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Leslie Arliss Movies

Leslie Arliss is a figure in British cinema whose early life and background remain shrouded in mystery and dispute, decades after his death. A screenwriter/director whose work was highly influential on British cinema of the 1940's -- if not widely respected -- the mystery of his origin is a remarkable footnote to a career that engendered more than its share of controversy. Many credible and responsible reference sources state without equivocation that Leslie Arliss was the son of George Arliss, one of the most renowned British stage actors of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; other sources categorically deny that this is the case, and state without equivocation that Arliss and his wife, Florence Arliss, had no children. What is definite about his early life is that he was born in 1901, and apparently had the name Leslie Andrews (which was, indeed, the Arliss family's original surname). And he grew up with a thorough background in literature and theater, and entered adult life as a journalist and critic in the 1920s. By the end of that decade, however, Arliss had developed a serious interest in film and had begun contributing to screenplay adaptations of theatrical works. He entered the movie industry formally in the 1930s as a screenwriter. His work was usually done in collaboration with others, and divided equally between serious historical profiles and comedies, including Strip, Strip, Hooray (1931), The Innocents of Chicago (1932), Rhodes of Africa, Windbag the Sailor (both 1936), Good Morning, Boys (1937), and Said O'Reilly to McNab (1937). By 1939, he had moved up to work on the screenplay of the Boulting brothers' production of Pastor Hall, the first serious anti-Nazi drama ever made in England. His subsequent output included the screenplay of the topical comedy The Foreman Went to France (1942), set in the dark early days of the war.

Arliss moved into the director's chair in 1941 when he joined Associated British Productions to work on The Farmer's Wife, a sound remake of a film that Alfred Hitchcock had done as a silent in 1928 (from a screenplay to which Arliss had contributed, uncredited), based on a hit play of the 1920s. Arliss co-directed the remake with fellow screenwriter Norman Lee, and it was moderately successful, enough to get Arliss a solo directing spot on the thriller The Night Has Eyes (1942), starring James Mason. A stylish mystery set on the Yorkshire mores, the movie proved a good vehicle for the star (who showed an attractive vulnerable quality that was new to his screen image) and the director. Arliss' career took off, however, when he moved to Gainsborough Studios, a part of J. Arthur Rank's General Film Distributors, where he wrote and directed The Man in Grey (1943). The first of what became known as Gainsborough romances, the movie was set some three hundred years in the past, featuring what seemed like lush costuming amid the wartime austerity of the early '40s, but what made it special was the overt lustiness and wickedness of the two protagonists, played by Mason and Margaret Lockwood, all wrapped around some unbridled (for its era) sadism. The movie was a huge hit, and even played well in the United States (where it was shorn of some ten minutes' running time), and it helped elevate Mason to a major stardom as a serious box-office draw.

Next up for Arliss was the romance Love Story (1944), retitled A Lady Surrenders in America, a romantic melodrama about a terminally ill woman pianist (Lockwood) who falls in love with a pilot (Stewart Granger) who is going blind; this film was also successful. Arliss followed it with The Wicked Lady (1945), starring Lockwood and Mason -- that movie stretched and shattered numerous boundaries marking out good taste, steeped in lusty talk about sex and some of the most revealing gowns ever worn by actresses in a British film. It was a box-office smash in England and even in America (despite the fact that the studio had to reshoot numerous scenes for the U.S.-released version with less revealing gowns on the ladies), and it should have been the flashpoint of Arliss' career, heralding his emergence as a major and distinctive filmmaker. Audiences wearied by years of wartime austerity and devotion to duty were delighted with the movie's frankness and humor, and, even 50 years later, the movie is startling to be seen as an artifact of its time. Alas, the same characteristics that allowed the film to earn a fortune for its studio -- its frank lustiness -- also brought a halt to the progress of Arliss' career. Audiences may have loved the scenes of Margaret Lockwood greedily cavorting with James Mason, and the veiled and not so veiled references to women's and men's libidinous natures (and the not so veiled female cleavage), but all of those elements personally appalled J. Arthur Rank, the owner of General Film Distributors. A devout Methodist, Rank had initially started producing movies as a means of spreading the gospel, and even in 1945, well into the business of entertaining millions, he preferred conveying positive values and focusing on uplifting messages, not the uplifted bosoms of Margaret Lockwood or Patricia Roc. The British mogul pulled the plug on the Gainsborough romances, preventing the next of them, Arthur Crabtree's Madonna of the Seven Moons -- a similarly lusty drama about a woman's affliction by a gypsy curse -- from getting wide distribution overseas.

