Jerome Jackson Movies
Jerome Jackson was an American-born lawyer-turned-producer who fostered several important careers in England during the 1930's, most notably that of director Michael Powell. The son of a prominent New York attorney, Jackson was sent to England in 1928 by Nathan Burkan -- the attorney best remembered for representing Mae West in the legal dispute over her censored play Sex -- on behalf of United Artists chief Nick Schenck in a legal capacity. As Michael Powell recalled in his autobiography A Life In Movies, no sooner did Jackson see London for the first time, however, then he was overwhelmed by the beauty of the city, and also attracted to the opportunities that he saw there. In America in 1928, the talkies had already begun their inexorable supplanting of the silents. This technological revolution and the aesthetic upheaval that it entailed had yet to arrive in England, but Jackson knew that it would get there within a year, and recognized that anyone with a head-start in dealing with the technology would have an enormous advantage; and that he not only had a head-start, but he was already in England -- and he was staying.He set up an office above a shop on Gerrard Street in London, and it was there that he first met Michael Powell, then a would-be filmmaker, just promoted from stills-man to writer. Powell's first job for Jackson was to recut a German-made comedy by Lupu Pick called A Knight In London, starring Lilian Harvey -- it was a silent, of course, and the cutting only required some taste and skill and common sense, and the picture was a reasonable success when Jackson released it in England. It marked the beginning of what would become a seven-year professional relationship between the neophyte producer and the aspiring director. Powell's next project for Jackson came in 1930 with the movie Caste; Powell had hoped to direct this movie as well as co-writing the screenplay, but ultimately it was original play author Campbell Cullen who directed it. Finally, in 1931, Powell moved into the director's chair on a Jackson production, Two Crowded Hours, starring Jerry Verno and John Longden. An inexpensive thriller, it was not only a success, but showed a good deal of promise on the part of this director, and over the next five years, Powell and Jackson went on to make a string of profitable low-budget thrillers, comedies, and dramas.
Indeed, low-budget is almost too grand a word -- minuscule would be more like it. The films that Powell and Jackson made together were called "quota" pictures or, sometimes, "quota-quickies," and they were a unique product of the British film industry's troubles. In order to forestall the complete dominance of American-made movies in England, Parliament passed a law which required that a certain percentage of British-made pictures be shown in British theaters -- the result was that American studios sometimes financed ultra-low-budget films that they could distribute themselves in England, to facilitate the release of their American-made movies; and enterprising producers like Jackson would make such quota films, and sell them to the distributors and theater chains. And the economics of it all were mindbogglingly small-scale and straightforward -- quota-quickies were budgeted at one pound (then about $6) per finished foot of film; the job of the producer, director, cast, and crew was to deliver a picture that cost no more than 17 shillings and six-pence (about $5.25) per finished foot to make and deliver; and the two-shillings-and-six-pence (around 75 cents) per finished foot of film left over was the profit. Next to many of these productions, all but the most emaciated American B-pictures were opulent. But making such pictures as Rynox, Red Ensign, Crown V. Stevens, and Lazybones taught Jackson and Powell what they needed to know in order to make better movies, and by 1938, both were doing just that. Powell had graduated to the august surroundings of Alexander Korda's London Films, while Jackson was producing pictures with such promising directors as Arthur B. Woods, who was spoken of as a potential successor to Alfred Hitchcock.
As Powell recalled for this writer in a personal conversation in 1988, by 1939, even as war-clouds gathered over Europe, Jackson was poised to take over as head of production at Warner Bros.' Teddington Studios. But over the ensuing year, he was never able to nail down a long-term contract from Warner Bros., mostly due to the growing threat (and then reality) of war. He finally returned with his wife Peggy and new baby to America in 1940, hoping to at least be offered a job in New York or Hollywood. But before any of his business affairs could be settled, Jackson died of natural causes, after a protracted illness, in America in 1940.
