Autumn Crocus (film)

1934 British film by Basil Dean From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Autumn Crocus is a 1934 British romance film directed by Basil Dean and starring Ivor Novello, Fay Compton and Muriel Aked.[1] The film follows a teacher who falls in love with the married owner of the guest house in which she is staying during a holiday to Austria. It was based on Dodie Smith's first play Autumn Crocus, previously a West End hit for director Basil Dean.[2][3] The film was made by Associated Talking Pictures at Ealing Studios, with art direction by Edward Carrick. It was the final film appearance of its star, Ivor Novello. A contemporary reviewer wrote, "Novello's schoolboy knees under his Tyrolean shorts make the audience, if not the players, feel bashful".[4]

Directed byBasil Dean
Written byDorothy Farnum
Basil Dean
Produced byBasil Dean
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Autumn Crocus
Directed byBasil Dean
Written byDorothy Farnum
Basil Dean
Based onAutumn Crocus by Dodie Smith
Produced byBasil Dean
StarringIvor Novello
Fay Compton
Muriel Aked
Esme Church
CinematographyRobert Martin
Edited byWalter S. Stern
Music byErnest Irving
Production
company
Distributed byAssociated British
Release date
  • February 1934 (1934-02)
Running time
86 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Close

Cast

Reception

The New York Times reviewer wrote, "the wistful romance of the fading English schoolmistress and the cheerful Tyrolean inn-keeper drags in its telling, and this in the face of the presence of Fay Compton and Ivor Novello in the principal rôles and of Basil Dean's direction".[5] The critic felt that Compton overacted, surprising since she played the role on stage for more than sixty weeks, in contrast to "the performances of Mr. Novello, Muriel Aked and Esme Church, who did well, indeed."[5] Still, the reviewer felt that Autumn Crocus "has a delicate charm, is handsomely photographed and presents a refreshingly different solution to a problem that would have had Hollywood's script-writers dashing madly in all directions."[5]

References

Bibliography

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI