It Always Rains on Sunday (1947) Poster

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8/10
British Crime Drama that Deserves to be Better Remembered
JamesHitchcock7 September 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Ealing Studios were, of course, best known for comedies, and Robert Hamer was possibly best known as the director one of the best of those, "Kind Hearts and Coronets". "It Always Rains on Sunday", however, is not a comedy but a crime drama, an example of the studio's more serious output. The action is set in Bethnal Green, a working class district of East London, in the years following the end of the Second World War. (In the forties the British cinema, which had hitherto concentrated on the lives of the well-to-do, began to make more films about working class life, foreshadowing the "kitchen sink realism" of the late fifties and sixties). Tommy Swann, an armed robber, escapes from Dartmoor Prison and makes his way back to London where he hides in the home of his former fiancée, Rose Sandigate, hoping to escape abroad by stowing away on a ship. Although Rose is now married to another man, she still loves Tommy and shelters him in the house.

In visual terms the film, with its strong contrasts of light and dark and its frequent shots of rain-swept streets, seems to have been influenced by the contemporary American film noir style. (Hamer was obviously keen on the rainy look- so keen, in fact, that we sometimes see rain, presumably courtesy of a hosepipe, falling from bright sunlit skies). This is particularly apparent during the gripping chase scenes near the end, when Swann attempts to hide from the police in a railway marshalling yard. In terms of content, however, the film differs from most films noirs, which normally had at their centre a single strong male character, who could be on either the wrong or the right side of the law but was generally a loner. Swann might fit that description, but the film is not really about him but about Rose and her family, and also about the wider community of which they are a part.

There are some memorable characters, both within the Sandigate family and without. Besides Rose, the family consists of her stolid, easygoing husband George, a man whose life revolves around his pipe, his newspaper, his pint of beer and the local pub darts team, their cheeky young son Alfie, and George's two attractive teenage daughters from an earlier marriage. These two are very different in character. Vi, the elder, is rebellious, promiscuous and the current mistress of Morrie Hyams, a shopkeeper of dubious character who also acts as bandleader at the local dance-hall. Doris, the more docile, placid younger daughter, is being pursued by Morrie's equally dubious brother Lou, a bookmaker, but prefers her steady boyfriend Ted.

We tend today to look back on the late forties as a time of post-way austerity and hardship, particularly in working class areas, but apart from a few shots of bomb-damaged buildings and references to the rationing system there is little of that to be seen here. The action all takes place on one single Sunday (probably in Autumn), and we see the East End at play rather than at work, with the local people enjoying themselves in the pub, at a street market, at the dance-hall and at an open-air boxing match (a chance for Lou Hyams to make some money by fixing the result).

Despite this emphasis on fun and relaxation, however, the people we see are not the stereotyped lovable cheerful Cockneys familiar from many British films. Besides the more serious villainy of Swann and his like, there is also a considerable amount of petty crime, often used as a source of comic relief. There is a comic subplot about three minor-league villains who have stolen a lorry-load of roller-skates and are trying to find a fence who will dispose of them; the man they find is a sanctimonious hypocrite who objects to boys playing the mouth-organ on the Sabbath but has no objection to dealing in stolen goods. The dodgy Hyams brothers are also a source of humour, especially Morrie who, for all his flashy pretensions, is an essentially ludicrous character, caught between the demands of the sluttish Vi and his long-suffering wife Sadie. (The brothers have cut themselves off from their traditional Jewish family, who disapprove of their dishonest dealings, although it is noteworthy that Morrie still claims the right, as a Jew, to open his shop on Sunday, something that in the forties would have been forbidden to Gentiles).

The main thrust of the film, however, is not humorous but serious. Rose (very well played by Googie Withers) is a tragic heroine. Her tragedy is that the man she loves is a violent rogue, who does not love her but makes use of her when it is in his interests, and that she cannot love her husband who is a decent, kindly man and treats her well. The film is a mixture of tragedy, thrills, documentary social realism and occasional humour. Although the film has not become recognised as a classic of the British cinema, unlike most of the Ealing Comedies or other crime dramas to the period, such as "The Blue Lamp", my view is that it deserves to be better remembered. 8/10
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8/10
Great dialogue
christopher-underwood25 November 2014
A rather splendid 1947 b/w film from the Ealing Studios. I find a lot of these films a little too sentimental and the acting a bit too stagey but this is a real surprise. Great dialogue, convincingly conveyed and together with super cinematography combine to make this a truly enjoyable if nostalgic view. The locations are more Camden than the East End, except for glimpses of Whitechapel at the start but no matter, it all looks good and the views of the railway marshalling yard at the end quite stunning. There is a central story but is is intercut with others and the whole thing bounces along nicely. Even the kids are all right and the amusing bits still amusing. Really though this is a very believable view of London's East End just after the war. Bomb sites, rationing and everyone trying to make the most of what they had. Also there was a feeling that the cops and robbers weren't really that different from each other, just on different sides and the important thing was to survive. Well worth a watch.
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8/10
British Postwar Film Noir
Red-12530 June 2008
It Always Rains on Sunday (1947), co-written and directed by Robert Hamer, is a film noir movie set in London's working class East End. The film is dated in many ways--London, two years after the end of WW II, is not the London that we know in the 21st Century. We can still see evidence of bomb damage, rationing still applies, and there's a sense of community where everyone knows everyone else's business. Police and petty criminals engage in banter: Joe runs a lunch wagon where criminals tend to meet. A detective sergeant stops at the wagon for information. Joe: We don't cater to the criminal classes. Detective Sergeant Fothergill: Turned over a new leaf?

Several plot lines run through the film. An escaped convict--scarred after being flogged with a cat-o-nine-tails--turns up at the home of a woman he once loved, and who loved him. Rose Sandigate, played by the talented and beautiful Googie Withers, has since entered into a practical marriage with a man 15 years older than she is. We enter into her life, along with the lives of her two step-daughters, her son, three petty criminals trying to get rid of stolen roller skates, and some Jewish good guys, bad guys, and not-so-bad guys.

The production values aren't great, and the lower class accents sometimes call for subtitles. Nevertheless, the central plot element of an escaped convict, who returns to find that the woman he loves has married while he was in jail, is as compelling now as it was 60 years ago.

Finally, the powerful scene of detectives chasing a man through the train yards in the dark, was surely known to Carol Reed when he directed "The Third Man." Reed's scene, set in the sewers of Vienna, took place miles away from Hamer's London. Even so, in compelling action and suspense, they have a great deal in common.
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7/10
Superb and spellbinding British Film Noir
trpuk196810 October 2007
Film Noir defies definition, plenty disagree whether its a movement, genre, style. Perhaps its more usefully conceived as a sensibility, a world view, an attitude. In which case the words pessimism, determinism ie characters lacking choice their lives are predetermined, doom, gloom, the past coming back to affect the present all spring to mind. Its possible to see a cycle of films with remarkably consistent features in terms of visual style emerging in U.S primarily and to a lesser extent the U.K and France in the forties and fifties. While most noir films have a male as the central protagonist, a male who is invariably weak and flawed, a number of these films, such as Mildred Pierce, have a female protagonist. Noir manifested itself differently in Britain, combining with elements of what was to become known as kitchen sink or social realism and frequently concerned with social class.

This film uses the claustrophobic interiors of the terraced house to great effect. The noir style of long shadows, oblique angles, becomes more evident in the final climax, not really needed early on since the interiors work effectively without lighting effects. Melancholia drips through this like the rain of the title, Googie Withers is terrific, her face a mask of dreams, desires pushed away, disappointment etched over her features through her hard make up. How different she is in appearance to the femmes fatales of the U.S movies, bustling round the kitchen in her pinafore, then later on the almost military smartness of her utility dress when she attends Tommy. As a character shes every bit as strong however as her American counterparts. Like Mildred Pierce, she's strong in a domestic setting, when the usual convention for women in noir is to take them out of the domestic, placing them typically as nightclub singers or gangsters molls. In details I ll acknowledge this is on occasions cheesy and dated. Scratch at the surface however and its a fascinating exploration of the social tensions emerging after World War Two. How were people to adjust to life in peacetime? Were they able to return to the rigidly prescribed roles they d had prior to the war? Ealing studios produced a number of films which now can be seen to share many affinities with American Film Noir, this is one of the most interesting and rewarding.
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9/10
Bleak, desolate, but heart warming
Andy-1403 February 1999
The film was made and set in the bleak environment of post-war east London and shows Robert Hamer to be an extremely talented and sophisticated film maker. Unlike Dearden and Relph, Hamer does not impose a moral framework on his characters. The film shows two sides of adultery between Googie Withers and the escaped convict and between her daughter and a Jewish shopkeeper. What makes this film stand out is its intentioned 'realism' and complex character portrayals. This little known classic is probably one of Ealing's finest films.
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good solid drama
JoshsDad7 October 2003
i have to disagree with the other reviewer. this a good, solid drama that captures the mood of post war london expertly. the stories mesh together well and the performances, with one notable exception, are first rate. the atmospheric photgraphy adds to the overall feel of the piece and the climax is very exciting.
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7/10
modern movie
SnoopyStyle1 July 2020
These are stories of various people one Sunday in London. Tommy Swann escapes from prison. He tries to hide at his former girlfriend Rose Sandigate but she is now married with a tired boring life and bratty step-children. Cops are in pursuit. There is a shooting, and an employees-only party in a closed nightclub.

This is a rather modern way of story telling. These are interconnected stories of connected characters with an overarching narrative. Some of it is more compelling than others. I got lost with some of the characters. The miniature railyard sequence is a bit laughable. Obviously, somebody screwed up with the shot although I think the sequence would be fine without the miniature. All in all, it's an interesting British movie.
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9/10
A black and white slice of English history in the late 40's
MIKE-WILSON615 July 2001
A superb study by Ealing studios, of a working class family, in the east end of London, after the 2nd World War. Googie Withers plays a harassed housewife, who during one Sunday lunchtime, discovers that her old boy friend, Tommy Swan, has broken out of jail and is in need of help.Local policeman Jack Warner is given the task of hunting him down. This film gives the viewer a fascinating look at life in England, in the late 1940's and early 50's. Look out for one scene, featuring the milkman, delivering milk, and his horse, walking up the centre of the street, and knowing just when to stop and when to go. Well worth watching.
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7/10
The Cold Damp Atmosphere Really Hits You
howardmorley1 June 2015
"London Live" t.v. channel no 8 are currently showing a season of Ealing Films and not just the well known comedies for which they were better known.I had obviously seen these comedies but on 1st June 2015 I saw "It Always Rains on Sunday" (1947) for the first time.I was familiar with Googie Withers from the time of her support role to Margaret Lockwood in the Hitchcock film "The Lady Vanishes" (1938).Talking of this great director one James Hitchcock has given a definitive user review dated 7/9/05 (first above) which satisfactorily explains the plot and other production values for which I commended him.Yes the film set rain machine was very much in evidence to add verisimilitude to the film title.A few reviewers from foreign parts I notice had an understandable problem with the London vernacular accents but it was obviously produced with the home market in mind as were many American movies.Being a 69 year old Londoner myself I understood all the East End dialogue, having worked in Stratford near Bethnal Green myself.In line with IMDb.com general average I rated it 7/10.
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9/10
IT ALWAYS RAINS ON Sunday (Robert Hamer, 1947) ***1/2
Bunuel19769 February 2007
Ealing Studios are chiefly remembered nowadays for their string of classic comedies made between 1946-55 but they also put out several notable pictures in other genres - including the justly celebrated horror portmanteau DEAD OF NIGHT (1945) - and this noir-ish melodrama is definitely one of their hidden gems. Although the plot per se is no great shakes - an escaped convict hides out in his by-now-married ex-flame's household - the idea was still fresh at the time and the film's marrying of the realistic and evocative recreation of daily life and surroundings (here being the seamier side of London's East End) with the exciting chase thriller format was much admired in its day and, in hindsight, very influential.

The good cast is headed by the formidable Googie Withers as the embittered housewife whose life of drab domesticity comes crashing down around her with the sudden reappearance of her lover (John McCallum, and Withers' own real-life husband-to-be) who demands food and shelter until he can skip the country; her much older, unassuming husband is played by frequent Norman Wisdom sidekick Edward Chapman and the pursuing police detective by the ubiquitous Jack Warner who cornered such roles in British films of the era, most notably in Basil Dearden's THE BLUE LAMP (1950); Chapman's three children are each having problems of their own and their frequent comings-and-goings in the house during this particular Sunday (the film is set all in one day) brings long-suppressed tensions to the fore.

Even without the eye-catching use of the medium of somebody like Carol Reed, the film is beautifully handled by the talented but ill-fated Robert Hamer - who, among other things, would later direct that which is undoubtedly Ealing's most famous comedy, KIND HEARTS AND CORONETS (1949) - and the climactic sequence (expertly lit, as always, by Douglas Slocombe) in which all the various strands of plot and secondary characters are seamlessly woven together is simply exquisite.

Optimum Releasing also included a featurette with film historian George Perry - who, incidentally, introduced THE BIG SLEEP (1946) at the recent National Film Theatre screening in London I attended; unfortunately, I encountered some playback problems on my Pioneer DVD player even before the start of the main feature but the R2 disc played without a hitch on my cheap HB model.
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7/10
Anyone want some roller skates?
AAdaSC16 September 2017
John McCallum (Tommy) escapes from Dartmoor prison and seeks out his ex-girlfriend Googie Withers (Rose) for food and clothing to help him on his way. Googie is now married to Edward Chapman (George) and lives with his 2 daughters and a son of their own. I think? The son seems a bit old but I think that's the relationship as he refers to Googie as 'mum'. We get involved in their claustrophobic life in their community where everyone seems to know each other. It's the East End of London and everyone is 'salt of the earth'. You get spivs, gangsters, family life and detective Jack Warner (Fothergill) on the trail of McCallum. Googie and McCallum do get together in real life but things are different in this film.

The main plot follows the escaped convict storyline but this film is also about family life with characters having their own agendas. Which room is the best room in the house to hide an escaped criminal? You won't believe where Googie directs her ex not only to hideout but also to have a kip! We see McCallum's true feelings towards Googie unravel in the later stages of the film and there is quite an intense final scene as he makes a break for it. I watched the film on a Sunday. And it was raining.
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10/10
Bit o' bovver in Bethnal. Warning: Spoilers
Googie Withers was England's equivalent of Joan Blondell (although better-looking and more talented): both actresses played similar types, alternating their performances between dramas and comedies. In 'It Always Rains on Sunday', Withers gives possibly the best performance of her career. She's skilfully abetted by a universally excellent cast.

This is a taut thriller, very much in the Hitchcock vein, based on a novel by Arthur La Bern. (His novel 'Goodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicester Square', set in Covent Garden in this same time period, was updated by Hitchcock as the basis for 'Frenzy'.) The lives (and a death) of several people in London's East End are deftly interwoven. A real strength of this drama is its perfect encapsulation of a distinctive time and place in one London neighbourhood: Bethnal Green and its environs.

