An impending Eleanor Roosevelt visit causes bustle in an English village, while the Ellis family struggles with private problems.An impending Eleanor Roosevelt visit causes bustle in an English village, while the Ellis family struggles with private problems.An impending Eleanor Roosevelt visit causes bustle in an English village, while the Ellis family struggles with private problems.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to an article in the April 30, 1945 edition of the Monthly Film Bulletin (a B.F.I. publication), the running time of British-released prints was one hour and twenty minutes, suggesting a considerable amount of footage was cut before its release in the U.S.
- GoofsTowards the end when Flora Robson is talking Eric Portman into seeing Eleanor Roosevelt's visit to the village, she places her hand on his right shoulder, then her hand is on the top of his arm and then back on his shoulder again.
- Quotes
Capt. John Ellis: I WILL not be bullied in my own house.
- Crazy creditsAt the very end, there is a dedication to the womens institutes, in appreciation for the contributions they have made to the war effort through their crafts.
Featured review
"Great Day" couldn't be described as a great film by any stretch but it has enough of the incidental pleasures present in so many English movies (for me anyway) to be worth seeing.
First of all Eric Portman is outstanding as the pathetic WW1 Captain whose time has passed. He reminded me a little of David Niven in "Separate Tables". Flora Robson as his supportive wife is also excellent, no surprises there. It struck me looking at the familiar faces in the cast that so many of these actors always seem to have been middle-aged, was there a young Irene Handl or John Laurie, was there ever a teenage Kathleen Harrison, Marjorie Rhodes or Patricia Hayes? I can't recall them.
While it's fascinating to see the Women's Institute in action in Village England "Great Day" is very studio-bound with too obvious back-projection and the dialogue tends to the stilted. (I did like one line about a dinner invitation "Kill the fatted spam") And was Britain always drenched in sunshine?
"Great Day" is well worth one look.
First of all Eric Portman is outstanding as the pathetic WW1 Captain whose time has passed. He reminded me a little of David Niven in "Separate Tables". Flora Robson as his supportive wife is also excellent, no surprises there. It struck me looking at the familiar faces in the cast that so many of these actors always seem to have been middle-aged, was there a young Irene Handl or John Laurie, was there ever a teenage Kathleen Harrison, Marjorie Rhodes or Patricia Hayes? I can't recall them.
While it's fascinating to see the Women's Institute in action in Village England "Great Day" is very studio-bound with too obvious back-projection and the dialogue tends to the stilted. (I did like one line about a dinner invitation "Kill the fatted spam") And was Britain always drenched in sunshine?
"Great Day" is well worth one look.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Corazones intrépidos
- Filming locations
- Denham, Uxbridge, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(exteriors and surrounding area)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 2 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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