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Kind Hearts and Coronets - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kind Hearts and Coronets

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kind Hearts and Coronets
Directed by Robert Hamer
Produced by Michael Balcon
Michael Relph
Written by Robert Hamer
John Dighton
from the novel by
Roy Horniman
Starring Dennis Price
Valerie Hobson
Joan Greenwood
Alec Guinness
Music by Ernest Irving
Cinematography Douglas Slocombe
Distributed by General Film Distributors
Release date(s) June 1949 (UK release)
Running time 106 min.
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Language English
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Kind Hearts and Coronets is a 1949 British black comedy film produced by Ealing Studios. A radio version of the script, starring Michael Kitchen and Harry Enfield, has been broadcast on BBC7, most recently in October 2007.

The script was directed by Robert Hamer, written by John Dighton and Hamer, and very loosely based on a book, Israel Rank, by Roy Horniman. The title is a quotation from Tennyson's 1842 poem Lady Clara Vere de Vere, which proclaims that "Kind hearts are more than coronets, And simple faith than Norman blood."

The film stars Dennis Price as a potential heir to a dukedom, but eight members of the D'Ascoyne family stand in his way. All eight (including one woman) are played by Alec Guinness. Guinness is also depicted in a painting of a family ancestor. There are also notable performances from Valerie Hobson and Joan Greenwood as a femme fatale.

The film is generally regarded as the one of the best made by Ealing Studios and appears on the Time magazine top 100 list as well as on the BFI Top 100 British films list. In 2000, readers of Total Film magazine voted Kind Hearts and Coronets the 25th greatest comedy film of all time. In 2004 the same magazine named it the 7th greatest British film of all time.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The story is set in the Edwardian period. Louis Mazzini (Dennis Price) is the son of a woman ostracised by her noble family for eloping with an Italian opera singer. Upon her death, the D'Ascoynes refuse to allow her to be buried in the family crypt. As a result, Louis plots revenge, aiming to succeed to the Dukedom of Chalfont, but eight relatives stand between him and the title.

Louis sets out to murder them all, in various inventive and blackly humorous ways. He manages to dispatch six of them. The other two die without his "assistance": his kindly banker employer, who dies of a stroke when he learns that he has inherited the dukedom, and Admiral D'Ascoyne, who obstinately steers his warship into a collision with another, and remains saluting on the bridge while it sinks beneath him (satirising the sinking of HMS Victoria in 1893).[1] He confesses to the last of the D'Ascoynes what he did and why. He then kills him and finally inherits the title.

Complications ensue when Louis is torn between two women, Sibella (Joan Greenwood), his longtime sensual paramour, and the more refined Edith D'Ascoyne (Valerie Hobson), the widow of one of his victims. Louis marries Edith, and Sibella becomes jealous. When Sibella's dull husband Lionel (John Penrose) kills himself, she hides the suicide note and, ironically, Louis ends up being tried and convicted of murdering one of the few people he didn't dispatch.

In prison awaiting execution, he writes his memoirs, detailing his exploits. At the last moment, Sibella "finds" the suicide note, saving Louis. As Louis steps through the prison gate to freedom, he finds two carriages waiting for him: in one, Edith, and in the other, Sibella. As he hesitates, he repeats to himself the couplet from The Beggar's Opera. "How happy could I be with either, Were t'other dear charmer away!" When a publisher approaches him and asks for the publication rights to his memoirs, Louis suddenly remembers the manuscript he left behind in his cell.

[edit] Difference from the novel

Louis' father in the novel was Jewish rather than Italian. Horniman had been accused of anti-Semitism, so the film-makers decided to play safe by changing his background.

[edit] Cast

  • Dennis Price as Louis Mazzini and Mazzini's father
  • Alec Guinness as The Duke, The Banker, The Parson, The General, The Admiral, Young Ascoyne, Young Henry and Lady Agatha. Guinness was originally offered the parts of only four D'Ascoynes. "I read [the screenplay] on a beach in France, collapsed with laughter on the first page, and didn't even bother to get to the end of the script," he recounts. "I went straight back to the hotel and sent a telegram saying, 'Why four parts? Why not eight!?'"[2]
  • Valerie Hobson as Edith
  • Joan Greenwood as Sibella
  • John Penrose as Lionel

A young Arthur Lowe has a brief appearance at the end.

[edit] Production

Chalfont, the family home of the d'Ascoynes, is Leeds Castle in Kent, England.[3]

The film's musical theme is 'Il mio tesoro' from Mozart's opera Don Giovanni.

[edit] Literary references

  • Louis's line on killing Lady Agatha - "I shot an arrow in the air, she fell to earth in Berkeley Square" - is a parody of "I shot an arrow in the air, it fell to earth I know not where" from HW Longfellow's "The Arrow and The Song".
  • Early in the film, Louis quotes Samuel Johnson's phrase that "When a man knows he is to be hanged the next morning, it concentrates the mind wonderfully." (Mancini adjusts the line from Johnson, who said "in a fortnight" rather than "the next morning.")
  • Louis's quip that he sent "caviar to the general" is a quotation from Hamlet (Act 2, Scene 2).
  • Louis quotes the following couplet from the The Beggar's Opera at the end of the film - "How happy could I be with either, Were t'other dear charmer away!"

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

[edit] Bibliography

  • The Great British Films, pp 131-133, Jerry Vermilye, 1978, Citadel Press, ISBN 080650661X

[edit] External links

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