The dialogue is note-perfect, although Americans will want subtitles for such terms as "have a butcher's" (take a look), "sweet Fannie Adams" (not a bloody thing), "Bob's your uncle" (you're all set), "shopped" (informed upon), "clothes" (blankets) and "the Anderson" (a mass-produced prefabricated outdoor shelter during the Blitz, employed as garden sheds after the war). I was even impressed that the scriptwriters caught the East Enders' subtle distinction between "up west" (the West End) and "out west" (the Home Provinces). That Anderson shelter, Mrs Spry's doss-house, the ration book, the police call-box with Albertus panels (from the pre-999 era of Whitehall 1212), the wide boys and the spivs (notably the splendid John Slater) all gave me a twinge of nostalgia.

SLIGHT SPOILER. The climactic chase is thrilling and well done, except for two shots using miniatures that are laughably obvious. American viewers might wonder why the plainclothesmen don't just simply shoot the fugitive. (When this film was made, British police never carried firearms except in very unusual circumstances.) I did notice a few minor errors, including some tech errors. Only two years after V-E Day, with rationing still in place, it's very unlikely that so many working-class Englishwomen would have such elaborate make-up. (Get a line on those carefully pencilled eyebrows!) Spivs or no spivs: how did so many of these characters get such elaborate and expensive leather gloves? And, drunk or not: would Vi (Susan Shaw) really go straight into bed without removing her make-up and her expensive frock?

'It Always Rains on Sunday' brilliantly preserves life in Bethnal Green in the late years of George VI's reign ... and also tells a cracking good suspense yarn. My rating for this one: despite a few flaws, a perfect 10 out of 10.
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7/10
Rainy Days And Sundays
Lejink6 March 2021
An interesting and intriguing contemporary Ealing drama directed by Robert Hamer and starring Googie Withers, a partnership continuing from their previous collaboration on "Pink String And Sealing Wax". Again, Googie's no goodie in this movie, playing Rose Sandigate, the sulky and rather surly wife to her much older anything-for-a-quiet-life husband, George, played by Edward Chapman. They live with his three children from one presumes an earlier marriage in fairly cramped style in a common-or-garden terraced house in Bethnal Green, London, the establishing shot of which recurs throughout the film to indicate the passage of time.

Food rationing is still in force, but some sort of normality is returning to the local community in the post war rebuilding era, with shops and nightclubs reopening for business. Perhaps unsurprisingly, local crime is on the increase too, although striving to keep the peace is local cop Jack Warner, policing the beat some fifteen years or so before he ended up doing the same on a weekly basis on TV as Dixon Of Dock Green.

It's Sunday and a rainy one at that, but no ordinary Sunday as a local convict escapes prison and goes on the run, turning up unbidden at his old flame Withers' door, seeking food, shelter and money from her so he can complete his escape abroad. There are other sub-plots at play too, one taking in the doings of a local gang of petty hoodlums, one of whom in particular is slightly unhinged and another, a flashy musician who also runs the local record shop but who cheats on his wife with the oldest Sandigate daughter.

For the first three quarters of the movie, there's more concentration on the melodrama, but in a sometimes surprisingly modern fashion, almost anticipating the kitchen-sink British realist movement of ten years later, as for instance when we're left in no doubt that Rose, up till then the iciest of wives, caves to passion and sleeps with the runaway con or when the playboy saxophonist finds there's no longer any cake to have and eat as his wife publicly exposes his infidelity in front of his much younger mistress.

However, fine and sometimes gritty as all this is, especially the scene where an old man is clubbed down in the street and we see his false teeth fall from his mouth into the rain-soaked gutter, it's all change in that last twenty minutes or so when Hamer goes dark and presents a thrilling chase scene involving cops and robber which ends up at a deserted railway station. Hamer's almost noir-ish tableaux and moving camera for this extended sequence might seem as if they belong in a different film but instead make for an exciting change of pace before the viewer is returned to that same pacifying shot of the everyday street, suggesting normality, at least of a kind, has returned to its occupants.

