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The Holly and the Ivy

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The Holly and the Ivy

An English clergyman's neglect of his grown children, in his zeal to tend to his parishioners, comes to the surface at a Christmas family gathering.

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Release : 1954
Rating : 7.3
Studio : London Films Productions,  De Grunwald Productions, 
Crew : Set Designer,  Set Designer, 
Cast : Ralph Richardson Celia Johnson Margaret Leighton Denholm Elliott John Gregson
Genre : Drama

Cast List

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Reviews

Cathardincu
2018/08/30

Surprisingly incoherent and boring

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Marketic
2018/08/30

It's no definitive masterpiece but it's damn close.

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Curapedi
2018/08/30

I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.

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InformationRap
2018/08/30

This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.

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James Hitchcock
2017/01/10

Wynyard Browne was, along with the likes of Noel Coward, Terence Rattigan, N C Hunter and J B Priestley, one of the school of playwrights who dominated the British stage during the thirties, forties and early fifties but whose work came to be seen as outdated after the revolution kick-started by John Osborne's "Look Back in Anger" in 1956. Their drawing-room comedies and well-made middle-class family dramas looked very old-fashioned in the brave new kitchen-sink world of the Angry Young Men. Coward's biting wit has kept his work alive, Priestley's "An Inspector Calls" had remained a perpetual favourite and there has been a recent revival of interest in Rattigan, but Browne is today a largely forgotten figure."The Holly and the Ivy" is a film adaptation of one of Browne's plays. As the title might suggest, the action takes place at Christmas, and this was an early example of the made-for-the-Christmas-market movie, opening on 22nd December 1952. The main character is the Reverend Martin Gregory, an elderly Irish-born Norfolk clergyman. Gregory, who has recently been widowed, lives with his elder daughter Jenny, who acts as his housekeeper. Gregory and Jenny are joined by his other daughter Margaret, his soldier son Michael, two ageing aunts and Richard Wyndham, a family friend. Jenny's fiancé David Patterson also pays them a visit. (There appears to be some confusion about David's geographical origins. We are informed that he is the son of a local farmer, but the script also states that he is from Aberdeen, and John Gregson plays him with a Scottish accent).David wants to marry Jenny, but as his work as an engineer will take him to South America in the near future, this will mean that Jenny will have to leave her father. Gregory has no objection to his daughter's marriage, and would welcome David as a son-in-law, but the rest of the family know that Jenny will never leave him alone in his rambling parsonage. They therefore try to persuade him to retire and move to somewhere where he can more easily be looked after, but he is unwilling to do this, believing that he still has something to contribute to the work of the Church in his parish. As the holiday season progresses, the family's other hidden secrets start to come to light, especially as regards Margaret.Even if I had not known that the film was an adaptation of a stage play I could have worked that out from the style of film-making. Like most British films based upon theatrical plays from this period, there is little attempt to open it up; nearly all the action takes place in the snow-bound parsonage. (There is, of course, snow on the ground outside. In Britain white Christmases are much more common in literature and the cinema than they are in reality; in southern and eastern England they are quite rare). This closed-up, stagey look, however, is not necessarily a bad thing in the context of this film, as it contributes to a sense of claustrophobia, a sense that this family, some of whose members have been avoiding each other for some time, have been forced together into a greater, but not necessarily welcome, intimacy.The film stars some of the leading lights of the British acting profession at this period. I felt that at 44 Celia Johnson was miscast as Jenny, who is only supposed to be 32. Jenny, however, feels that her biological clock is ticking and that David represents her last chance of marriage and a family of her own, so her age is an important plot point. A 44 year-old Jenny would probably have long since resigned herself to a future as a spinster. Denholm Elliott as Michael has surprisingly little to do, but the real stars of this production are Ralph Richardson and Margaret Leighton.At only fifty (only six years older than his supposed daughter Johnson) Richardson was, strictly speaking, too young for the role of Gregory, who is probably supposed to be in his sixties, if not seventies, yet he seems convincingly older. Gregory is a man seemingly cut off from the twentieth century, worrying about the decline of faith and fretting that the cinema rather than his church now seems to be the spiritual centre of his small Norfolk town, and even more cut off from his own family. Paradoxically, it is his religious calling itself which has contributed to this estrangement; as a clergyman Gregory believes that everyone should be able to come and discuss their problems with him, but his family see him as a remote figure, more concerned with God than with other people. Margaret, as played by Leighton, is a brittle young woman, superficially glamorous and successful but underneath lonely and deeply troubled.From the viewpoint of 2017, "The Holly and the Ivy" might seem like a rather old-fashioned drama, but in fact it was in some ways controversial in 1952. Theatre and cinema audiences of this period were not used to seeing respectable vicars' daughters portrayed as alcoholics or unmarried mothers, especially at Christmas time. In many ways it still holds up well- rather better, I suspect, than many of today's cinematic Yuletide offerings will hold up six-and-a-half decades from now. 7/10

