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John Corfield Movies

Liverpool-born film executive John Corfield was mostly known for his stewardship of British National, the small studio he operated from 1934 until 1948, which became very important in the early '40s. British National was formed in 1934, when Corfield, then a producer, brought about a meeting between J. Arthur Rank, a devout Methodist and flour millionaire, and Lady Yule, the widow of jute magnate David Yule. Both were concerned with the state of morality in cinema, which had been the subject of much commentary at the time, and they decided to finance British National with the intention of producing religious films that would present uplifting stories and messages. It never seemed to work out exactly that way, however, and the resulting production company, using the the facilities of what had been known as the Rock Studio, at Elstree, and with Corfield in charge, ended up releasing a succession of mostly low-budget thrillers and comedies. Most of British National's output of the 1930s was bottom-of-the-bill fare in England, and virtually none of it was ever even seen anywhere else. In 1937, Rank sold his shares in the company to Lady Yule, who left Corfield in charge. Then, late in 1939, British National began taking a much more ambitious approach to making movies. Corfield let it be known that, within the constraints of his available budget, he was willing to back more substantial film projects. It was a fortuitous decision, and one that, less than a year later, would transform Corfield -- a cautious businessman at all times -- into one of the more important film industry executives in England. War had broken out in September of 1939, though the fighting would be confined mostly to the east for the next six months; Britain's film industry, along with the rest of its economy and business community, was left in crisis. No one was sure what would happen to the economy, or the availability of financing, especially for an industry that was not deemed militarily essential. (One must also remember that these events were unfolding only 21 years after the end of the First World War, which had nearly bled Britain dry, militarily and economically). And in the midst of it all, in the spring of 1940, the biggest movie producer in all of England, Alexander Korda, closed his studio and moved his entire operation to America in order to finish work on The Thief of Bagdad. A lot of producers and directors were left in a precarious position by Korda's move, and while numerous filmmakers were anxious to keep working, and doing movies that, in many instances would prove important (directly or indirectly) to the war effort, it was difficult to know what could or couldn't be made.
Corfield's British National, which had been virtually inactive across most of 1939, suddenly, in 1940, found filmmakers who needed a home for their projects, and he was willing to oblige. British National's output that year soared, along with the quality of movies it released. The latter included everything from the regionally popular comedies in the "Old Mother Riley" series (which were not important movies in any respect, except to the extent that they helped keep up morale on the homefront, by which standard they were enormously important) to Thorold Dickinson's masterful thriller Gaslight (1940), starring Anton Walbrook and Diana Wynyard. The latter was so impressive that MGM snapped up the rights and, later, the movie, suppressing the latter and shooting a mega-budgeted remake with Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer; it was a crowing irony of Corfield's career that the biggest success he ever had as a producer was unseen for almost half a century, as a by-product of its success and MGM's machinations; the man would also probably love to have known that, as late as 2009, some 70 years after its release, at a point when it was long available on DVD and to television, British National's Gaslight could still pull a capacity crowd into a theater in New York City.
The most historically significant movie financed by Corfield, however, was Michael Powell's Contraband, based on a script by Emeric Pressburger. Powell and Pressburger were not yet organized corporately as The Archers. They were professionally treading water in the wake of Korda's departure and trying to aid the war effort, and Contraband (1940) -- which was one of the most effective romantic thrillers of the early part of the war -- did all of that, and also helped keep the partnership together. And as a result, the two, working in tandem, soon after delivered with Forty-Ninth Parallel (1941), which, in turn, spawned The Archers.
Although British National seldom moved out from behind the shadow of the Rank Organisation as the latter expanded its production in new and ambitious directions during the early/middle 1940s, it did get some important pictures made, including Love on the Dole (1941), starring a young Deborah Kerr; Penn of Pennsylvania (1941), starring Clifford Evans; and Pimpernel Smith (1941), directed by and starring Leslie Howard. And occasionally, when Rank declined to finance a movie for whatever reason, Corfield was able to open his company's checkbook to get it made, the most important instance of the latter was Powell and Pressburger's One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1942). Of course, the company's capitalization was never a match for the kind of financial muscle that Korda or Rank's company could bring to bear -- Corfield and his Elstree-based National Studios were never going to be in a position to make a Henry V or A Matter of Life and Death -- but he came through at those moments that he was most needed. And Michael Powell, in his book A Life in Movies, called Corfield "one of those men who are scared to death by every decision they make, but can't resist making them." The quality of British National's releases slackened in the mid-'40s, though it was still generating good, solid low-budget features, such as Appointment With Crime (1945), and Corfield was still producing pictures right up until 1948, when the company shut down. Corfield passed away five years later, in 1953. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
1948  
 