Withers again is good value as the haughty housewife forced by one event to confront her past, present and future, her soon-to-be real-life husband John McCallum gives an edge to his performance as the desperate runaway which might also explain the ardour in their clinches, while dependable old Jack Warner punches in his card just as you'd expect him to as the diligent, pursuing cop.

A many-faceted film, with more than a few surprises up its sleeve, I'd happily watch this any old day of the week.
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7/10
Among the living, in Old Bethnal Green.
punishmentpark26 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
A beautiful film; on the DVD I have is an introduction in which I learned that it was filmed in post-war Bethnal Green, an area in East End, London, which since then has radically changed. So, here one can still see beautiful pictures of old London streets, markets, shops and such, in which ordinary people with ordinary people live their lives. The photography is sublime and the acting is very well done.

The plot is carefully built around the escaped criminal Tommy, his former lover Rose and her 'new' family; a father, two rebellious stepdaughters and an adolescent son. Apart from them there is room for the stories of a few inhabitants of Bethnal Green (some of whom are directly connected to the family). But unfortunately, things don't come brilliantly together in the end. Some parts of the story are all too easily finished up, and instead there is an atmospheric, tense pursuit. Not something to cry over, but the initial build-up had more promise to it.

For me it was a terribly fun ride - although I'll have to watch it again to catch all the dialogues of it (no subs on my DVD, alas).

A big 7 out of 10, this first time around.
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10/10
Atmospheric
Marc-188 August 1999
This film portrays the post-war East End atmosphere like few other films. Its characters appear to be typical East End characters - the frustrated housewife, adventurous schoolboy, local spiv, small-time gangsters, Jack Warner as the archetypical detective, patrician father-figure - just a few of the memorable characters whose lives intertwine on a bleak, rainy Sunday afternoon in London. There is more to these characters than meets the eye, as the plot unravels.

A note on the music: a cheery theme that is repeated throughout the film, as the setting returns to the Sandigates' terraced house, apparently called "Theme without Words": as so often with Ealing films, it adds to the setting a very fitting background.
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A true picture of the real Est End in the 1940s and 50s
roy-785173 May 2018
I watched this film when it was first released at my local cinema in Hackney. It was the first film that I had ever seen which showed an East End which I could recognise as the one I knew. All the characters were recognisable and true to life. One caveat thought, we see the husband having a hipbath in his kitchen (true to life), but I did wonder where all the hot water came from.certainly not from the tap!, Although I grew up in Hackney, within walking distance, all my immediate family came from there and, as I discovered later,many generations earlier too. Very much a Jewish East End too. This sounds like a cliche, but most of my best school friends were Jewish boys (NEVER jewboys which was pejorative ). It was a delight to see it again, I must search around to find a good copy on DVD. I lovely film which took me back seventy years or more to my boyhood.
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7/10
London Gothic.Wonderfully silly but irresistible.
ianlouisiana4 November 2005
This is one of those "slice of cockney life" films so beloved of post war British filmmakers.It belongs in a time capsule along with "Picturegoer","Illustrated","Lilliput" and "Health and efficiency". It's so wonderfully silly and full of British thesps struggling bravely with their dipthongs and glottal stops. I don't think anybody actually says"Blimey guv'nor,yore a toff and no mistyke" but that was probably due to an oversight.However,there is some slight connection with real life in the 1940s that overrides these criticisms and makes it quite compelling in its absurd way.60 years ago London comprised of dozens of autonomous communities like the one shown in this film.They were separated by clearly defined social and physical boundaries.If a boy from Bethnal Green was walking out with a girl from Poplar,say,she would have been viewed with some suspicion by his friends and family. Together with Stepney,Bethnal Green,Poplar and Bow have merged into The Borough of Tower Hamlets.Half a century of Town Planning and Social Engineering has seen the community become ghettoised and divided along racial and religious lines that not even the most pessimistic East Ender could have foreseen.So in these black and white images we have a portrait of a society that - all unknowing - was on its way to extinction. The major problem I have with "It always rains on Sunday" is the casting of Miss G.Withers and Mr J.Macallum in the lead roles.I'm not sure what they're speaking but it certainly isn't cockney.Edith Evans as Lady Bracknell comes to mind. Jack Warner,Sidney Tafler and the great Meier Tzelnicker walk away with the film,masters all of what is now called "Estuary English". When you look at this and "The Blue Lamp" you are seeing the first stirrings of British Noir Cinema if I may use so grand a term.As such,both films have been hugely influential on subsequent generations of artists and countless TV soaps. Every film of course is a Time Machine,and here,preserved,is a Britain on the verge of the Welfare State,populated by people many of whom were still suffering from the deprivations of the Second World War,a male - dominated society where a considerable amount of the community had outside lavatories and no bathrooms,everybody smoked and the local copper could give you a clip round the ear without being thought a fascist brute because everybody knew what real fascists were. If you remember this era with some affection - however grudging - the chances are you already know "It always rains on Sunday". If it seems like a recounting of some Dark Age then you might find as L.P. Hartley said,that the past is a foreign country,and whilst it might be worth your while to take your passport and visit,you wouldn't want to live there.
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8/10
Dynamic
gsygsy19 April 2014
Dynamic British romantic thriller with a cracking script and an outstanding final reel, crammed full of delectable performances from a fine group of character actors. Above the title are the ever-excellent Googie Withers and charismatic Australian hunk John McCullum: they married soon after shooting was over, which certainly goes some way to explaining their on-screen chemistry. With them is dear old Jack Warner, whose folksy old copper in the TV series DIXON OF DOCK GREEN used to irritate me when I was a child, but here he's playing a detective with a bit of grit in him, and it's a pleasure to discover that Mr Warner was perfectly up to the task. Of the supporting cast, Edward Chapman deserves mention for his self-effacing but nevertheless affecting performance as Ms Withers' husband.

