Hue & Cry is
the tertiary feature film project of British director Charles
Crichton (6 Aug 1910 – 14 Sept 1999), a former film editor (on many an
English classic) who had, only three years earlier, made his directorial debut
with the war-time propaganda film For Those in Peril (1944 / trailer),
assuming that one does not count his co-direction of the decidedly comic The
Golfer's Story segment — "the weakest entry but still charming in its own
way [Horrified]"
— of the famed anthology horror film Dead of Night (1945 / trailer)
as a full directorial credit. It is perhaps the propensity for humor, combined
with the obvious talent for shooting on location displayed in his second
feature film, Painted Boats (1945 / scene),
that led to this project, a film commonly touted as the "first"
Ealing comedy, although to simply label the film a comedy does this oddly
schizophrenic movie injustice.*
* Despite forays
into other genres, today Crichton is above all remembered as a comedic
director. His best-known films remain, arguably, the classic Ealing comedy The
Lavender Hill Mob (1951 / trailer)
and his final movie, also a classic comedy, A Fish Called Wanda (1988 / trailer).
The Lavender Hill Mob was likewise written by the same screenwriter as Hue and
Cry, T.E.B. Clarke (7 Jun
1907 – 11 Feb 1989): he won the 1951 Oscar for Best Original
Screenplay for his script to the movie.
At its core, Hue &
Cry is very much a close relative of Emil and the Detectives — which had
already been filmed twice by 1947: in Germany in 1931 (trailer)
and in Great Britain in 1935 (full
film) — if not the multitude of cheaper, mostly less-interesting flicks
from the US featuring the likes of the Little Tough Guys, the Dead End Kids,
the East Side Kids and/or the Bowery Boys. Here, at least for the poster the youths are given the moniker Blood & Thunder Boys, though we really cannot remember if the name is ever used in the film.
In any event, while the narrative initially concentrates on a
smaller group of youngsters, in time of need that group easily expands into an inordinately well-organized
and tightly knit swathe of young boys, all of whom are willing to swarm
together to work in unison for a common cause — even if, only a few hours
earlier, some among them were exchanging fisticuffs and pulling hair in a personal
fight. The setting this time around, however, is neither the big bad world of
Berlin or NYC, but a post-WWII London caught midway between in-ruins and
rebuilt.
Trailer to
Hue
& Cry:
The basic plot is
not the most original of narratives, and is very much of the type only found in
kiddy adventure flicks or books of the Hardy Boys or Three Investigators ilk. The
narrative is that of a young lad named Joe Kirby (Harry Fowler
[10 Dec 1926 – 4 Jan 2012]*) who comes to realize that a story serialized in a
popular weekly penny dreadful is secretly being used by an unidentified master
criminal to convey instructions to his cadre of professional criminals. As to be
expected, Joe cannot find an adult who believes him, so he and his gang decide
to put an end to the criminals and their robberies by themselves.
* Though displaying
less than stellar acting chops in Hue & Cry, Harry
Fowler went on to an acting career that lasted more than
six decades and over 200 screen appearances, including
Fire Maidens from Outer Space (1956 / trailer),
The Nanny (1965 / trailer)
and Start the Revolution Without Me (1970 / trailer).
Four years after the release of Hue & Cry, his married fellow actress Joan Dowling (6 January 1928 – 31 March 1954), who played Clarry in that film, the
only female girl to be grudgingly accepted by the gang of boys and who often
proves herself very much their equal in mettle, stamina, courage and
intelligence. Three years later on 31 March 1954, at the age of 26, she killed
herself by gas poisoning in the kitchenette of their home in Farmer Street,
Kensington.
While the plot may
not be of any true note, it is the rest of the movie that makes the entire
package so watchable, enjoyable and entertaining — not to mention extremely
intriguing as a historical document. The last is due in particular to the
filmmakers' decision to film most of the movie on location in post-WWII London.
Street scenes show a London long gone, be it the markets where the early
morning laborers toiled, the rebuilt streets and brick houses long replaced by
sleek skyscrapers, or the bombed fields of ruined structures and rubble. The
last often calls to mind the ruins of Berlin as seen in Roberto
Rossellini's homophobic, pessimistic and melodramatic neo-realist fiasco (and "classic"), Germany,
Year Zero (1948 / scene).
Interestingly enough, while Germany, Year Zero tries to affect by means of
moral corruption and child suicide, there is an almost in-passing short scene
in Hue & Cry that is far more affecting and unnerving than Rossellini's
entire movie. Prior to, during and after Joe and some of his pals stand amidst
the ruins of the Blitz discussing their plans, a young boy happily plays in the
ruins by imitating, to the point of aural perfection, the sounds of an air raid,
complete with planes, sirens, bombs falling and bombs exploding — something
that everyone in the movie was surely familiar with from real life.
It is an oddly
unsettling scene, one of many moments in the movie when it becomes rather hard
to simply label Hue & Cry a comedy. For though there are many moments of
humor in the movie, and one character that is played purely for laughs, Hue
& Cry is an interlacing of elements from and references to a variety of
genres: comedy, thriller, adventure, domestic drama, horror, suspense and more.
It is an amazing feat that such a schizophrenic films nevertheless remains both
coherent and grounded, offering a little of everything to make something well worth
watching and never boring.
Of the three stars
blazed across the movie's posters, only two are arguably remembered today. The
forgotten name, Valerie White (26 Dec 1915 – 3 Dec 1975), plays Rhona Davis, a
hardened bad gal with a fear of mice. Jack Warner
(24 Oct 1895 – 24 May 1981), a name perhaps best remembered from The Quatermass
Xperiment (1955 / trailer),
plays Joe's boss, Jim Nightengale, who has more to him than just his annoying
laugh and humor would indicate. But the name at the top, and the face the hogs
up most of the poster, belongs to the Scottish character actor Alastair Sim
[(9 Oct 1900 – 19 Aug 1976) of the lesser Hitchcock film Stage Fright [1950 / trailer]),
in a guest appearance as Felix H. Wilkinson, the author of the penny-dreadful
stories that are subsequently altered to convey the criminal's instructions.
Sims role is short, perhaps five to eight minutes in total at best, and he
makes an impressingly effective if somewhat hammy impression, coming across (at
least by modern standards) as a man you might not want to leave your children
alone with. Within seconds, he goes from batty to pleased to threatening to
swishy to fawning to flattered to terrified in an oddly campy turn that any and
all fans of the German Rialto Edgar Wallace krimis will recognize as the
performance that Eddi Arendt
(5 May 1925 – 28 May 2013) obviously based most of his Wallace krimi
performances on.*
* See, for example,
Inn
on the River (1962), The
Indian Scarf (1963), The
Red Circle (1960), The
Black Abbot (1963), amongst other films.
One of the better
vignettes of the movie concerns an escape through the sewers of London, the
result of the failure of the less-than-thought-out plans of out intrepid
youngsters, and there is a "torture" scene that is oddly funny, but
it us surely the big showdown at the end of the movie, in which apparently
every working class youth in London shows up to battle the bad guys as Joe
faces off with the top honcho, is a doozy.
In the end, Hue
& Cry might never truly lose the feeling that it is less a comedy than a
pre-teen suspense film, but the movie is very much worth watching as an adult
because it offers so much more than simple family entertainment. Give it a go.
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