Kind Hearts and Coronets (2002)
Kind Hearts and Coronets Image Cover
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Director:Robert Hamer
Studio:Anchor Bay
Rating:5
Rated:NR
Date Added:2006-01-01
Purchased On:2006-01-01
ASIN:B00006FMAR
UPC:0013131145991
Price:19.98
Genre:Classic Comedies
Release:2002-10-09
Location:0089
Duration:106
Features:Black & White
Custom 1:Copied
Robert Hamer  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
Dennis Price...Duke Louis Mazzini/Mazzini Sr.  ...  
Valerie Hobson...Edith D'Ascoyne  ...  
Joan Greenwood...Sibella Holland  ...  
Alec Guinness...The Duke/The Banker/The Parson/The General/The Admiral/Young Ascoyne/Young Henry/Lady Agatha  ...  
Audrey Fildes...Mama Louisa  ...  
Miles Malleson...Mr. Elliott The Hangman  ...  
Clive Morton...The Prison Governor  ...  
John Penrose...Lionel Holland  ...  
Cecil Ramage...The Crown Counsel  ...  
Hugh Griffith...Lord High Steward  ...  
John Salew...Mr. Perkins the Lodger  ...  
Eric Messiter...Det. Insp. Burgoyne, Scotland Yard  ...  
Lyn Evans...The Farmer  ...  
Barbara Leake...Miss Waterman The Schoolmistress  ...  
Peggy Ann Clifford...Maud  ...  
Anne Valery...Girl in the punt  ...  
Arthur Lowe...Tit Bits reporter.  ...  
Peter Gawthorne...First Lord Delivering Verdict  ...  
Laurence Naismith...Warder in Jail  ...  
Richard Wattis...Defense Counsel  ...  
Summary: Set in Victorian England, Robert Hamer's 1949 masterpiece Kind Hearts and Coronets remains the most gracefully mordant of the Ealing comedies. Dennis Price plays Louis D'Ascoyne, the would-be Duke of Chalfont whose mother was spurned by her noble family for marrying an Italian singer for love. Louis resolves to avenge his mother by murdering the relatives ahead of him in line for the dukedom, all of whom are played by Alec Guinness. Guinness's virtuoso performances have been justly celebrated, ranging from a youthful D'Ascoyne with a priggish wife to a brace of doomed uncles and one aunt. Miles Malleson is a splendid doggerel-spouting hangman, while Valerie Hobson and Joan Greenwood take advantage of unusually strong female roles. But the great joy of Kind Hearts and Coronets is the way in which its appallingly black subject matter (considered beyond the pale by many critics at the time) is conveyed in such elegantly ironic turns of phrase by Price's narrator/antihero. Serial murder has never been conducted with such exquisite manners and discreet charm. --David Stubbs