~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
It took two directors to bring this modest British thriller to the screen. The story concerns a gang of international jewel thieves, headed by a "mystery man" who is never seen and who communicates with his minions through a microphone. Rival criminal Jacques LeClerq (Sebastian Shaw) gains the gang's confidence, joining them on their biggest caper. Only when it's too late to back out does LeClerq reveal that he's actually a member of the French police. Without revealing the identity of the criminal mastermind, it's worth noting that one of the actors plays a dual role, a fact spelled out in the opening credits. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Sebastian Shaw, Anna Konstam, (more)
In this thriller, a playwright overhears a gang of men plotting a kidnapping and enlists the assistance of a detective to investigate them. They soon find the ring is fronted by a bogus employment agency that sends "clients" to check out potential victims. Action ensues as they endeavor to stop them. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
In this British comedy, set in London during the 1840s, an acting troupe aspires to high-society, but despite their best efforts are consistently rebuffed and consider little more than lowly beggars. As they endeavor to entertain people, they are arrested and put into prison. Later the performers are redeemed when they save a nobleman's son who was abducted by gypsies. The grateful aristocrat finally helps the actors out. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Max Miller, Hal Walters, (more)
A wealthy man's valet, Blore, concocts a blackmail scheme about an attempted poisoning when his employer passes out at a party in this farcical comedy. ~ All Movie Guide
Director Roy William Neill, best known for his work on Universal's Sherlock Holmes series of the 1940s, occasionally made side trips to England during the 1930s. Neill's Anything to Declare? stars Claude Hulbert as an eccentric inventor named Claude Fishlock. Our hero has just developed a new device that will prove useful in construction of military tanks. When the device is stolen by foreign spies, Hulbert is forced to smuggle himself into an unnamed European country in order to retrieve his invention. If you think the name "Claude Fishlock" is funny, you'll roll on the floor when you hear some of the other character monikers in Anything to Declare?: Pete Nutter, Captain Torrent, Sgt. Major Hornett, and so on and so forth. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this British farce, a soldier invents a tank supercharger that he is most eager to try. When the Germans hear about the invention, they send out spies to steal it. The soldier and his partner are both klutzes and almost bumble the plans into the spies' waiting hands, but Fate intervenes and they are saved. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
As cleaner-salesman/electioneer Miller learns of the actions of evil Maltby in running the orphanage, he turns his loyalties to the kind Burtwell. ~ All Movie Guide
In this suspense movie, a secretary marries her rich old boss. He suddenly dies and she finds herself the prime suspect in his murder. She goes to court and is found guilty. En route to court, she is involved in a near-fatal auto-accident. Within her heart is a small piece of glass that a surgeon removes during a ground-breaking operation. The doctor then discovers that the woman has been given a death sentence. Not wanting to lose the patient he worked so hard to save, the doctor sneaks her out of the hospital and keeps her well hidden until the police accost the real killer. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Elizabeth Allan, Cyril Ritchard, (more)
A loving mother sacrifices all for her son in this drama. She is an artist's model who finds herself financially drained by a dead-beat artist when she falls in love with a younger man, marries him and bears a son. When her beloved husband dies in the war, the old artist tries to win her back. When that doesn't work, he lures her into his studio and pulls a gun on her. During the ensuing struggle, she accidentally shoots him and ends up spending 15 years in jail. Upon her release she heads for America to keep her son from discovering the truth. In the States, she gets involved with a gambler, but then returns to England and discovers her son is being flimflammed by gamblers. She then saves him from losing it all, but the ungrateful son only has eyes for his lover and his mother slowly fades from view. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Bebe Daniels, Arthur Margetson, (more)
Not to be confused with either Nicholas Ray's melancholic 1949 crime tale They Live by Night or Raoul Walsh's 1940 action-melodrama (which borrowed only its title), this British thriller concerns one flawed man's attempts at clearing his name. They Drive by Night stars Emlyn Williams as Shorty, a just-released convict eager to reunite with his girlfriend -- whom he finds strangled to death when he reaches her apartment. Certain the police won't look favorably upon him should he report the dead body, Shorty enlists the help of ex-girlfriend Molly (Anna Konstam) in an attempt to find the real killer, amidst the intrusions of Walter Hoover (Ernst Thesiger), a creepy forensic criminologist who might know more than he lets on. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
