Film Review: The Lavender Hill Mob (1951)

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(source: tmdb.org)

Britain came out of Second World War victorious, but the price of that victory was high. Britons, among other things, had to endure war-related deprivations almost a decade after the war ended and other countries, including those who had lost the war, recovered. One of the things that made life in such bleak circumstances more tolerable were comedies, including those made in famous Ealing Film Studios, many of which would later become classics. One of the best was The Lavender Hill Mob, 1951 film directed by Charles Chricton.

The plot begins in Rio De Janeiro where the protagonist, English expatriate Henry Holland (played by Alec Guiness) explains how he got there. Through flashbacks we are brought to London where Holland used to work as a bank clerk in charge of transporting gold bullions. He has spent twenty years at the same post and, lacking promotion, he began to ponder eventual taking some of that gold for himself. His plan, however, has one fatal flaw – he can’t sell such great quantity of gold in Britain without bringing attention, while he doesn’t know how to smuggle it abroad. The solution comes in form of Alfred Pendlebury (played by Stanely Holloway), eccentric artist who produces paper weights in form of Eiffel Tower, which are, among other things, sold as souvenirs in Paris. Pendlebury lives in the same boarding house at Lavender Hill as Holland, and the bank clerk recruits him to his scheme that would involve having gold smuggled by being melted into paper weights. Two professional criminals – Lackery Wood (played by Sid James) and Shorty Fisher (played by Alfie Bass) – are recruited to help with the actual robbery which, although not going exactly as planned, succeeds. It is only in France, where Holland and Pendlebury are to convert last batch of paper weights into cash, that their plan begins to go awry following mixed shipments in souvenir shop.

Ealing comedies were light, and The Lavender Hill Mob isn’t an exception. The film is also light in a different sense – it is very short, barely 80 minutes of running time, but experienced director Charles Crichton (who would, decades later, close his career with another comedy classic A Fish Called Wanda) manages to keep it quick, comprehensible and digestible. Much of the credit should go to T. E. B. Clark, screenwriter who won Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. The basic plot of the film is actually very simple and it could easily serve as basis for straight crime thriller or heist film. What makes it funny are eccentric characters and series of bizarre coincidences that lead to absurd and comical situations, while at the same time being realistic. Clark, in order to make his film as close to real life as possible, actually consulted with experts from Bank of England who worked out a scenario how the gold bullion heist would be best conducted. Realism can be seen in the use of London locations which still bore marks of wartime bombing, and which represent sharp contrast to the locations of Paris, including Eiffel Tower, which is used in a scene rumoured to inspire Hitchcock’s Vertigo. The main characters in The Lavender Hill Mob might be criminals, but they are portrayed as generally kind-hearted, soft-spoken and likeable, so it is easy for the audience to start rooting for them and wanting that they get away with their crime. It doesn’t happen because producers knew that such ending was contrary to the principles of MPAA Production Code and to keep it would have barred the film from being distributed at lucrative American market.

Another important ingredient for this film’s success is the cast. Alec Guiness is nowadays best known as Obi Wan Kenobi in original Star Wars trilogy, a role that he actually hated, and, perhaps, noble characters in David Lean’s epics. But Guiness actually excelled playing in Ealing comedies and the role of Henry Holland, during which he plays rich bon vivant, meek pencil pusher and criminal mastermind, is one of the best in his career. Veteran Stanley Holloway, who would later play Alfred P. Doolitle in My Fair Lady, is also quite effective as flamboyant artist. Sid James, who would later earn fame as part of Carry On films cast, is memorable as one of the criminals. Fans of legendary Audrey Hepburn might find an actress, uncredited in the film, as Brazilian girl in the scene at the beginning, which represented one of the first notable film roles of an iconic actress. The Lavender Hill Mob is a very good film that represents British humour and Ealing comedies at their best.

RATING: 8/10 (+++)

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