By that time, Arliss had left Rank for the seemingly friendlier and more lucrative environment of Alexander Korda's London Films. There he worked on three lackluster films, Man About the House (1947), Saints and Sinners (1949), and A Woman's Angle (1952), with one last Gainsborough-style potboiler in between the first two, the independently financed Idol of Paris (1948), which made a valiant effort at recalling the uninhibited sexual free spirits of The Wicked Lady without as good a cast. Arliss left Korda in 1952, and after that began writing and directing for television, including the anthology series Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Presents, and the adventure shows William Tell, The Buccaneers (starring Robert Shaw), The New Adventures of Charlie Chan, and The Forest Rangers. He also directed some short films starring Peter Sellers, but he was largely absent from the movie business from 1964 until the early '80s, when Cannon Films and director Michael Winner made a remake of The Wicked Lady (1983), starring Faye Dunaway and based on a new screenplay by Arliss, which carried the libidinous nature of the original even farther and ran into trouble with censors in England over a scene -- lifted from his own Idol of Paris -- in which Dunaway and Marina Sirtis engage in a duel with carriage whips. Arliss passed away four years later. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
1983  
 
Faye Dunaway stars in Michael Winner's labored re-make of the 1945 swashbuckler, which was co-scripted by Leslie Arliss, the original director of the 1945 film. Dunaway is Lady Barbara Skelton, a lady of the royal class, who becomes a highway robber, taking up with Captain Jerry Jackson (Alan Bates), a highwayman and her lover. Because of a notorious whiping scene in which Lady Barbara and Jackson's girlfriend (Marina Sirtis) take horsewhips to one another, tearing their clothing to strategically-placed ribbons, the film was held back from release because Winner refused to cut the salacious footage. After corralling author Kingsley Amis, and directors John Schlesinger, Karel Reisz, and Lindsay Anderson to attest to the redeeming social value of the scene, the scene stayed in the film. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi

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Starring:
Faye DunawayAlan Bates, (more)
 
1959  
 
A girl named Madeleine (Leigh Madison) steals Peter Brady's passport so that her boyfriend Nick can pose as "The Invisible Man" and smuggle narcotics into the country. Teaming up with plucky policewoman Sgt. Winter (Jeanette Starke), Brady himself dons a disguise to go undercover at a Soho den of inquity, the better to trap Nick and his cohorts. Amusingly, the role of Nick is played by Tim Turner, who had been providing the voice of Peter Brady, sans screen credit, ever since the first episode of The Invisible Man. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1958  
 
Let to believe that she has killed a man in a car accident, entertainer Barbara Crane (Helen Cherry) is blackmailed into collaborating with a gang of criminals. Fortunately, one of Barbara's biggest fans is Peter Brady, aka "The Invisble Man." Figuring out that Barbara is completely innocent, Brady takes full advantage of his invisibility in a next-to-closing effort to clear the woman's name and round up the crooks. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1958  
 
Thanks to an unforseen mishap, the existence of "The Invisible Man" is revealed to the world. In his efforts to avoid the media, Peter Brady retreats to the countryside with his sister Diane (Lisa Daniely and niece Sally (Deborah Watling. Here the Bradys become enmeshed in the sinister schemes of John Norton (Derek Bond), who is planning to murder his wealthy wife (Faith Brook) and stepdaughter (Margaret McCourt) and abscond with the family fortune. Ultimately, the scurrilous Norton adds Diane and Sally to his list of intended victims--obliging Brady to once more use his invisibility to vanquish a villain. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1958  
 
Brady is approached by Raphael Constantine (Dennis Price), a man with a horribly disfigured face. His voice choking with anguish, Constantine claims to be seeking a method to hide his ugliness, and asks Brady to render him invisble. Little does our transparent hero realize that he is being duped into creating an invisible assassin, for the purpose of murdering the visiting ruler of a South American nation. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1955  
 
In this crazy British comedy, a Cockney corporal dreams of getting promoted so that he can finally receive his inheritance. To facilitate the raise in status, he masquerades as a priest and goes out one night with the vicar's glamorous, blond wife. His action starts a trend and soon he runs into a number of men in priestly garb. The trouble is, he cannot discern the real ones from the fakes until the end when he finds a fugitive convict and gets him arrested. Soon after, the plucky corporal gets his promotion. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1955  
 
In this crime drama, a writer and his wife are sleeping peacefully in their beds when a mysterious woman shows up, gives the writer her gun, also hands him some jewels and asks for a place to sleep. Unfortunately, someone murders her during the night and the author is accused of the crime. Fortunately, he is able to prove his innocent by the story's end. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1954  
 