The port of Southampton provides the locale for a series of escapades of British sailors on a 6 hour leave. ~ All Movie Guide
In this opera-oriented musical, a young tenor in Venice meets a young woman who sneaks into the opera house to try and get her fiance hired as the orchestra's pianist. She tells him her story, but calls her fiance her brother. He finds her out, but gives her a card that will get the pianist a job anyway. She feels guilty, breaks off the engagement, and decides to go along with her parents' choice of a wealthy society man as her husband, but changes her mind right before the wedding and marries the tenor. ~ Steve Huey, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jan Kiepura, Sonnie Hale, (more)
Venerable stage favorite Cyril Maude is pretty much the whole show in the British comedy-melodrama Heat Wave. Maude plays a cranky old vegetable trader who pulls into port at a mythical banana republic. Loudly announcing that he has potatoes, onions and cabbage for sale, the old man unwittingly spouts out the code words for a gun-running operation. He is hired by a revolutionary group to supply guns for an impending insurrection, but of course he thinks he's merely making another produce run. When Maude shows up at his appointed destination with vegetables instead of rifles, it looks like he's a goner, but through a series of logic-defying complications, our hero not only saves his own skin, but also those of the Presidente and his pretty daughter. Director Maurice Elvey manages to find a spot or two to showcase the talents of British radio singer Les Allen, here cast as the heroine's sweetheart. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Albert Burdon, Cyril Maude, (more)
Three talented screenwriters collaborated in adapting Evadne Price and Joan Roy Byford's play The Haunted Light to the screen as Phantom Light. This British chiller-diller-thriller begins with the mysterious murder of a lighthouse keeper. After his death, the region is plagued by shipwrecks, each heralded by a "phantom light" beaming from the lighthouse. Female detective Binnie Hale teams with new keeper Gordon Harker and navy officer Ian Hunter to solve the mystery. Directed with a sure and steady hand by Michael Powell, The Phantom Light is infinitely superior to the quota-quickie melodramas then flooding the British film market. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Binnie Hale, Donald Calthrop, (more)
Based upon the play Murder Party by Roland Pertwee and John Hastings Turner, Night of the Party uses one of the murder mystery genre's favorite conventions, that of a parlor game gone wrong. In this instance, the game is being held after a dinner party thrown by the ruthless publishing tycoon, Lord Studholme, in honor of the visiting Princess Amelia of Corsova. The guests at the dinner party are a wide range of business and personal associates, each of whom has a strong grudge against the host. When the lights are turned out for a game of Murder in the Dark, Lord Studholme is discovered dead. Arriving shortly thereafter, Scotland Yard's Sir John Holland begins an investigation, and Studholme's secretary, Guy Kennington, is arrested under suspicion of murder. Studholme, however, is not convinced of Kennington's guilt, believing that any of the guests -- including his own daughter, who was present at the party -- could have slain the host. However, it is not until Kennington's trial at the Old Bailey is well underway that he identity of the killer is finally and conclusively revealed. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jane Baxter, Viola Keats, (more)
One of the best of Michael Powell's low-budget "quota quickies" -- essentially British B-movies made on ultra-low budgets under the government-imposed quota system for British-made movies in British theaters -- Red Ensign was also one of the more intelligent thoughtful dramas of its kind. Set amid the massive economic disruptions of the worldwide depression of the mid-'30s, it tells the story of David Barr (Leslie Banks), the managing director of an idled Scottish ship-building company, who has devised a revolutionary new design for cargo vessels using arcform hulls, which permits them to operate more cheaply and efficiently than any ships currently in service. He can revolutionize the merchant shipping industry, but Barr wants more than that -- he sees that as only the first step to reviving the entire British economy. Barr, who worked his way up from the shipyards (starting as a riveter) to the boardroom, is able to see this larger picture, from the top down to the vantage point of the lowest yard worker, and from the bottom up to the management suites, and he is driven by the breadth and clarity of what he perceives. But before he can do that, or get even one ship built, he has to overcome the resistance of the other directors, upper-class all, who admire Barr's brilliance but can't understand his passion, content as they are to ride out this worldwide depression in cautious comfort. Their leader is the recalcitrant board chairman, Lord Dean (Frank Vosper), who not only doesn't believe in taking risks but also resents Barr's successful wooing of the company's principal shareholder, June Mackinnon (Carol Goodner), the daughter of the company's late founder.
