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A Canterbury Tale Poster

A Canterbury Tale

1944 | 125m | English

(7023 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Three modern day pilgrims investigate a bizarre crime in a small town on the way to Canterbury.
Release Date: Aug 21, 1944
Director: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
Writer: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
Genres: Comedy, Drama, Mystery, War
Keywords england, world war ii, rural area, wartime, railroad, canterbury, home front
Production Companies The Archers, J. Arthur Rank Organisation
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

No trailers or extras available.

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Eric Portman Thomas Colpeper, JP
Sheila Sim Alison Smith
Dennis Price Peter Gibbs
John Sweet Bob Johnson
Charles Hawtrey Thomas Duckett
Esmond Knight Narrator / Seven-Sisters Soldier / Village Idiot
Hay Petrie Woodcock
George Merritt Ned Horton
Edward Rigby Jim Horton
Freda Jackson Prudence Honeywood
Betty Jardine Fee Baker
Eliot Makeham Organist
Parry Jones Jr. Arthur
Beresford Egan P. C. Ovenden
Esma Cannon Agnes
Anthony Holles Sergt. Bassett
Maude Lambert Miss Grainger
Wallace Bosco A. R. P. Worker
Charles Paton Ernie Brooks
Jane Millican Susanna Foster
Michael Golden Sergt. Smale
John Slater Sergt. Len
Graham Moffatt Sergt. Stuffy
Judith Furse Dorothy Bird
Barbara Waring Polly Finn
Jean Shepeard Gwladys Swinton
Margaret Scudamore Mrs Colpeper
Joss Ambler Police Inspector
H.F. Maltby Mr. Portal
Eric Maturin Geoffrey's Father
Name Job
John Seabourne Sr. Editor
Allan Gray Original Music Composer
Alfred Junge Production Design
Harold Hurdell Draughtsman
Elliot Scott Draughtsman
George Paternoster Boom Operator
Parry Jones Jr. Third Assistant Director
Jim Body Clapper Loader
George Blackler Makeup Artist
Ernest Gasser Assistant Makeup Artist
Hilda Sheardown-Course Hairstylist
George Maynard Production Manager
Miss Johnstone Set Dresser
Desmond Dew Sound Recordist
C. C. Stevens Sound Recordist
Alan Whatley Sound Recordist
J.H. Kay Sound Recordist
Alan Thorne Sound Assistant
W. Percy Day Modeling
Arthur Breton Wardrobe Designer
Dorothy Edwards Wardrobe Designer
Michael Powell Writer, Director
Emeric Pressburger Writer, Director
Erwin Hillier Director of Photography
Name Title
Michael Powell Producer
Emeric Pressburger Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 8 10 6
2024 5 10 16 7
2024 6 8 19 5
2024 7 12 23 6
2024 8 8 12 6
2024 9 11 19 7
2024 10 7 9 5
2024 11 7 14 5
2024 12 7 18 4
2025 1 7 12 5
2025 2 5 7 3
2025 3 4 7 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 2 3 2
2025 10 3 3 2

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

This is a curious film to describe. In the best traditions of Chaucer, from whom the title is borrowed - it is a bit of an English whimsy. Not whimsical, not in any light and fluffy sense, but a story that though rooted in characterisations has something more intangible about it. This tale centres a ... round three strangers who meet at railway station near Canterbury. "Alison" (Sheila Sim) is a naive, but determined land girl, "Peter" (Dennis Price) a British solider on a few days leave and "Bob" (John Sweet) - a young GI who accidentally gets off at the wrong stop. On their way to report to the town hall, the young lass is attacked by the local peril that is the "glue man", a mysterious individual who tips glue over the heads of women out with soldiers late at night. When they arrive, the locals try to help and they are introduced to the rather imperious magistrate Eric Portman "(Mr. Colpeper) who pretty much runs the town. In the brief time that they have together, the three seek out this miscreant and the search turns into a modern day pilgrimage of their own as they are exposed, by degree, to the chequered history of their locale.. Each has their own journey to make, and they take us along for the enjoyable interesting ride. As we have come to expect from Messrs. Powell and Pressburger, the story has a richness to it. It interweaves their task with an evaluation of "Britishness" - a bucolic idyll that had largely bumbled along for centuries with little by way of profound development or intervention. Horse drawn carts, respect for the landed gentry - and the clergy - and for traditions that had long outlived their usefulness, but in which the population still had a certain faith. It's celebratory, not detracting of this society, no WWII jingoism or propaganda, just a delicately poised degree of introspection that isn't self indulgent, more evocative... The photography is superb, the acting - particularly from Sweet who epitomises the visiting forces with a mischief, a charm that is engaging and respectful; and from Price who really only wants to get back to his cinema organ. Eric Portman could be a difficult actor to appreciate - his demeanour and style frequently emotionless and staccato. Here that works, it gives him a solid base from which to evolve as his relationship with "Alison", herself charmingly and determinedly played by Sim - grows. It sort of has a narrative to it, but that's not really so important. Don't expect this to follow any established pattern - it's unique and a grand film to watch.

Mar 28, 2022