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kidboots
2012/01/05

Wynyard Brown's thoughtful play was a West End success story of the 1949-50 season and writer producer Anatole de Grunwald took a straightforward approach in adapting it for the screen. The action takes place on Christmas Eve and the following day as enjoyed or suffered by the Reverend Martin Gregory (Ralph Richardson) and members of his family who gather at the country vicarage for the holiday.His enlisted son Mick (Denholm Elliott) is home on leave and at the last moment his youngest daughter, Margaret (Margaret Leighton), a London journalist appears. The older daughter, Jenny (Celia Johnson) has never left home, devotedly caring for her father, so much so that she cannot bring herself to marry her fiancée David (John Gregson) who is about to leave the country for five years for work. David is frustrated that Jenny is the only one willing to stay at home to look after her absent minded father and thinks Margaret should have her turn. The play revolves around Ralph Richardson's character of the lovable but eccentric parson who has always been kept "in the dark" about serious family matters by his children who feel that as a parson he cannot deal with life's realities. Everyone knows that Jenny desperately wants to marry and the real reason why Margaret is on her way to becoming an alcoholic and Martin proves that he can certainly cope with any skeletons dangling in the family closet.Christmas Day brings matters to a head - the night before Margaret and Mick head off for the cinema but go instead to the local pub - they both come home drunk. The next thing Martin upbraids Mick for getting Margaret drunk, things become heated and Mick angrily reveals Margaret's secret. She had met an American airman during the war and he had been killed, she had had a child, who, unfortunately, died the year before and she had started drinking to cope with her sorrow. There follows a moving scene between Martin and Margaret (beautifully played by the Richardson and Leighton) which brings them closer together and proves to Margaret that there is a place for her in the world. For Martin, an ironic piece of self discovery when he realises that he, a person whose job it is to help other people, never really knew his own family or how much they needed him. As good as the movie is, without the performances it would have been just another bland play about Christmas. Maureen Delany as the hatchet faced Aunt Bridgit and Margaret Halston as the dreamily sweet Aunt Lydia were retained from the original play. Celia Johnson, as Jenny, is as usual stoical yet ultimately poignant and Ralph Richardson's bewildered despair at realising his home failures, give him a heartfelt sympathy. Margaret Leighton is the real show stopper as Margaret, her initial hardened selfishness is quickly explained and the emotional showdown with her father allows her bitterness to crumble away.

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norise
2005/04/01

Please, please, somebody get this superb movie on North American DVD or VHS. We need this film at Christmas time and always. Straight from the heart to the heart. To add even greater meaning to this fabulous treat, do some research about the symbolism of the holly and the ivy and consider the lyrics and tune of the Christmas carol. Personally, I've always thought of the two wonderful aunts as representing the holly and ivy of Christmas lore, probably with the priest's sister being the holly and his sister-in-law the ivy. Of course, they represent much more than the masculine and feminine principles: poorness vs richness, bitterness vs gratitude, disappointment vs hope, negative vs positive, pessimism vs optimism. All of these oppositions are worked out beautifully by the perfectly cast and capable actresses playing the aunts. A masterpiece!

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smithy-8
2003/12/30

"The Holly and the Ivy" is the only realistic Christmas movie of the 1950's. It tells the story of an English minister, Ralph Richardson, and his three conflicted adult children: Margaret Leighton, Celia, Johnson, and Denholm Elliott. Everybody in the cast does a great acting job. This is Mr. Richardson's last great role as a leading man in a movie. The story is like riding a roller coaster. Christmas should be a calm time for families, but it is not for this English family. This movie is a forgotten gem.

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