There is a certain amount of caricature in the writing (and perhaps in the playing too) of a couple of roles, but on the whole the script succeeds in delineating personalities rather than types, unusual in a film of the period presenting a mainly working- and lower-middle-class milieu, a good deal of it filmed (by the great Douglas Slocombe) on location.

Director Hamer's final reel is a daring chase followed by a strangely affecting coda. The chase is slightly marred by the intrusion of a couple of model shots which the sequence could easily have done without. But it says something about the power of Hamer's vision that he imagined long shots at those points: it was just unfortunate that the only way to achieve them was by using miniatures.

Highly recommended.
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7/10
Very much the old postwar London with bomb sites everywhere
mgodwin-228 January 2021
Well made thriller which really brought the period to life. Jack Warner already looked too old to be a tough cop on the beat though. And he was still playing Dixon of Dock Green nearly 30 years later! Quick q: the odd little sports car nicked by the fugitive, KMD 727 - any idea what it was? Thanks!
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9/10
Little Known Classic
vespatian7511 July 2016
Wonderful little film from post WW2 Britain. After the World War Europe and America were exhausted, It became the era of the "little film". In the US there was "film noir", in Italy "neo realism", France and Britain shared in the movement. Beyond the crime pictures there were the slice of life films that focused on the lives and problems of ordinary people. "It Always Rains on Sunday" combines both themes. There is the criminal element and there is the focus on day to day living in a mixed industrial/ residential neighborhood, the East End of London, reminiscent of neighborhoods in post war New York. It manages to tell a story involving inter related lives. Every character is treated sympathetically but the film is by no means sentimental. Even the ostensible villain, Tony Snow becomes a sympathetic character. Amoral, but ultimately more sinned against than sinning, only at the end do we see the depths of his desperation. We come to understand and empathize with all the characters as we view them trying to deal with problems of existence in a tough unforgiving world. The two leads in particular give wonderful performances. that can be overwhelming. A must see for film lovers.
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6/10
Dated with unrealistic dialogue
malcolmgsw29 January 2014
I watched this dated melodrama last night.Whilst parts were of interest,quite frankly much of it was mundane and the dialogue was in no way related to what you would expect to hear in the East End.I should know as my late father and his family originally came from the East End.As a Jew I found that the dialogue ,particularly of Sidney Tafler was stereotypical and unlike anything I ever heard when I was young.No one spoke that way.I am surprised that Michael Balcon allowed the totally unrealistic dialogue into the script.Tafler seemed to be constantly shrugging his shoulderd and making actions with his hands.I cannot see any such scenes being shown in a film today thankfully.So in part I have to say I found this film to be an embarrassment of earlier attitudes.It is well produced but is unrepresentative of the East End that I saw in the late forties and early fifties.
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8/10
Location
wrs1013 August 2009
It is already listed but if you want to see the street where the family was "living" go to Hartland Road, just off Chalk Farm Road, just north of Camden Market. It is amazing how little has changed! (except the price of property!) It is odd to think that the street in which the film was set in such a period of shortages is now so close to such overt consumerism!