Ann Markham (Margaret Lockwood) is an employee with the British Embassy in Rio de Janeiro. Though ostensibly businesslike and intelligent, Ann can't help falling in love with irresponsible Charlie Kent (Griffith Jones). On their wedding day, Ann discovers that Charlie is on the lam from fraud charges throughout the world. Still, she believes his promise that he'll mend his ways once they've tied the nuptial knot. Not unexpectedly, Charlie goes back on his word, and it is up to handsome millionaire Ashley Morehouse (Norman Wooland) to save Ann from her poor judgment. It was surprising to see the British film industry's resident "wicked lady" Margaret Lockwood playing so gullible a character -- so surprising, in fact, that audiences tended to stay away from Look Before You Love in droves. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Margaret LockwoodGriffith Jones, (more)
 
1948  
 
There's dirty work backstage in the British melodrama My Sister and I. Sally Ann Howes plays Robina Adams, an aspiring actress who lands a job at the provincial repertory company managed by Miss Havisham-like Mrs. Camelot (Martita Hunt). Still carrying a torch for her late husband, Mrs. Camelot makes everyone's life miserable until she is found dead of gas poisoning. The solution to the murder is hinted at in the film's title, which is all that can be revealed for now. A subplot concerns the romantic tug-of-war between Robina and her two would-be swains, actor Graham Forbes (Dermot Walsh) and lawyer Roger Crisp (Patrick Holt). ies. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Hazel CourtHelen Goss, (more)
 
1943  
 
Headline serves as a vehicle for handsome David Farrar, who in 1943 was Britain's fastest-rising leading man. Farrar is cast as Broogle, a crime reporter who'll do anything-ANYTHING-for a story. When the wife of the publisher disappears after witnessing a murder, Broogle ignores Scotland Yard's warnings to "lay off" and endeavors to solve the mystery himself. The film's best performance is rendered by BBC radio favorite Richard Goolden, cast as a self-styled "psychological" detective. While genuine journalists howled at the innacuracies in Headline, audiences ate it up. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1941  
 
In this mystery, a detective trying to crack a forgery ring gets one of its members to go to prison to help him. When he gets out three years later, he finds that his girlfriend is now with the ringleader, and the detective must save him from being hanged by the gang. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi

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1941  
 
The pageantlike This England was designed by the Anglo-American film corporation to boost the morale of the war-besieged island nation. The story unfolds in the ancient British community of Claverly Village, which has already weathered serveral centuries of political upheavals, both foreign and domestic. A.R. Rawlinson and Bridge Boland's screenplay traces the history of the village from the Feudal Era to the Second World War, with Emlyn Williams (who also contributed additional dialogue), John Clements and Constance Cummings enacted the roles of several Claverly citizens throughout the years. Cummings is at her best in the "Spanish Armada" sequence, portraying a fetching gypsy not unlike her Latin American charmer in Harold Lloyd's Movie Crazy (1932). Perhaps because of its episodic construction, This England is one of those unfortunate films that never seems to turn up intact when shown today. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Emlyn WilliamsJohn Clements, (more)
 
1941  
 
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This subtle, unadorned British war drama was the second collaboration between "The Archers," Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger. Six British bomber crewmen are obliged to bail out over Holland. To escape detection from the Nazis, the crewmen accept the hospitality of several Hollanders, all dedicated to the freedom-fighting activities of the Underground. The film is constructed along the lines of the earlier Powell-Pressburger film The Invaders, except that the escapees are British rather than German and their Dutch contacts are willing rather than reluctant co-conspirators. The six male stars are Godfrey Tearle, Eric Portman, Hugh Williams, Bernard Miles, Hugh Burden, and Emrys Jones; among those who aid them in their flight to freedom are Googie Withers, Joyce Redman, and Peter Ustinov. The austere photography by Ronald Neame is complemented by the to-the-point editing of future director David Lean. Adding to the verisimilitude of One of Our Aircraft Is Missing is the utter absence of a musical score. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Godfrey TearleEric Portman, (more)
 
