905E0DB1E39EE3ABC4F53DFB467838A629EDE
  6. "French Leave".

Bibliography

External links

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