Appointment with Venus (film)
Appointment with Venus | |
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File:Appointment with Venus.jpg | |
Directed by | Ralph Thomas |
Written by | Nicholas Phipps |
Based on | story and adaptation by Jerrard Tickell |
Produced by | Betty Box Peter Rogers (associate) |
Starring | David Niven Glynis Johns George Coulouris Barry Jones Kenneth More |
Cinematography | Ernest Steward |
Edited by | Gerald Thomas |
Music by | Benjamin Frankel |
Production company | British Film Makers Ltd |
Distributed by | General Film Distributors |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Box office | £144,000[1] |
Appointment with Venus is a 1951 film adaptation of the 1951 Jerrard Tickell novel of the same name. It was directed by Ralph Thomas, produced by Betty E. Box and its screenplay was written by the novelist Nicholas Phipps. The film was based on the evacuation of Alderney cattle from the Channel Island during World War II.[2]
In the United States the film was re-titled Island Rescue.
Plot
In 1940, after the fall of France, the fictitious Channel Island of Armorel is occupied by a small garrison of German troops under the benign command of Hauptmann Weiss. The hereditary ruler, the Suzerain, is away in the British Army, leaving the Provost in charge.
Back in London, the Ministry of Agriculture realise that during the evacuation of the island, Venus, a prize pedigree pregnant cow, was left behind. They petition the War Office to do something urgently due to the value of the cow's bloodline, and Major Morland is assigned the task of rescuing Venus. The Suzerain's sister, Nicola Fallaize, is in Wales, serving as an Auxiliary Territorial Service army cook. She is quickly posted to the War Office so she can tell them about the island. However, when Morland finds out that Venus is practically a member of her family, he obtains permission to ask her to go along. They, radio operator Sergeant Forbes and naval officer "Trawler" Langley, who knows the local waters, are taken to the island by submarine.
They contact the Provost and discover that Weiss, a cattle breeder in civilian life, is about to have the cow shipped to Germany. Nicola persuades her pacifist cousin and painter Lionel Fallaize to disguise another cow as Venus, so they can switch them. Weiss detects the deception, and the chase is on. They are captured by Sergeant Vogel, but manage to overpower him (after Venus gives birth). They spirit the cow and her calf onto a Royal Navy Motor Torpedo Boat which takes them to Britain, sinking a pursuing German E-boat in the process.[3]
Cast
- David Niven as Major Valentine Morland
- Glynis Johns as Volunteer Nicola Fallaize
- George Coulouris as Captain Weiss
- Barry Jones as the Provost
- Kenneth More as Lionel Fallaize
- Noel Purcell as "Trawler" Langley
- Bernard Lee as Brigadier
- Jeremy Spenser as Georges
- Martin Boddey as Sergeant Vogel
- Patric Doonan as Sergeant Forbes
- John Horsley as Naval Officer Kent
- George Benson as Senior clerk
- Richard Wattis as Carruthers
- David Horne as Magistrate
- Philip Stainton as Constable
- Pat Nye as ATS auxiliary
- Nicholas Phipps as Minister
- Derek Blomfield as Admiralty Officer
Basis
The story is based on a real incident told to Tickell after the war by an army officer who had been involved.
The film follows the original novel closely with the exception of the fate of Lionel.
The fictitious island of Armorel may be based on Sark, one of the locations where the film was shot. Sark, inhabited by 500 people, had a feudal ruler, the Seigneur until 2008, as depicted in the play The Dame of Sark.[4] Like all the other Channel Islands, it was occupied by German troops 1940–1945. British commandos made two unsuccessful raids in 1942–43.
Production
The film was based on a novel. Much of the film was shot on the island of Sark.[5] The island did not allow motorised traffic. The filmmakers were allowed one Land Rover and trailer to transport their equipment. Otherwise they had to walk or use boats and horse-drawn carriages.[6] The rushes were transported to the nearby island of Guernsey where they were seen weekly.[7]
Director Ralph Thomas later said they used twelve plain coloured cows to play the lead cow, painting them with a patch on the side. He said this "was a sod because we shot mainly on location, and every time it rained, which it did regularly, the colours would run, and you would think the cow was milking itself because drops of paint were falling on the grass. It was a difficult picture but it was fun."[8]
See also
- Venus fra Vestø, remake about the rescue of a Danish cow named Venus
- Cow (2009 film)
Notes
- ^ BFI Collections: Michael Balcon Papers H3 reprinted in British Cinema of the 1950s: The Decline of Deference By Sue Harper, Vincent Porter p 41
- ^ Alderneysociety.org Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Appointment With Venus". The Australian Women's Weekly. 25 June 1952. p. 29. Retrieved 17 December 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ The Dame of Sark a play by William Douglas Home.
- ^ "Round the studios". The Mail. Vol. 41, no. 2, 061. Adelaide. 1 December 1951. p. 9 (SUNDAY MAGAZINE). Retrieved 22 July 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Box p 59
- ^ Box p 61
- ^ McFarlane, Brian (1997). An Autobiography of British Cinema By the Actors and Filmmakers Who Made It. Methuen. p. 558.
- Box, Betty E. (2000). Lifting the Lid. The Book Guild.
External links
- Webarchive template wayback links
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- Articles with short description
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- 1951 films
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- 1950s war comedy-drama films
- British war comedy-drama films
- 1950s English-language films
- Films based on British novels
- Films directed by Ralph Thomas
- Films scored by Benjamin Frankel
- Films shot at Pinewood Studios
- Films set in 1940
- Films set in the Channel Islands
- Films about cattle
- British black-and-white films
- British World War II films
- 1951 war films
- 1950s British films