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40 out of 40 people found the following review useful:
Small is beautiful, 15 September 1999
Author:
Dibyaduti Purkayastha (tipup@hotmail.com) from New Delhi, India
What hits you first about LHM is its smallness. It is a small film (78 min)
made with a small budget about some small people. But their smallness
doesn't stop them from dreaming the impossibly big - rob the Bank of
England! In fact it is this very smallness & unobtrusiveness that gives Alec
Guinness & Stanley Holloway - bank clerk & artist respectively - their
chance.
The film, told in an intelligent flashback, is divided into 3 segments.
First is the plotting. A mild mannered bank clerk meets a minor artist. Both
want to get out of their seedy Lavender Hill boarding house & nondescript
existance. Both look past their glory days. Yet together they have the
opportunity to pull off a brilliant crime.
Then comes the heist. A surprisingly simple operation perfectly (almost!)
executed. Finally the escape - getting the gold outside the country into the
'continental blackmarket'. Alas, the movie being made in the good old days
when crime didn't pay, our heroes must suffer. But by then they have given
us enough joy & adventure for us to forgive their one tragic
slip.
This is definitely one of the best comedies Ealing studios made in the '50s
(my other favourite is the vastly underrated 'Hue & Cry' where Alistair Sim
gives a typical quirky performance & the tipsy 'Whiskey Galore'). Holloway &
Guinness acted in many of them. They usually played very stiff upper British
lip polite, eccentric, but excitable characters. In this movie they decide
they are familiar enough to ask each other their first names only after they
have robbed a bank together! When Holloway realises they can pull it off,
his face is hidden in the shadows as he slowly tells Guinness, 'Thank God
Holland, we are both honest men' - a line which I think summarises the
entire movie.
The reason this movie is so amusing even today is that it is very tightly
scripted (Tibby Clark won an Oscar for his effort) & brilliantly realised by
the ensemble cast. As far as caper films go this has half the gadgetry of
'Entrapment' but twice the fun.
This is the 3rd time I am seeing this movie & I enjoyed it as much as I did
the first time. Please see this one!
33 out of 34 people found the following review useful:
Brilliant Ealing Comedy, 19 July 2004
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Author:
The_Void from Beverley Hills, England
Ealing studios are famous for making very dry and witty comedies; they're
probably most famous for the excellent 'Kind Hearts and Coronets' and darkly
comic 'The Ladykillers', but The Lavender Hill Mob, although not as good as
the other two, is definitely worth a mention.
The Lavender Hill Mob is about a bank clerk (Alec Guinness) that, with the
aid of his friend Alfred Pendlebury (Stanley Holloway), a man that makes
paperweights in the shape of the Eiffel tower, has an ingenious idea of how
to rob his own bank. The two realise that the bank cannot be robbed by just
them, so they set a trap to catch a couple of criminals, and once they've
recruited them; The Lavender Hill Mob is born.
Alec Guinness, a regular of Ealing comedies and a man that I think is worthy
of the title "the greatest actor of all time" shines, as usual, in this
movie. Alec Guinness manages to hit the tone of his character just right; he
is suitably creepy, as he is, a criminal, and yet at the same time he's also
eccentric enough to be considered an upstanding citizen and bank clerk.
Guinness is, however, not the only actor who's performance in this movie is
worthy of acclaim, the entire cast shine in their respective roles; Stanley
Holloway is more subdued in his role, but that's also suited to his
character. There are also excellent support performances from Sid James, who
is mostly remembered for his work on the 'Carry on' films; Alfie Bass, whom
fans of British comedy TV will remember from the series "Are You Being
Served" and there's also a very small role for Audrey Hepburn, who's movie
legacy is legendary.
The Lavender Hill Mob also features many memorable moments that will stick
in the viewers' mind long after the film has ended. Parts of the film such
as the chase on the Eiffel tower and the way that the two central characters
manage to loose the entire police force are legendary. The Lavender Hill Mob
is a small movie, but it's a movie that aims big and it works a treat. This
movie also features a brilliant twist ending that rivals the one in the
superb 'Kind Hearts and Coronets'.
Overall, The Lavender Hill Mob is, despite its low budget and short running
time, a spectacular comedy film that should not be missed by
anyone.
23 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
One of the most engaging and witty movie I have seen, 26 July 2005
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Author:
ClassicMovieFans
The DVD used Audrey Hepburn's first movie appearance as a promotion.
Together with the fact that Alec Guinness is the leading man, I
immediately jumped at the chance of watching the film.
The film began with Alec Guinness recalling his life last year, as a
20-year bank clerk and how he plotted to steal a vast amount of gold.
Stanley Holloway (who also starred as Eliza's father in My Fair Lady)
and Alec Guinness made a wonderful couple. And watch out for the
elegant Audrey Hepburn in the first 10 minutes of the movie.
The story unfolded nicely as Alec narrated how he formulated his plan,
how he recruited partners to execute his well-thought plan and how,
when their plan did go wrong, they improvised. The scene of them
chasing after Englsih school girls at the Eiffel Tower in Paris is
particularly impressive. It is as if they were flying in the air and
laughing their hearts out on a merry-go-round. I kept wondering how
modern movies did not make such shots any more. It was funny to see how
they persisted in order to succeed. They were like serious school kids
who was intent on completing their project by any means. Never did they
think of betraying their team members.
With an excellent script, funny characters and a marvellous twist in
the end, this movie is not a bit out of date. Love to watch it again
soon.
24 out of 27 people found the following review useful:
Small Ealing comedy that still delivers., 6 October 2002
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Author:
Peter Hayes from United Kingdom
A banker decides to rob his own bank.
A classic small British film that punches above it weight. Good cast get
their teeth in to an Oscar winning script. The kind of film they should
show
at films schools to show how good films are constructed and delivered.
One
of the top 100 comedy films ever made - although delivers small chuckles
rather than out-and-out laughs.
20 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
Funny, at times hilarious., 18 January 2005
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Author:
Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico, USA
Ealing Studios turned out a series of comic gems in the late 40s and
early 50s and this is a good example. Only a curmudgeon would not laugh
aloud during some of the scenes.
The plot, briefly, involves a clever bank clerk (Guiness) developing a
plan with a die caster (Holloway) to steal several million pounds of
gold bullion, recast it into tourist knicknacks in the shape of Eiffel
Tower paperweights, and ship it to Paris to sell on the black market.
They recruit two professional thieves to help them.
It may not be Ealing's best comedy (my vote would be for "The Lady
Killers") but it's more than funny enough. I'll just give three scenes
as examples.
(1) Holloway and Guiness, two honest men, need to recruit what they
call a "mob" but have no idea how to go about it. What I mean is -- how
would YOU go about recruiting criminal assistants? What they do is go
to crowded places of low repute -- saloons, prize fights, the
underground -- and shout at each other through the noise about the safe
being broken at such-and-such an address and all that money having to
be left in it. Then they hole up at the address and wait for the
burglars to arrive.
(2) A scene at the Eiffel Tower in which they discover that half a
dozen of the gold paperweights instead of the usual leaden ones have
been sold to some English schoolgirls. They watch horrified as the door
closes and the elevator carrying the girls begins its descent, and they
decide to rush down the tightly spiraling staircase to ground level,
trying to beat the elevator. By the time they reach the street they've
been spun around so many times that they can't stop laughing and are
unable to stop twirling around until they fall down.
(3) After the robbery, in an empty warehouse soon to be searched by the
police, Guiness must be tied up, gagged, and blindfolded with tape.
Then his clothes must be torn and dirtied so that it appears he put up
a fight before the gold was taken. But the police arrive too soon, and
the others beat it, leaving Guiness standing alone, tied up, and
blindfolded, but not dirty. He stumbles about blindly, trying to blow
the tape from his mouth, getting his feet caught in discarded bicycle
wheels, until he falls into the Thames.
Probably the weakest part of the movie is near the end, when police
cars wind up chasing one another because of confusing messages. The
scene could have been lifted from Laurel and Hardy. It's a little
silly. (Why didn't Guiness and Holloway park the stolen car, get out,
and walk away?) But that's a minor consideration.
