His Excellency (1952 film)

His Excellency
Directed by Robert Hamer
Produced by Michael Truman
Written by Robert Hamer (screenplay)
W. P. Lipscomb (script contribution)
Adrian Alington (novel) (uncredited)
Based on a play by Dorothy Christie & Campbell Christie
Starring Eric Portman
Cecil Parker
Helen Cherry
Music by Ernest Irving
Cinematography Douglas Slocombe
Edited by Seth Holt
Distributed by Ealing Studios
Release dates
January 1952 (UK)
Running time
82 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

His Excellency is a 1952 British comedy film directed by Robert Hamer and starring Eric Portman, Cecil Parker, Helen Cherry. It follows a blunt Yorkshireman and former trade union leader, who is sent to take over as Governor of a British-ruled island in the Mediterranean.[1]

Cast

Critical reception

Britmovie quoted George Perry from his book Forever Ealing, "His Excellency retains a stagebound atmosphere. It’s other great fault lies in the way it wastes the theme’s potential in a glib and artificial treatment. At times the film is like an Ealing comedy that got away, with familiar stereotypes such as the ladies who form the clientele of the ‘Old Tea Shoppe’, and the governor’s staff. The governor himself tends towards caricature, retaining a shirt sleeves and braces attitude akin to a trade-union rabble rouser long after he should have made a transition to the respectability demanded by his appointment... Robert Hamer returned to Ealing specially to make this film, but compared with the promise of his earlier work it is disappointing and marks the beginning of his decline." [2]

References

External links

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