Forever My Heart appears to have been fashioned from two half-hour episodes of TV's Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Presents. Fairbanks produced this 52-minute effort, and appeared in both of the short playlets offered herein. The first story takes place a hundred or so years ago; a male and female prisoner in the Tower of London plot their escape, but when the time comes, only one of them is able to make the break to freedom. In the second story, a woman of loose morals begins to imagine that the ghost of her sister has materialized to condemn her. The biggest "name" in the cast outside of Fairbanks is Anouk Aimee as the heroine of the second story. Forever My Heart was directed by Leslie Arliss and Bernard Knowles, both regular contributors to Fairbanks' TV anthology. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1954  
 
This anthology is comprised of three stories. In the first a naive American tycoon boards the famous Orient Express and finds himself victimized by con-artists until a helpful train guard comes to aid him. The second tale centers on an impoverished Irishman's daughter who wants to marry the son of a miserly Scottsman. She and he are told they cannot marry, but the Irishman steps in and saves the day. The third tale centers upon a Norwegian artist who kills his own brother. It is his own wife who sees that he gets his come-uppance. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1953  
 
A remake of the 1937 British comedy Where There's a Will, Top of the Form top-bills perennial comic relief Ronald Shiner as a Bilko-like bookmaker. Circumstances dictate that Shiner find himself in charge of a boys' school, where all the students show a natural affinity for gambling. Taking the boys on a tour of the European gaming tables, Shiner gets entangled in a plot to steal a Mona Lisa (not so far-fetched; such a theft actually took place in 1913). With the help of his young charges, Shiner rescues the Da Vinci classic from artnappers. Among Shiner's students are such future luminaries as Anthony Newley and Ronnie Corbett. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1949  
 
Saints and Sinners is set in a remote Irish village where "appearances" take precedence over everything else. Having served two years in prison for a crime he didn't commit, Michael Kissane (Kieron Moore) returns to his home town of Kilwarra. While many of his old friends believe in Michael's innocence, he is obliged to prove that innocence before he will be fully accepted again. Christine Norden plays Blanche, the girl who promised to wait for Michael but who went back on that promise at the behest of her family. Drenched in atmosphere and local color, Saints and Sinners falters only in its depiction of a stereotypical American visitor. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Kieron MooreChristine Norden, (more)
 
1948  
 
The Idol of Paris is based on Paiva, Queen of Love, a novel by Alfred Schirokauer. Set in the mid-19th century, the film traces the rags-to-riches story of a girl named Theresa (Beryl Baxter). Sleeping her way to the top, she becomes a highly sought-after Parisian courtesan, one worthy of the attentions of the Emperor Napoleon (Kenneth Kent). But Theresa has no time for the Emperor, not with such virile lovers as Hertz (Michael Rennie) around and about. Despite inherent censorship problems, The Idol of Paris was picked up for American distribution by Warner Bros. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Sybilla BinderCampbell Cotts, (more)
 
1947  
 
A novel by Francis Brett Young and its theatrical adaptation by John Perry were the sources for the even-keeled melodrama A Man About the House. Handsome Italian laborer Kieron Moore works as caretaker of the Neopolitan villa inherited by plain-Jane Englishwomen Margaret Johnston and Dulcie Gray. Johnston is swept off her feet by the raffishly charming Moore, and before long they are wed. Their connubial bliss lasts just long enough for Moore to poison his bride; the villa had once belonged to his family, and he's willing to use any means to get it back. Though it seems as if Moore has committed the perfect crime, Dulcie joins forces with doctor Guy Middleton to prove that Moore murdered Johnston. Since the villa fronts a vertigo-inducing clifftop, it is inevitable that someone will topple into the ocean with a piercing scream. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Margaret JohnstonDulcie Gray, (more)
 
1945  
 
In this drama, set during the reign of King Charles II, the aristocratic Lady Skelton (Margaret Lockwood) attempts to relieve the tedium of her day-to-day life by secretly acting as a highway robber. Meeting up with the rogue Captain Jerry Jackson (James Mason), the two begin a relationship. When her private and public lives begin to interfere with one another, however, Lady Skelton finds herself caught up in a tangled web of romance, danger, and jealousy. ~ Iotis Erlewine, Rovi

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Starring:
Margaret LockwoodJames Mason, (more)
 