What surprises me about some of these comedies is that they're able to
make us laugh despite the dreary atmosphere. The streets of London look
awfully dismal in this grainy black and white film. Some of them were
still charred wrecks left over from the Blitz. But it doesn't dampen
the comedy at all. Following the successful robbery a drunken Guiness
and Holloway return to their boarding house to be chided by their
landlady for being "naughty". One pulls the other aside, chuckling
conspiratorially, and the two agree to call each other "Al" and "Dutch"
-- two REAL BIG gangsters for you.
If you need to use up some neuropeptides this is your movie.
14 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Breaking the bank, 13 February 2005
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Author:
jotix100 from New York
This is a comedy the talented Alec Guinnes did for the Ealing studio in
the early part of his career. Of his Ealing days, he left us a legacy
that is hard to surpass: "Kind Hearts and Coronets", "The Ladykillers"
and this one, that comes to mind.
Directed by Charles Crichton and written by T.E. Clarke, this is a fun
movie that in spite of the years since it was filmed, it still charms
its audiences, young and old.
The background is a London, right after the war. The film is original
in that it takes us all over the city to places that one can identify
so clearly, even after more than 50 years! It speaks of how careful are
the English not to destroy their monuments.
As the would be robbers, Henry "Dutch" Holland is a man with a plan. He
recognizes in his neighbor of the Lavender Hill rooming house, Alfred
Pendlebury, a kindred soul that will see his proposal of how to steal
the precious gold bullion from the Bank of England. It's a big
operation, yet, only four people are needed to carry on the job.
This is a comedy of errors, where the best laid plans go awry in the
small details the gang hadn't planned. The sure thing becomes a dead
giveaway to the authorities once Holland and Pendlebury decide to go
after the souvenir one young student bought in Paris that is part of
the loot. Prior to that, the scenes in Paris at the Eiffel Tower was an
original sequence for a movie that relies on intelligence rather than
in overblown special effects.
Alec Guinness is charming as the master mind behind the heist. Stanley
Holloway, a great English actor is magnificent as the man with an
artistic eye, who almost derails the operation. Sid James and Alfie
Bass contribute to make the film the joy it is with their comic
presence. In a small cameo that comes and goes so quickly, we watch a
young and elegant Audrey Hepburn makes an graceful appearance.
This is a film for all Ealing fans of all ages.
11 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
The most exuberant of Ealing Comedies, 5 August 2006
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Author:
UncleJack from United Kingdom
This is a gentle understated English comedy, a classic example of
Ealing Studios' output of the 1950s. But paradoxically what makes it
most remarkable is its sheer exuberance, the unconcealed glee of
Holland and Pendlebury as they revel in the success of their audacious
plan. Their first meeting after seeing each other at the police
station, the drunken return to their rooms after their celebratory meal
and of course the famous descent of the Eiffel Tower, their laughter
echoing the giggles of the schoolgirls spiralling round and round
before falling dizzily out at the bottom.
Painting and sculpture were Pendlebury's wings, his escape from his
"unspeakably hideous" business occupation. But when Holland delicately
introduces him to his own dream of twenty years' to escape - and not
just metaphorically - from life as a nonentity, Pendlebury is drawn in.
The scenes in the Balmoral Private Hotel in Lavender Hill are
outstanding, and the sparse dialogue allows Alec Guinness and Stanley
Holloway to shine as Holland suggests to Pendlebury how gold might be
smuggled out of the country. "Hohohoho; By Jove, Holland, it is a good
job we are both honest men." "It is indeed, Pendlebury."
Later in the film, the plot stands less well up to scrutiny but
Guinness and Holloway are easily able to carry the viewers' attention.
Chases that turn into farces often don't work in this style of British
film, but here again Holland and Pendlebury carry such energy and
excitement that they fit in well, and I am sure that even in nineteen
fifties Britain, large numbers of the audience will have grasped the
ironic humour of the policeman singing "Old MacDonald," in addition to
those laughing at the straightforward ludicrousness of the scene.