Also nice to note that is the fact that "Rose"- Googie Withers and "lover boy" John McCallum married each other for real in the year that the film was made and are still alive and married to each other today!

I wonder if films which are so "depressing" could be made today. Maybe the audience is just not there anymore. Conditions have improved since then and film-makers have to relate to their current audiences (usually under 25!)
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6/10
Plaistow When It Drizzles
writers_reign5 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This is a poor man's London Belongs To Me and although there's nothing much wrong with it the question remains why bother. Norman Collins wrote a superb valentine to London in London Belongs To Me and it was adapted for the screen around the same time as this effort which is unfortunate as this one will always come off worst in direct comparison whereas a larger gap might have been beneficial. Collins' Dulcimer Street was located in South London and the Sandigate's home is in Bethnal Green whilst Ealing, where it was made, is in West London; so much for that. One thing is clear from the opening scene; the only escapism here is in the shape of Tommy Swann who kick-starts the action by escaping from Dartmoor and lights out for Bethnal Green and sanctuary with the faithful (he hopes) Rose (Googie Withers) who has married, since he went down, a colourless husband who treats her well. None of the women in Bethnal Green are having much fun; the elder of Rose's step-daughters, Susan Shaw, a good-time girl manque' is involved with small-time shop-keeper cum musician Sydney Tafler, who is married and only interested in a bit on the side, whilst younger daughter - Patricia Plunkett in her first film - catches the eye of Tafler's spiv brother, John Slater, who offers her a job 'up West' which will probably evaporate once she comes across. The usual suspects are wheeled out, wooden Jimmy Hanley, Alfie Bass, Vida Hope, Hermione Baddely, Frederick Piper and a pre-Dixon Jack Warner as the cop charged with tracking Swann (John McCallum) down. In 1947 it was probably good solid entertainment; shame London Belongs To Me eclipsed it.
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Superb
lucy-666 November 2001
Melodramatic (and that's a compliment), and Googie Withers is

wonderful. Watch out for the buckets of fake rain falling only on the

actors in a sunlit street, though. PS - in England it's usually the

other way round.

xxxx
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6/10
A slice of life and history.
Greensleeves28 December 2006
This film is set in the Jewish East End of the 1940's, A part of London that has changed dramatically, It is interesting in a social history sense but for a film it is rather lacking in narrative drive. The characters and performances are interesting but the story has nowhere to go. Women are treated rather badly and called 'bags' and 'mares' and are often portrayed in an unflattering light. It was probably quite shocking at the time. The film abounds with wonderful character actresses such as Hermione Baddeley, Vida Hope and Gladys Henson who are always a pleasure to watch and leads Googie Withers and John McCallum make the most of their roles.
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