Those People Next Door (1953) Poster

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5/10
Good cast makes best of t rather dull script
trimmerb123417 August 2009
There were a number of domestic comedy series made in the 1940's and '50s starring as the parents Jack Warner (the Huggets) Gary Marsh (the William stories)and the redoubtable Marjorie Rhodes. Here they all appear together along with character actor Charles Victor and later to be super-star Antony Newley. None an international name then but nevertheless probably the most familiar faces in these kinds of roles. As with the Huggets there are attractive late teen daughters with new and strong interest in "boys". Set in wartime but actually filmed in 1953 it feels rather dated and grey for its time. Interestingly both working class father (Warner) and very upper class opposite number (Marsh) are treated seriously and sympathetically - Warner is not afraid to talk very plainly in reply to Marsh's wife's upper-class condescension doubting the suitability of Warner's daughter as a marriage partner for the lady's son.

Interesting that the subject of humour if not satire revolved around the neighbours played by Charles Victor and Gladys Henson, the first loudly preaching the Evils of Capitalism (in between whiles describing at great length ludicrous inventions of his own), his wife a permanent leach on the "people next door" constantly calling to "just borrow" something.

The film puts across a message: that upper and working classes can each still respect the other's dignity and common human feelings. The odd ones out were the neighbours: he a left wing but harmless malcontent and impractical dreamer, she a habitual cadger. Quite a pointed message for all the film's apparent ordinariness.

Although adapted from a play it lacks the sparkle, polish and wit to be seen in "One Wild Oat" and other productions which had been honed over long runs on the stage stage. It does however have a pretty good cast. It is though only for those interested in the cast or the era. Nearly all the cast appeared in more entertaining films which suggests that the studio blew their budget on the cast rather than on the script.
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5/10
Mr & Mrs Dixon only with different spouses.
malcolmgsw20 July 2008
This is a film from the redoubtable Mancunian Studios of John Blakely.Starring in this but married to different spouses are Mr & Mrs Dixon otherwise Jack Warner and Gladys Henson.This is a stage play and one is made only too aware of the films antecedents.The camera is most times plonked down in what would be the centre of the stalls.To save lots of set ups and editing what happens is that when any character has a line they make their way to the centre of the stage and then retreat to the back of the stage when their scene has been played out.This film is mainly about class distinction which was obviously rearing its head again under the Churchill Tory administration.However all the petty squabbles are set aside when in the middle of the film Jack Warner goes down to the pub and who should come in but Jimmiy James and his stooge.What follows is like a 5 minute music hall act.This quite frankly is the only thing worth watching in the whole film.
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5/10
Jack Warner At War
boblipton19 February 2023
Jack Warner stars as the head of a working-class family -- when wife Marjorie Rhodes lets him -- during the War. His routine and equanimity are upset when Lady Grace Arnold comes by to demand he forbid his daughter Patricia Cutts, from seeing her son.

It's quite a change from the "We're all in it together" that filled British movies from the start of the war to the end. This makes full use of snobbery, both of the upper classes towards the working folks, and that of the lower class Charles Victor, full of Bolshie contempt for the uppers, and yet always ready to cadge whatever he fancies, from a beer to Warner's reading glasses. Warner has his own pride, thinking himself as good as any man and twice as good as most, and his women folk the best of all.

It's pleasant fare, although nothing extraordinary about it. That was Warner's stock-in-trade in performance, that of the ordinary, decent bloke, doing his job, keeping up with what was going on in the world, pleased with what he's achieved, and minding his own business, but happy to help out in an emergency, like millions of others on both sides of the Atlantic.
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3/10
What was it all about?
andeven22 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
A curious mish-mash of a film which doesn't seem to know where it's going or what it's for.

Basically, during the war a horribly snooty woman calls on a working class family, with the full support of her absent husband, and demands that their daughter stops seeing her son as the relationship is quite unsuitable. She is effectively thrown out but, after a single visit from the daughter,she and her husband relent and everything is hunky dory to the extent that the girl's parents visit and everyone is on first name terms, unlikely enough and certainly not back in the forties. Even more bewildering is that the working class family's neighbours, he a socialist unlikely to approve of the boy's parents and their lifestyle and she an unremitting scrounger, are for some reason invited along too, presumably to justify the film's title.

And in the middle of all this Jimmy James and Eli appear in a pub to do their "isn't drunkeness amusing?" act in a scene which has nothing to do with the already flimsy story. Padding pure and simple.

I'll give it three only because Jack Warner is in it. Probably nil otherwise.
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3/10
An interesting museum piece.
stewartb-212092 April 2023
Unfortunately, I have to say that "Those People Next Door" (1953) is a film that I would not recommend. The acting performances, particularly by Jack Warner, were quite disappointing. Warner's portrayal of the main character lacked nuance and depth, making it difficult to connect with him emotionally. The story itself felt stale and predictable, with little to offer in terms of originality or creativity. The pacing of the film was also problematic, with scenes dragging on for longer than necessary and little sense of urgency or momentum. Overall, "Those People Next Door" is a forgettable film that fails to leave a lasting impression.
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3/10
Odd
evans-154756 May 2021
This is the weirdest film I've seen on talking pictures supposed to be love between the classes but just turned into the jack warner show I don't think the happy couple spoke one sentence to each other and I don't understand why anyone would relate to this at the time.
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8/10
Chucklesome!
TondaCoolwal18 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Caught this on Talking Pictures Channel. The write-up gave the impression of a completely different film, but once I got into it, I found it very amusing. Apparently based on a play, the scenario is rather like a sitcom and bears some similarities to The Huggets series. Though made in the fifties, the story is set during World War 2. Jack Warner is Sam Twigg, a munitions worker whose daughter Anne is in love with an RAF officer from a titled family who do not approve due to her "social standing". Cue lots of working class indignation interspersed with jokey episodes in the pub, down in the air raid shelter and in the Twigg's living room which is continually invaded by their scrounging neighbours. Things change when Anne's sweetheart goes missing in action. Cue families coming together with mutual empathy and understanding. But it all ends happily. Probably could have run to a series but the dated setting was against it. We get an indication of Jack Warner's fame and popularity when Sam Twigg asks for the radio to be switched off when Warner's real self features on it in a sketch from Garrison Theatre, a wartime comedy show.
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8/10
Bagshot Street
richardchatten16 July 2020
A bittersweet look at life in lockdown under the Blitz ("Hurry up, the raid'll be over before you're dressed!") set in Kent but shot in Manchester.

Jack Warner, Charles Victor, Gladys Henson and Garry Marsh all look the same age they ever did, but Marjorie Rhodes, Anthony Newley, Patricia Cutts and unbilled local Eli Woods (described as a "long streak of pump water") are startlingly youthful.
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