Barr is single-minded in his vision and certain enough of his cause that he is willing to withhold information from the other directors to get what he wants, and even commit forgery if there's no other way to get the first ship built. Lord Dean, meanwhile, wants to sign a contract for the new ships with Manning (Alfred Drayton), the unscrupulous owner of a shipping line notorious for its use of foreign registries, poorly paid and trained foreign crews, and safety violations, which would solve the shipyard's problems for a time but do nothing for British shipping or the economy. And Manning, desiring these new ship and faced with Barr's opposition, is not above putting spies and saboteurs into the shipyard, and setting fires and explosions to undermine Barr's work. Amid the corporate maneuvering and the threat of strikes (fomented by Manning's paid agitators) and arrest, the script keeps the pacing brisk and the focus tight on the fate of Barr and his ideas, in what was one of the more cerebral and diverting dramatic thrillers of its day. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Barr is single-minded in his vision and certain enough of his cause that he is willing to withhold information from the other directors to get what he wants, and even commit forgery if there's no other way to get the first ship built. Lord Dean, meanwhile, wants to sign a contract for the new ships with Manning (Alfred Drayton), the unscrupulous owner of a shipping line notorious for its use of foreign registries, poorly paid and trained foreign crews, and safety violations, which would solve the shipyard's problems for a time but do nothing for British shipping or the economy. And Manning, desiring these new ship and faced with Barr's opposition, is not above putting spies and saboteurs into the shipyard, and setting fires and explosions to undermine Barr's work. Amid the corporate maneuvering and the threat of strikes (fomented by Manning's paid agitators) and arrest, the script keeps the pacing brisk and the focus tight on the fate of Barr and his ideas, in what was one of the more cerebral and diverting dramatic thrillers of its day. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Leslie Banks, Frank Vosper, (more)
The Fire Raisers (British slang for arsonists) was inspired by the true story of Leopold Harris, an insurance assessor convicted of arson. Called "a sort of Warner Brothers Newspaper Headline story" by director Michael Powell, the film centers around Jim Bronson (played by Leslie Banks), an ambitious assessor intent on marrying the daughter of a successful underwriter at Lloyd's of London. Bronson employs unscrupulous methods to better his financial position and convinces the daughter to marry him against the father's wishes. Unfortunately, Bronson cannot leave well enough alone and foolishly gambles away most of his money. To save face and regain his wealth, he becomes involved with a gang of arsonists. Bronson's assistant, Bates, becomes suspicious of his superior and helps Twist, a representative of Lloyd's, infiltrate the gang. However, the fire raisers suspect things are not on the up-and-up; unbeknownst to Bronson, they beat Bates and leave him to die in a vault while they turn their attentions to Twist. Discovering Bates in the vault, Bronson has a change of heart and tries to rescue Twist before the gang gets to him. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
A very early effort from director Michael Powell, C.O.D is a gimmick-laden British murder mystery. Hope Davy finds herself with the corpse of her stepfather on her hands. She insists she's innocent, but all existing evidence points right in her direction. She takes erudite crook Gary Marsh into her confidence, begging him to help her hide her stepfather's body until she can track down the real murderer. Screenwriter Ralph Smart was still plying his twist-and-turn trade thirty years later on The Avengers. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
An early example of the British musical film, His Lordship is in the long line of musicals in which a commoner finds himself elevated to the peerage, with comic results. In His Lordship, the commoner is a happy cockney plumber by the name of Bert Gibbs. Bert comes into contact with the celebrated Russian movie star Ilya Myona. Desperate for publicity and aware that nobility make for good copy, Ilya persuades Bert to pose as her fiancé (with the possibility of persuading him to go through with the marriage if need be). Things are complicated by a pair of anarchic Bolsheviks, one of whom has a daughter named Lenina who knows Bert from his plumber days and is quite in love with him. The knotty plot includes a musical segment in which Bert performs as a quick change artist in order to appear in a succession of publicity shots. Long thought lost, a print was found and restored by the British Film Institute in 1997. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
