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Where There's a Will
Overlook Pick

Where There's a Will

69
User Score7 ratings
TMDB 6.916+19551h 20mEnglish
Comedy

Synopsis

A Cockney family inherit a ramshackle Devon farm. The rest of the family don't want to leave London but the father insists and off they go, to face the unknown.

Director
Vernon SewellFrom TMDB credits
Studio
George Maynard Productions1 production companies
Release
March 1, 1955Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 12
Kathleen Harrison
Kathleen Harrison
Annie Yeo
George Cole
George Cole
Fred Slater
Leslie Dwyer
Leslie Dwyer
Alfred "Alfie" Brewer
Ann Hanslip
June Hodge
Edward Woodward
Edward Woodward
Ralph Stokes
Dandy Nichols
Dandy Nichols
Maud Hodge
Thelma Ruby
Amy Slater
Edward Lexy
Mafeking Brewer

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Nov 14, 2022

I suppose most of us, if told we had inherited something, would find our eyes light up. Not so much this family of East London Cockneys who have inherited a run-down old farm in Devon after it's owner had a rather terminal encounter with a land mine. It is about as far away from London as they can go without a passport (assuming any of them actually had one). Upon arrival, they discover it's pretty much a dump and they are keen to just be rid of the place - and, fortunately, there are no shortage of folks wanting to obtain the land. Snag is, one of the family - "Alfie" (Leslie Dwyer) decides that he is tired of working in a bathhouse, and his niece "June" (Ann Hanslip) who is equally fed up with the relentless drudge of 1950s London life decides to help him make a go of the enterprise. What now ensues are a series of enjoyable escapades as they are, quite literally, fleeced by the locals, the ever pervasive Ministry and are soon ruing the day they ever saw the place. It is one of these gently internecine dramas, with everyone trying to pull a flanker before an ending that is as inevitable as it is enjoyable. It's maybe its a bit too basic, this - charming, yes - but the script and characterisations are little better than adaptations that might have worked (or, maybe did) better on the wireless. Still, it is quite a fun tale that raises a smile and makes you rethink that expression about gift horses

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