Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
Mrs Ross
Archie Ross
Charlie Ross
The Girl Upstairs
The Man Upstairs
Police Sargeant
Mr. Conrad
Mr. Conrad's Colleague
2nd Redeemer
Mr. Weaver
Mrs. Noonan
Grogan
Publican
Mrs Ross When Young
Mavis Noonan
Jimmy Noonan
Mr Noonan
Negro Doctor
Plainclothes Policeman
Nurse
Nurse
Young Doctor
Psychiatrist
Assistance Board Officer
Caretaker
Hospital Almoner
Nurse
Ticket Collector
Prostitute
Man in N.A.B Office
Mr Fish
Andy
Man in Street
1st Attacker
2nd Attacker
1st Young Man
2nd Young Man
3rd Young Man
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-18
Dame Edith Evans received her third Oscar nomination for this splendid performance as the ageing "Mrs. Ross". A lady with a seemingly limited grip on lucidity - frequently claiming to be a countess, or a member of the Order of the Garter - who is expecting her £40,000 inheritance to arrive at any moment, but living in penury/on charity meantime. When her son "Charlie" (Ronald Fraser) turns up expectedly he leaves a package that she discovers a few days later. Can her dreams have come true? She is an honest woman, and when she goes to tell the kindly National Assistance man "Conrad" (Gerald Sim) that she will no longer need their help, she falls in with an unscrupulous woman who takes her for a drink, robs her and with her family leave her lying on the bombed-out road where she is discovered by her upstair neighbours. Hospital then enter her estranged, untrustworthy husband "Archie" (an effective Eric Portman) who cares little for her, pinches from her purse before becoming embroiled with some local gangster types. Bryan Forbes has put together a superb supporting cast - many British household names who deal, abeit tangentially, with not just issues of poverty, criminality and neglect, but of race and colour too. Essentially, though, this is really a tour de force from an accomplished actor very much at the top of her game. Her nuanced and emotive portrayal of this character demonstrates a decency through her dotage; a humanity and kindness that shines through even though her grasp on reality is tenuous at best. The photography is often close-up, and the facial expressions convey that which a thousand words could not. Well worth a watch.