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» » Laburnum Grove (1936)

Short summary

Laburnum Grove. A quiet, residential address in one of the newer north London suburbs, Nice houses. Nice people.Mr Radfern, decent, respectable citizen and householder spends his Sunday evenings in his greenhouse who would think he is a forger working for criminals.......

This film received its earliest documented telecast Saturday 19 August 1944 on New York City's pioneer television station WNBT (Channel 1).

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Nagis
    At last an early Carol Reed movie that's neither risible nor cringe-making. Ironically it was mostly his later films - Climbing High etc - that fell into that category. On the other hand in this case he is working from a rock-solid base, a 'well-made' play by Jack Priestley rather than an 'original' screenplay. In fact Reed was working for an outfit that had been formed to bring West End successes to the screen so it may well be that he was, to a certain extent, restricted creatively. Certainly there is no discernible 'signature' in evidence in what amounts to a (presumbably) faithful rendering of a West End success. Edmund Gwenn is his usual lovable rogue as the head of a household with a secret life as a master forger. Cedric Hardwicke is unconvincingly cast against type as his seriously sponger brother-in-law whilst Katie Johnson lends solid support - and looks exactly the same as she did in The Ladykillers almost 20 years later - as Gwenn's wife. Gwenn's would-be son-in-law behaves exactly as his counterpart in The Winslow Boy, i.e. running a mile at the first whiff of scandal and somewhat bizarrely for a climate in which film producers were under orders to make Crime Does Not Pay fodder for the masses, Gwenn walks into the sunset happier and wiser. Worth a look.
  • comment
    • Author: Innadril
    I saw this film at the NFT last night.It was shown as part of the tribute to Carol Reed.A director who now largely seems to be forgotten.This film is based on a play by J.B.Prisetley.Given that there is not a lot in the way of opening out it is fairly easy to see where the three acts begin and end.The two lead performances by Gwenn and Harwicke are ones to cherish.I have seen Gwenn in a number of his British films and i have to say that i have not seen him put a foot wrong.He has a cherubic smile which normally hides some mischievous thought.This film thrives on incongruity.There are some exterior shots of suburban London in the 1930s including the exterior,and possibly the interior of Stolls Picture Theatre,which i believe was in Kingsway.
  • comment
    • Author: Mr.jeka
    By the late 1930s Carol Reed was a young director who was being talked about as being able to take a pretty ordinary script and turn it into something special. Have loved Edmund Gwen ever since "The Good Companions" and together with Cedric Hardwicke as the two brothers-in-law who can barely tolerate each other they don't disappoint. Tremendous movie - starts off a bit "what's going on then" but soon gets started. On the surface George (Gwen) is a happy, contented man whose biggest thrill is his tomato patch but he also has to put up with supporting his sister and her layabout husband who is always cornering George, begging for loans for sure fire business deals (and it's always huge amounts, hundreds of pounds). When George's daughter (a beautiful Victoria Hopper) brings home her new man, George sizes him up as a rotter instantly, cut from the same cloth as Baxley. He, too, is after a loan to buy a used car yard and George sees red!! He spins a story over dinner about how he is the head of a big forgery syndicate - the Mr. Big!!, now he can sit back and watch the fun!! Is it true or is it a tall tale, only time will tell!!

    The movie belongs to Cedric Hardwicke as the bone idle Baxley, forever eating George's bananas, always swiping handfuls of cigarettes to keep his own battered Carven A box replenished. Now he is running scared, seeing spies and criminals lurking in every shadow!! A hilarious scene involves the three of them - Baxley, his wife and George's daughter going for a day on the town, too scared to use the money George gave them but as usual having nothing of their own!! The scene finishes in the restaurant and is a riot!!

    All the cast shine with Katie Johnson as George's wife, looking very much the pixilated lady she would appear in "The Lady Killers" of almost 20 years in the future!!
  • Credited cast:
    Edmund Gwenn Edmund Gwenn - Mr. Radfern
    Cedric Hardwicke Cedric Hardwicke - Mr. Baxley
    Victoria Hopper Victoria Hopper - Elsie Radfern
    Ethel Coleridge Ethel Coleridge - Mrs. Baxley
    Katie Johnson Katie Johnson - Mrs. Radfern
    Francis James Francis James - Harold Russ
    James Harcourt James Harcourt - Joe Fletten
    David Hawthorne David Hawthorne - Inspector Stack
    Frederick Burtwell Frederick Burtwell - Simpson
    Terry Conlin Terry Conlin - Police Sergeant (as Terence Conlin)
    Norman Walker Norman Walker - Man with Glasses
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Tom Gill Tom Gill - Bit Part
    Arnold Lucy Arnold Lucy - Bit Part
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