Laxdale Hall

Laxdale Hall is a 1953 British romantic comedy film directed by John Eldridge and starring Ronald Squire, Kathleen Ryan, Raymond Huntley and Sebastian Shaw, with Prunella Scales and Fulton Mackay in early roles.[1] Released in the U.S. as Scotch on the Rocks, it was adapted from the 1951 novel Laxdale Hall by Eric Linklater.[2]

Laxdale Hall
Directed byJohn Eldridge
Produced byAlfred Shaughnessy
Written byAlfred Shaughnessy
John Eldridge
Based onnovel Laxdale Hall by Eric Linklater
StarringRonald Squire
Kathleen Ryan
Raymond Huntley
Sebastian Shaw
Music byFrank Spencer
CinematographyArthur Grant
Ken Hodges
Edited byBernard Gribble
Production
company
Group 3 Films
Distributed byAssociated British-Pathé (UK)
Release date
  • April 1953 (1953-04) (UK)
  • 5 June 1954 (1954-06-05) (USA)
Running time
77 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Pettigrew, a British parliamentary delegation is dispatched to the village of Laxdale - a village near Skye which his mother came from.

The residents are protesting at their poor road links with the outside world, and seek a new road to the east and a new pier.

However, when Pettigrew arrives, together with Hugh Marvell MP and young Flett from the Scottish Office, he sees the problem as a different. He suggests abandoning the village and setting up a New Town, Brumley Dumps, 100 miles away. The villagers are not happy.

Flett (Fulton Mackay) begins romancing the local schoolteacher (Prunella Scales). Marvell spends his time with the general's daughter.

The villagers see everything differently. In the middle of torrential rain the local poacher chats casually with the undertaker saying "ach, there's a bit of mist on the hill". The hearse is used to transport his poached stag. Later in the pouring rain they have an open air production of MacBeth. The play is cut short when news arrives that there are non-local poachers on the estate (local poachers are tolerated). They ambush the poachers (who are from Glasgow).

Only when leaving does Pettigrew say that the village may have a new road.

Production

Applecross House

The external scenes were shot in Applecross and "Laxdale Hall" is in fact Applecross House, an early 18th century laird's house of formal composition.[3]

Cast

Critical reception

The Radio Times wrote, "The huge success of director Alexander Mackendrick's Whisky Galore! meant it was inevitable that film-makers would cast around for more stories of wily Scots running rings around the stiff-necked English. However, lightning didn't strike twice and this tale of the battle between Whitehall and a tiny Hebridean island, whose inhabitants won't pay a hated road tax, lacks the magic sparkle of Mackendrick's classic";[4] whereas TV Guide wrote, "The humor is subtle and gentle, but often very funny, in much the same way as that in Bill Forsyth's pictures (Local Hero, Comfort and Joy) three decades later."[5]

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References


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