Holiday Camp (film)
Holiday Camp | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Ken Annakin |
Produced by | Sydney Box |
Written by | Peter Rogers Muriel Box Sydney Box addit. dialogue Mabel Constanduros Denis Constanduros Ted Willis |
Story by | Godfrey Winn |
Starring | Jack Warner Kathleen Harrison Dennis Price |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | General Film Distributors |
Release dates
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5 August 1947 |
Running time
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97 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £150,400[1] |
Box office | £184,300[1] |
Holiday Camp is a 1947 British comedy drama film directed by Ken Annakin, starring Jack Warner, Jimmy Hanley, Kathleen Harrison and Dennis Price[2] set at the then popular Butlin's holiday camps.
Contents
Synopsis
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. It documents a postwar working-class London family's annual visit to a summer holiday camp. It was the first film to feature the Huggett family, who went on to star in the Huggetts Trilogy. It resonated with post-war audiences and was very successful. The film is a kaleidoscope of various lives at play by the sea, in a Butlin's holiday camp. They include a pregnant young girl, a group of gamblers, and a murderer seeking his next victim.[3][4]
Cast
- Flora Robson as Esther Harman
- Dennis Price as Hardwicke
- Jack Warner as Joe Huggett
- Hazel Court as Joan Martin
- Emrys Jones as Michael Halliday
- Kathleen Harrison as Mrs Huggett
- Yvonne Owen as Angela Kirby
- Esmond Knight as Camp Announcer
- Jimmy Hanley as Jimmy Gardner
- Peter Hammond as Harry Huggett
- Esma Cannon as Elsie Dawson
- John Blythe as Steve
- Jeannette Tregarthen as Valerie Thompson
- Beatrice Varley as Valerie's Aunt
- Susan Shaw as Patsy Crawford
- Pamela Bramah as Beauty Queen
- Alfie Bass as a redcoat
- M.E.Clifton James as himself (Monty's Double)
- Patricia Roc, Cheerful Charlie Chester, and Gerry Wilmot as themselves and a young Diana Dors dances The Jitterbug.
Development
The film was directed by Ken Annakin, who had made a number of documentaries for producer Sydney Box. When Box took over Gainsborough Pictures he hired Annakin to make Holiday Camp. It was part of Box's initial slate of pictures for the company, others including Jassy and Good Time Girl.[5]
The original story was by magazine writer Godfrey Winn. He went to a Butlin's holiday camp at Filey with Annakin to research. Annakin remembers Winn "put together a very good story" but Sydney and Muriel Box "decided we should add extra elements".[6] He says Muriel Box worked on the Dennis Price character, inspired by the Heath Murders, then they held a round table conference with Ted Willis, Peter Rogers and Mabel Constanduros. "Godfrey wasn't terribly happy about it because he thought he was going to have a single screen credit," says Annakin.[7]
Peter Rogers had worked as Muriel Box's assistant. He says he wrote "the screenplay and most of the stories... but Mabel Constanduros and one or two other people had little ideas. Sydney [Bo] was always on the side of writers and always gave writers credit, even if they just had two lines in the script."[8] Rogers claims it was his idea to introduce the Dennis Price character and "the only bit that Mabel Constanduros contributed was the scene between Jack Warner and Kathleen Harrison on the cliffs."[9]
Production
The opening shot of a train arriving at the cliff-top station was filmed at Sandsend, a mile from Whitby, North Yorkshire. Camp exteriors were shot at Butlins, Filey, on the East Coast, a few miles from Sandsend. Although Butlins had its own rail station, the view at Sandsend was considered more spectacular.
Sydney Box used the film to introduce a number of new actors, including Susan Shaw and Hazel Court.
Reception
Box Office
The film was the sixth most popular movie at the British box office in 1947.[10] Annakin attributed this in part "perhaps because I had come from documentary and British cinema at that time was very artificial. The Huggetts absolutely caught the spirit and feeling that existed after the war... People didn't want more fairy stories; they wanted something in which they could recognise themselves. Being of lover middle class origins myself, I felt at home with these people who were having a fine holiday in a very cheap place which provided wonderful entertainment. I think I caught the spirit of the holiday camps and we had a very warm, natural cast."[11]
Peter Rogers thought the film was a hit "the same way that the Carry Ons caught on - you've got ordinary people doing amusing things."[12]
The film made a reported profit of £16,000.[1]
Critical
Time Out wrote, "Time has mellowed the documentary quality of the film, and location shooting and authentic detail now seem less important than the presence of the whole range of British acting talent, from Dame Flora Robson to Cheerful Charlie Chester, among the cast of thousands."[13]
"I'm not embarrassed about Holiday Camp," said Annakin years later, "although the later Huggett films don't hold up well."[14]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Andrew Spicer, Sydney Box Manchester Uni Press 2006 p 210
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Holiday Camp, BritMovie.co.uk
- ↑ Holiday Camp, IMDb
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ McFarlane p 25
- ↑ McFarlance p 25
- ↑ McFarlane p 493
- ↑ McFarlane p 493
- ↑ JAMES MASON 1947 FILM FAVOURITE The Irish Times (1921-Current File) [Dublin, Ireland] 02 Jan 1948: 7.
- ↑ McFarlane p 25
- ↑ McFarlane 494
- ↑ RMy, Holiday Camp, Time Out London
- ↑ McFarlane p 25
- Brian McFarlane, An Autobiography of British Cinema, Methuem Film, 1997
External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Holiday Camp at IMDb
- Holiday Camp at British Film Institute
- Review of film at Variety
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- English-language films
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- 1947 films
- British films
- Films directed by Ken Annakin
- Gainsborough Pictures films
- Films produced by Sydney Box
- Screenplays by Muriel Box
- Screenplays by Sydney Box
- Screenplays by Peter Rogers
- 1940s British film stubs
- British black-and-white films