A Gem from the Thirties!
Posted: March 18th, 2008, 10:03 pm
Get out your compass, your pick & your spade, cause this lost little treasure is definitely worth digging for!
And if you're as lucky as I was, you might be able to unearth it on VHS at your local video rental stop!
It's called Storm in A Teacup, a quite ascerbic British comedy of manners from '37; it's propelled by the pivotal leads of Vivian Leigh and a fresh-scrubbed, horsefaced young Rex Harrison, not yet quite comfy in those worsted tweeds soon to become his hallmark; but just as with Capra's standard-setting You Can't Take It With You, the prism of supporting characters that revolve about their twinned axis is far more the bread & butter of this movie's story.
And the priceless truffle in this dysfunctional dagwood is Sara Allgood (best remembered to us cine-mavens as Mother Morgan from How Green Was My Valley) - as Honoria, an ice cream hawker in the semi-mythical Scottish resort town of Baiki, a charming, indefatigable, shrewd woman who is resolutely commited to her Patsy, a heart-stealing Bearded Collie on trial for his life.
Literally.
No Greyfriar's Bobby this, though; there's class snobbery, yellow journalism, infidelity, perjury, great bagpiping, horrid architecture, smart-aleck domestics, corrupt politicians, and a flood of vibrant Gaelic gossip that flashes like the lightning overhead through the pubs & shops & cottages of Baiki, as real a place surely as Bedford Falls or Pilgrim's Farm.
So go ahead, take the LMS overnighter up from Houston Station; you can catch the ferry in Oban, then it's less than 40 minutes in clear weather to Baiki, and the only passport you'll need is a thirst for eccentricity.
And if you're as lucky as I was, you might be able to unearth it on VHS at your local video rental stop!
It's called Storm in A Teacup, a quite ascerbic British comedy of manners from '37; it's propelled by the pivotal leads of Vivian Leigh and a fresh-scrubbed, horsefaced young Rex Harrison, not yet quite comfy in those worsted tweeds soon to become his hallmark; but just as with Capra's standard-setting You Can't Take It With You, the prism of supporting characters that revolve about their twinned axis is far more the bread & butter of this movie's story.
And the priceless truffle in this dysfunctional dagwood is Sara Allgood (best remembered to us cine-mavens as Mother Morgan from How Green Was My Valley) - as Honoria, an ice cream hawker in the semi-mythical Scottish resort town of Baiki, a charming, indefatigable, shrewd woman who is resolutely commited to her Patsy, a heart-stealing Bearded Collie on trial for his life.
Literally.
No Greyfriar's Bobby this, though; there's class snobbery, yellow journalism, infidelity, perjury, great bagpiping, horrid architecture, smart-aleck domestics, corrupt politicians, and a flood of vibrant Gaelic gossip that flashes like the lightning overhead through the pubs & shops & cottages of Baiki, as real a place surely as Bedford Falls or Pilgrim's Farm.
So go ahead, take the LMS overnighter up from Houston Station; you can catch the ferry in Oban, then it's less than 40 minutes in clear weather to Baiki, and the only passport you'll need is a thirst for eccentricity.