1944  
 
No relation to the 1970 box-office blockbuster of the same name, the 1944 British film Love Story was originally released in the US as The Lady Surrenders. Margaret Lockwood stars as one of those brilliant but troubled concert pianists, so beloved of British wartime filmgoers. Knowing that she suffers from a potentially fatal heart condition, Margaret has one last fling with RAF pilot Stewart Granger, who is slowly going blind. As in such earlier romantic dramas of the One Way Passage variety, Margaret and Stewart keep their afflictions secret from each other. When the truth comes out, Granger agrees to a dangerous and experimental operation to restore his sight. This sets the stage for a war of wills between Lockwood, who wants Granger to undergo the surgery, and Gragner's fiancee Patricia Roc, who, for reasons of her own, does not. Love Story was cowritten and directed by Leslie Arliss, son of eminent British stage star Sir George Arliss. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Margaret LockwoodStewart Granger, (more)
 
1943  
 
A set of flashbacks to 19th century London provide the action in this British wartime film, in which a wealthy girl (Phyllis Calvert) becomes friends with a young waif (Margaret Lockwood) while at school. The waif later becomes a governess for the girl, but betrays their relationship by having an affair with her friend's husband (James Mason). The Man in Grey did exceptionally well in England at the time of its release, and later spawned a cavalcade of similar movies. ~ John Bush, Rovi

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Starring:
Phyllis CalvertMargaret Lockwood, (more)
 
1943  
 
In this episode of the mystery adventure series, Simon "The Saint" Templar finds a dead man on his doorstep. Soon the ace investigator finds himself mired in more murder, smuggling and a South American mine. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Hugh SinclairJean Gillie, (more)
 
1942  
 
Set near the beginning of WW II, this exciting war drama follows a courageous British factory foreman as he makes a dangerous foray into occupied France to recover three machine parts that will be vital to the Allies. He is accompanied by a pair of tough British soldiers and an American girl. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Tommy TrinderConstance Cummings, (more)
 
1942  
 
Terror House is the prosaic American title for the taut British chiller The Night Has Eyes. James Mason plays Stephen Deremid, one of those brooding, secretive young men so beloved of wartime melodramas. He lives in a remote Yorkshire mansion surrounded by a boggish moor. A young British girl (Joyce Howard) and her wisecracking American friend (Dorothy Black) are forced to seek shelter in Stephen's home during a thunderstorm. The friend disappears; perhaps Stephen is responsible, or perhaps it's his Mrs. Danvers-like housekeeper (Mary Clare). And then there's the harmless, helpful Wilfred Lawson. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
James MasonJoyce Howard, (more)
 
1941  
 
In this comedy of mistaken identity, an amiable fellow decides to help out his singing South American look-a-like who must fulfill a few obligations for his opera company. Mayhem ensues when the bogus singer finds himself pursued by paid assassins. Fortunately, the whole mess is straightened out in the end and happiness ensues. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1941  
 
Eden Philpotts' "provincial" comic novel and play The Farmer's Wife was first filmed in the silent era by Alfred Hitchcock. The 1940 talkie version was directed by Leslie Arliss, son of stage star George Arliss. The story remained the same: A middle-aged widower attempts to select a wife from his rural district's eligible females (Basil Sydney). Three unsuccessful dalliances later, the farmer settles for his housekeeper, whom the audience has been rooting for all along. The Farmer's Wife is a prime example of the sort of fare that struck a proper chord with British filmgoers, but whose appeal would be lost to any other nationality. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Basil SydneyWilfred Lawson, (more)
 
1940  
 
In this drama, the owner of a newsreel company and his son decide to make a documentary that pays tribute to human accomplishment. Then Hitler conquers Czechoslovakia. After that, the father decides to make a movie about the terrible Nazis. The son refuses to assist and instead escapes to Uruguay. There he films the sabotage and sinking of the German battleship Graf Spee at Montevideo. The movie includes actual war footage. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1940  
 
In this patriotic drama, the courage of a German pastor is presented as he makes a public stand against Nazi philosophies and actions. Unfortunately, the outspoken fellow is sent to a concentration camp where he is beaten and tortured. Still he manages to escape and give one final sermon to his congregation before he is gunned down. The story is based on an actual event. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Wilfred LawsonNova Pilbeam, (more)
 
1940  
 
In this rather theatrical comedy, a millionaire and a starving author exchange places. The beleaguered millionaire does this so he can find a little peace and quiet. The ersatz millionaire goes to a boarding house where he finds moochers at every turn. Meanwhile the real millionaire's wife throws a monkey wrench in the scheme when she surprises her "husband" at the house. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Wallace EvennettEvelyn Roberts, (more)