A Matter of Innocence
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Guy Green
Hayley Mills
Trevor Howard
Shashi Kapoor
Brenda De Banzie
Dick Patterson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Homely, bespectacled Polly Barlow leaves her mother's bakery shop in England to go on a world cruise as a traveling companion to her rich and vulgar aunt, Mrs. Innes-Hook. Polly's uncle, Robert Hook, is supposed to meet them in Singapore, but he becomes too occupied with his Chinese mistress and sends an Eurasian guide, Amaz, to show them the sights of the city. After devouring a huge meal, Mrs. Innes-Hook drowns in the hotel swimming pool, leaving the 21-year-old Polly in possession of the dead woman's jewelry and money. Under the guidance of Amaz, Polly buys new clothes and contact lenses, which improve her plain appearance considerably--to the amazement of Robert, who arrives for Mrs. Innes-Hook's funeral. Later, Rick Preston, another tourist, begins to court her, and Polly then realizes that she has become an attractive young woman. Although aware that Amaz is a gigolo who would never consider marriage, Polly does not discourage his advances, but eventually she decides that it is time to fly back to England. As she prepares to sail for Hong Kong, Polly receives a talking parrot as a farewell present from Amaz.
Director
Guy Green
Cast
Hayley Mills
Trevor Howard
Shashi Kapoor
Brenda De Banzie
Dick Patterson
Kalen Liu
Patricia Routledge
Peter Bayliss
Dorothy Alison
David Prosser
Toni Murphy
Eric Young
Sarah Abdullah
Anthony Chin
S. Y. Han
Colonel Fairbanks
Fred Bryant
Lorne Polanski
Peter Martin
Paul Fagg
Edward Johnson
Ong Ah Lock
Palham Groom
Norman Grant
Peter Honri
Crew
Maurice Binder
Don Black
Frank Clarke
Trevor Crole-rees
Dorothy Edwards
Ernie Farrer
George W. George
George W. George
Frank Granat
Frank Granat
Willis Hall
Gerry Hambling
Arthur Ibbetson
Bernadette Ibbetson
Michel Legrand
Michel Legrand
Terry Lens
Gordon K. Mccallum
Anthony Mendleson
Harry Miller
Peter Mullins
Kay Rawlings
Ron Robson
Len Shilton
C. C. Stevens
Sydney Streeter
H. A. R. Thomson
David Tringham
Janet Turner
Keith Waterhouse
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Guy Green (1913-2005)
He was born on November 5, 1913 in Somerset, England. Long fascinated by cinema, he became a film projectionist while still in his teens, and was a clapper boy by age 20. He bacame a camera operator during World War II in such fine war dramas as One of Our Aircraft Is Missing; In Which We Serve (both 1942) and This Happy Breed (1944). His big break came as a director of photography came for Carol Reed's The Way Ahead (1944). He was eventually chosen by David Lean to photograph Great Expectations (1946), and his moody, corrosive look at Dickensian London deservedly earned an Academy Award. His work as a cinematographer for the next few years were justly celebrated. Film after film: Blanche Fury (1947), Oliver Twist (1948), The Passionate Friends (1949), Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. (1951), The Beggar's Opera (1953), I Am a Camera (1955), all highlighted his gift for cloud-soaked period pieces with sweeping vistas of broad landscapes.
He made his directorial debut in a modest crime drama, River Beat (1954). Some minor titles followed: Portrait of Alison (1955); House of Secrets (1956); the ingenious mystery thriller The Snorkel (1958); the controversial child molestation drama The Mark (1961) starring Stuart Whitman in an Oscar® nominated performance; and his breakthrough picture, The Angry Silence (1960) which starred Richard Attenborough as an outcast who tries to battle labor union corruption. This film earned Green a BAFTA (a British Oscar equivilant) nomination for Best Director and opened the door for him to Hollywood.
Once there, he proceeded to make some pleasant domestic dramas: Light in the Piazza (1962), and Diamond Head (1963), before moving onto what many critics consider his finest work: A Patch of Blue (1965). The film, based on Elizabeth Kata's novel about the interracial love between a blind girl (Elizabeth Hartman) and a black man (Sidney Poitier) despite the protests of her bigoted mother (Shelley Winters), was a critical and commercial hit, and it earned Green a Golden Globe nomination for Best Director.
Strangely, Green would never enjoy a critical success equal to A Patch of Blue again. Despite his talent for sensitive material and handling of actors, Green's next two films: a forgettable Hayley Mills vehicle Pretty Polly (1967); and The Magus simply didn't attract the moviegoers or the film reviewers. He redeemed himself slightly with the mature Anthony Quinn-Ingrid Bergman love story Walk in the Spring Rain (1970); and the historical drama Luther (1973), before he stooped to lurid dreck with Jacqueline Susan's Once Is Not Enough (1975).
Eventually, Green would find solace directing a series of television movies, the best of which was an adaptation of the Arthur Hailey (of Airport fame) novel Strong Medicine (1986) starring Sam Neill and Annette O’Toole. Green is survived by his wife Josephine.
by Michael T. Toole
Guy Green (1913-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Location scenes filmed in Singapore. Released in Great Britain November 1967 as Pretty Polly.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Winter January 1968
Techniscope
Released in United States Winter January 1968