Passport To Pimlico - Film - British Comedy Guide (original) (raw)

Passport To Pimlico. Image shows from L to R: Mr. P.J. Wix (Raymond Huntley), Arthur Pemberton (Stanley Holloway), Gregg (Basil Radford), Straker (Naunton Wayne). Copyright: Ealing Studios / STUDIOCANAL

Genre

Film

Released

1949

Stars

Stanley Holloway, Hermione Baddeley, Margaret Rutherford, Paul Dupuis, Raymond Huntley, John Slater, Jane Hylton, Betty Warren and more

Writer

T.E.B. Clarke

Director

Henry Cornelius

Producers

Michael Balcon and E. V. H. Emmett

Companies

It is 1947 and amidst the post-Blitz ravages of war-torn London, redevelopment is slowly beginning to take place. But whilst children play happily on the impromptu playgrounds created by bomb sites, their parents are still struggling with the continued hardship of the age and strict rationing on food and clothing in particular.

When a group of Pimlico children accidentally detonate an unexploded German bomb on just such a levelled site, the adults rush to assist and shopkeeper Arthur Pemberton manages to slip into the deep hole, still billowing dust. Dazed, he is not sure what he can see at the bottom, but a return visit later that night with his adult daughter quickly confirms the discovery of a long-forgotten chamber containing an astounding haul of treasure and an historic royal charter. Calling in an expert from one of London's top universities, it is established to be a never-revoked charter stating that the area - modern Pimlico - is not in fact English soil, but part of the Duchy of Burgundy.

The residents are initially shocked by news of their new technical nationality, but when they realise it offers them the chance to be free of rationing, Sunday trading laws, sales taxes and pub licensing regulations, they jump into their new-found nationhood with both feet!

However, things become problematic when the Burgundians try to deal with Whitehall. As they attempt to reach an agreement with the British governmental machine over cross-border relations, the officials push back hard. Matters quickly escalate and Burgundy is left completely isolated, the border marked by rolls of barbed wire and patrolled day and night by a police watch.

The Burgundians find England looks rosier by the minute when they are cut off from the water network and their food supplies run low, but Whitehall soon realises it hasn't counted on the free-spirited, anti-authoritarian feeling of other ordinary Londoners, and indeed the wider country at large!

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Additional details

Tagline

French goings-on in the heart of London

UK certificate

U

Duration

84 minutes

UK release

Thursday 28th April 1949

Distributors

General Film Distributors

Production

Studio

Camera set-up

Single camera

Picture

Black and white

Soundtrack

Music composed by Georges Auric, played by The Philharmonia Orchestra, and conducted by Ernest Irving.

Broadcast details

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Recording details