1941  
 
Based on Monica Ewer's novel Ring O'Roses, the British musiccomedy He Found a Star is dominated by the thousand-watt personality of music hall favorite Vic Oliver. He's cast as Lucky Lyndon, a seedy but enthusiastic talent agent specializing in small-time variety acts. Lyndon spends the entire picture searching for the next "big star", never realizing that his secretary Ruth Cavour (played by Sarah Churchill, Winston's daughter) is madly in love with him. By the time he's figured out what's what, Lyndon has nearly come to grief trying to promote ungrateful nightclub songstress Suzanne (Evelyn Dall). An average subject at best, He Found a Star is distinguished by the creative cinematography of Oscar-winning lensman Ernest Palmer. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Vic OliverSarah Churchill, (more)
 
1940  
 
In this British WW II era espionage film a Nazi spy purloins a secret cartridge in Paris and must make it back to Germany. He is pursued by Allied agents who, with the help of an English lass and a German general's son, try to get it back. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Basil RadfordThorley Walters, (more)
 
1940  
 
In this wartime comedy, set after the beginning of WW II, a British entertainer is drafted and immediately finds himself at odds with his new CO. After he uses his show-biz know-how to save the camp, the performer is given a commission. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1940  
 
The 1940 British production of Gaslight was the first of two cinematic adaptations of Patrick Hamilton's play. Oozing faux continental charm, Anton Walbrook inveigles his way into the confidence of the young mistress (Diana Wynyard) of a large Victorian mansion. Walbrook is searching for the rubies that he'd stolen from the previous owner of the house -- whom he'd also murdered. Suspecting that Wynyard is about to catch on to his secret, Walbrook enlists the aid of a sluttish maidservant to drive his loving bride crazy. The ploy almost works, but Wynyard is rescued by an unexpected ally. Gaslight was released in the U.S. as Murder in Thornton Square, then withdrawn entirely on the occasion of MGM's expensive 1944 remake of Gaslight, which starred Charles Boyer and Ingrid Bergman. To avoid confusion, MGM allegedly ordered that all prints of the original Gaslight be destroyed. Evidently that order was not honored to the letter, since the 1940 Gaslight is still safely available for both theatrical and TV exhibition. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Anton WalbrookDiana Wynyard, (more)
 
1940  
 
In this entry in the long-running British comedy series, boisterous Irish washerwoman Mother Riley gets into deep trouble when during her crusade to help local shopkeepers fight the presence of a ruthless chain of stores, she inadvertently pushes the chain's boss into the river. She immediately flees to a hospital where she puts on a nurse's uniform. Now she must escape from the hospital. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1940  
 
In this entry in the long-running British comedy series, boisterous Irish washerwoman Mother Riley plays the wardrobe lady for her daughter, a chorus girl. Her daughter then falls for a wealthy fellow. To spy, Riley dons a maid's uniform and begins working in the beau's family home. Mayhem ensues. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1940  
 
Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne repeat their "Charters and Caldicott" characterizations from Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes for the British comedy-mystery Crooks Tour. This time, our cricket-happy heroes take a vacation in unoccupied Europe. They cross the path of a seemingly dedicated Nazi lass (Greta Gynt) who is actually loyal to the British crown. Laughs are in abundance, but the verbal wit displayed by Radford and Wayne in earlier films is noticeably lacking. Crooks Tour was one of hundreds of British films that were run to death during the early days of American television. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Basil RadfordNaunton Wayne, (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)
 
1940  
 
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The Danish freighter Helvig approaches English waters in early 1940 and, in keeping with the needs of British security, it is boarded by customs and naval officials in search of contraband cargo. Her skipper, Captain Anderson (Conrad Veidt), is compelled to ascede to British demands, but dreads the delay, pointing out that the medical supplies in his cargo are vital. Anderssen is a dedicated seaman, all business, even where Mrs. Sorenson (Valerie Hobson), a headstrong passenger, is concerned. Then, on their first night in port, Mrs. Sorenson and a Mr. Pidgeon (Esmond Knight) disappear from the ship with Anderson's landing papers, the captain is in hot pursuit. Forced to join the woman in what seems a mad chase across London by night, he plunges into an Alice-in-Wonderland world of the blacked out city, following a set of clues through the maze of darkened streets and uncover a Nazi spy ring operating out of a basement in Soho. Each also discovers that there's a lot to admire and even possibly to love in the other -- the challenge is for Hobson, who is something other than the divorcee and mother she pretends to be, to stay alive long enough for Captain Anderson to effect a rescue and prevent the German spies from turning the British counter-intelligence effort against the Allies. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

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Starring:
Conrad VeidtValerie Hobson, (more)
 
1939  
 
In this entry in the long-running British comedy series, the boisterous Mother Riley plays a nurse who was forced to volunteer for the Auxiliary Territorial Service. Mayhem ensues until she is able to prevent German spies from acquiring important documents. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1939  
 
The success of the British Q Planes spawned a brief cycle in airborne espionage pictures--at least until all British aircraft was impounded for actual combat use. The title Spies of the Air tells all: The central character is a test pilot who turns out to be in the employ of The Enemy. Since the film is adapted from Jeffrey Dell's stage play Official Secrets, much of the action takes place on the ground. The flight sequences blend stock footage and newly-shot aerial scenes with acceptable expertise. Spies of the Air was filmed in 1939, but not released until 1940--by which time its topicality had increased tenfold. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Barry BarnesRoger Livesey, (more)
 
1939  
 
In this three-hanky crime drama, a junkman offers a little sage advice for a young woman who has fallen in love with a cowardly crook. The woman tries to convince her lover to reform. He does try, but then he is later arrested while robbing a bank. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1939  
 
In this crime drama, a boys' school matron is brutally murdered after she wins the French lottery. The story tells how it was done. She is killed by a French loan shark who tricks her into coming to his place. He then kills her and has another woman put on her clothing and collect the lottery winnings. The law pursues the killer, who commits two more murders before he kills himself. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Emlyn WilliamsSara Seegar, (more)
 
1938  
 
In this action film, a truck driver must carry a load of dynamite. Meanwhile, his girlfriend gets mixed up with a gang that sells stolen furs. Eventually, the truck driver must rescue his girlfriend from the bad guys and blows them and their loot to Kingdom Come. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi

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1938  
 
In this romantic comedy, an aspiring actress and her father move into his sister's boarding house where they promptly find themselves abused and overworked. Despite the hardship, the girl is able to find time to fall in love with an aspiring songwriter. When the star of a local mime company learns of their affair she nearly breaks them apart with her jealousy. Fortunately, true love triumphs and the happy duo begin sharing grand dreams after they are offered a theater contract in London's West End. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1938  
 
In 1954 there was Godzilla, the lizard transformed by radiation, and in 1959, the British gave us Behemoth, the Sea Monster, Godzilla's Anglo, radiated cousin. Now there is the "man of steel" in this undistinguished, "B"-grade, sci-fi melodrama that was the last film directed by Allan Dwan. The unsuspecting Eddie Candell (Ron Randell) is on the lam from a crime he never committed when he is exposed to a dangerous, radioactive cobalt substance emanating from an atomic bomb test site in the desert. This exposure does not cause cancer or radiation sickness; it turns Eddie's epidermis into an iron-clad suit of armor that no bullet can penetrate. Thus protected, Eddie the human tank decides to wreak revenge on the villains who framed him for that crime. The only question is not whether he will rust, but whether this odd skin condition is as permanent as it seems. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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1936  
 
A robbery committed by gambler Fitzgerald is claimed by his friend Banks while the two are stationed at an African outpost. ~ Rovi

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1935  
 
For 400 years, the Fosdyck family were the only fishermen in a tiny British coastal village. Now, the Fosdyck's predominance is threatened by the arrival of a new clan, the Lunns. Patriarch Uncle Isaac Fosdyck (J. Fisher White) regards the Lunns as invaders, declaring them persona non grata in his household. Now comes the BIG SURPRISE: Ruth Fosdyck (Geraldine Fitzgerald) falls in love with Marney Lynn (John Garrick). After a minimum of muss-and-fuss, the two families bury the hatchet and elect to share their piscatorial plunder. Perhaps the original Leo Walmsey novel Three Fevers was more innovative than this by-the-numbers film version. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
John GarrickGeraldine Fitzgerald, (more)