Well-to-do couple Dora and Charles Randolph are celebrating their golden wedding, and three generations meet at the Randolph country home. As the relatives gather, each reveals his or her personal quirks and shortcomings. Caught in the middle is family secretary Penny Fenton, who has the unenviable task of sorting and smoothing out the family's deep-set hostilities and jealousies so that a good time can be had by all.[3][4]
The film was a rare comedy from Gainsborough at the time in that it was not a vehice for a specific comic.[5]
Lockwood made it after The Man in Grey in the spring of 1943. She wrote in her memoirs that "there had been some trouble over the script of this film. Neither Herbert [her agent] nor I had considered the part which was offered to me sufficiently good. After much arguing my part was built up, but even so I was not pleased with the film, and felt that for me it had been a backward step."[6]
Director Harold French later said "I'd liked the play and thought I could make a picture of it and I think I did some of it well." He called it "a lovely film to make, very harmonious cast. I was delighted to get away from war films and make something light and frothy. It was just what the public wanted."[7]
Critical reception
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Production is conscientious and direction adequate, but the play – it remains a play photographed – is primarily an actors' piece."[8]
TV Guide described the film as a "routine English comedy of manners", but added, "it has its moments."[9]
Allmovie wrote "the film is variations on a single theme, albeit consistently amusing ones."[10]
Box office
Kinematograph Weekly listed this film among those which were "runners up" in its survey of the most popular films in Britain in 1943.[11]
References
^"Dear Octopus". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 23 November 2024.