Aficionados of British postwar comedy will enjoy this film, and because
it lacks the dryness of say, "Kind Hearts and Coronets" or "The
Ladykillers" it provides a more accessible introduction for those who
are new to this most wonderful of genres.
11 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Crime doesn't pay, 8 November 2000
Author:
Petri Pelkonen (petri_pelkonen@hotmail.com) from Finland
Alec Guinness (1914-2000) plays a bank clerk who gets an idea to rob his own bank.He does that with the help of his friend Pendlebury (Stanley Holloway) and two professional criminals Lackery (Sid James) and Shorty (Alfie Bass).Lavender Hill Mob is brilliant crime comedy from 1951.The late Alec Guinness does amazing role work and the other actors do also superb job.You can also see the young and beautiful Audrey Hepburn playing Chiquita there.The movie has lots of marvelous scenes.One hilarious scene is the scene where the gang is trying to get to ship but are having all kind of problems with passports and stuff.And the car chase is absolutely brilliant.Watch this British classic movie.It won't let you down I guarantee it.
14 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
Best Comedy Movie Ever......., 22 June 2001
Author:
tmsindc-2 from Washington, D.C.
In my opinion - this is the best comedy movie ever made. There are few
movies that can still generate belly laughs two or three years after their
release. This movie is still funny after more than fifty years! Plus it
has some of the greatest comedy scenes ever filmed: the "my safe is broken
and I have the whole payroll in it" scene; the two small-time thieves
comparing resumes; Alec Guiness blending into the crowd of City bankers;
and, of course, the famous last scene.
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
"Run Dutch, Run", 14 October 2005
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
Ealing studios in Great Britain had a reputation for producing some
very droll comedies in the post World War II years and this one was
done when Ealing was at its height.
Alec Guinness is once again playing a mild mannered schnook of a man
who no one notices at all. In fact his own superiors at his job, tell
him to his face that his only virtue is a dull, honest dependability
with a lack of imagination.
Boy how they were wrong. Guinness's job is to supervise the transfer of
gold bullion from where it is smelted into bars to the Bank of England.
Every working day he accompanies the gold in an armored truck to the
bank. And Sir Alec's imagination has been working overtime as to how a
robbery could be accomplished.
As he's discovered a long time ago, the problem isn't the robbery, it's
the fencing of the loot. Well, bigger and more professional criminals
have failed to lick that one on occasion.
Into Guinness's life walks Stanley Holloway who's the owner of a small
foundry that makes lead souvenirs for sale. Another man with a dull
life, looking for adventure. Guinness recognizes both a kindred spirit
and a solution to his problem.
What makes The Lavendar Hill Mob work is the chemistry between Guinness
and Holloway. It's so understated, but at the same time, so droll,
funny, and touching. These two middle-aged men are living out a fantasy
we'd all like to live, even if it means a touch of robbery. Guinness's
character name is Henry Holland and Holloway is Alfred Pendlebury. As
the friendship grows, they stop referring to each other as Mr. Holland
and Mr. Pendlebury. Holloway even gives Holland the gangster nickname
of Dutch.
They pick up two other amiable allies in petty crooks Sidney James and
Alfie Bass. The robbery comes off pretty much as planned, but afterward
things don't quite work out.
They use Holloway's foundry to make solid gold statues of the Eiffel
Tower and send them to Paris to get them out of the country. What
follows after that is some pretty funny situations, a mad run down the
real Eiffel Tower and also one of the wildest police chase scenes ever
filmed.
The run down the Eiffel Tower has always been a favorite of mine. When
I was a lad, my parents took the family to Washington, DC for a sight
seeing tour and I got the brilliant idea of walking down the Washington
Monument to see the various commemorative stones in the wall of the
Monument. Even after walking down, my whole family felt just like
Guinness and Holloway.
Sir Alec Guinness got his first Oscar nomination for The Lavendar Hill
Mob, but lost the big sweepstakes to Gary Cooper for High Noon. the
Lavendar Hill Mob won an Oscar for the screenplay.
I understand there will be a remake of it coming out next year. I can't
conceive of any remake possibly duplicating the chemistry between
Guinness and Holloway.
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