Coming in at an economical 44 minutes (and costing an economical 3700 pounds), Star Reporter was one of several collaborations between director Michael Powell and acclaimed mystery writer Philip MacDonald. A sly character named Mandel (Garry Marsh) persuades Lord Longbourne (Spencer Trevor) to participate in an insurance scam: Mandel will abscond with a precious diamond belonging to Longbourne's daughter, Lady Susan Loman )Isla Bevan), and Longbourne can cash in on the insurance money. Things go awry when Lady Loman's chauffeur, Major Starr (Harold French), foils their efforts and Mandel is killed in a fall from a rooftop. Starr, who it turns out is the star reporter of the title, then proposes to Lady Loman, who accepts. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
Produced for an economical (even in 1932) £4000, Hotel Splendide stars comedian Jerry Verno as Jerry Mason, an impecunious nobody who inherits the seaside resort of the title. He immediately quits his dead end job, tells his boss off, and travels to Speymouth -- where he finds that his vision of his inheritance does not quite match reality. Although initially disappointed, he decides he will try to make a go of it and sets about making plans on how to bolster the hotel's (and his) fortunes. Along the way he discovers a small package that, unbeknownst to him, contains the famous Dysart Pearls, stolen and buried there before the hotel was built. Eventually the packet falls into the possession of Gentleman Charlie, a former convict who is posing as a new guest at the Splendide. Several complications ensue involving a rival gangster, a detective, a series of mistaken identities and a safe (the combination of which Mason has forgotten) before all ends well and Mason finds himself richer by £10,000. The first of director Michael Powell's features for Gaumont-British, Splendide marked the first time Powell appeared as an actor in a movie which he also directed. In addition, it features one of the earliest cinematic uses of "Funeral March of the Marionettes," better known as the theme music for Alfred Hitchcock Presents. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
Based upon a detective novel of the same name by Philip MacDoanld, "The Rasp" refers to a wood-rasp, a file-like implement that is used to murder John Hoode, an important cabinet minister. In the best murder mystery tradition, all of the evidence points to only one possible suspect -- Alan Deacon (James Raglan), the secretary of the deceased official. The case seems airtight: Deacon's fingerprints are the only ones on the blood-soaked weapon, his alibi does not hold water (whereas the alibis of all other possible suspects are rock solid), he has a motive for the slaying, and he's physically capable of having committed the deed. Although things look black for him, reporter Anthony Gethryn(Claude Horton) has a hunch that all of the pieces are fitting together a little too neatly. He takes it upon himself to unravel the mystery and discover the real killer, and manages to fall in love along the way. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
Oliver Sandys' novel Mops was the inspiration for the easy-to-take British musical Born Lucky. Rene Ray stars as a servant girl who happens to possess a thrilling voice. With the aid of handsome John Longden, Ray rises to fame as a radio singer. The film is of interest as an early directorial effort of Michael Powell (his ninth feature, to be exact). Born Lucky was distributed to the English-speaking world by MGM British. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The shortest of director Michael Powell's surviving films, Rynox is based upon a novel by Philip MacDonald, one of the most popular mystery novelists of the time. "Rynox" is the name of the company headed by the wealthy F.X. Benedik, a businessman whose life has been threatened by a mysterious and violent stranger by the name of Boswell Marsh, who apparently holds a grudge against Benedik. When Benedik is found murdered, Marsh becomes the prime suspect and Benedik's son, Tony, turns his attention to both running the company and finding his father's killer. Tony eventually solves the mystery, along the way discovering that things are not always the way they seem. Rynox was remade in 1937 as Who Killed John Savage? ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
Comedian Jerry Verno, who played a cabbie in Michael Powell's earlier Two Crowded Hours, is back behind the livery wheel in My Friend the King. King Ludwig Eric Pavitt) is a young Ruritanian prince who is unceremoniously abducted by revolutionaries led by the wicked Count Huelin (Tracey Holmes). Verno is called upon to help in the efforts to save the young ruler, going as far as disguising himself as a countess to effectuate the rescue. After a lengthy car chase, all ends well with the prince restored to his rightful place. My Friend was one of five movies that Michael Powell filmed during his first busy year as a director. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide









