Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Left Right and Centre

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.8
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6.8
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Sidney Gilliat

Music director
  
Humphrey Searle

Duration
  

Language
  
English

6.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Romance

Producer
  
Frank Launder

Country
  
United Kingdom

Left Right and Centre movie poster

Release date
  
1959

Writer
  
Sidney Gilliat (screenplay), Sidney Gilliat (story), Val Valentine (story)

Cast
  
Ian Carmichael
(Robert Wilcot),
Alastair Sim
(Lord Wilcot),
Patricia Bredin
(Stella Stoker),
Richard Wattis
(Harding-Pratt),
Eric Barker
(Bert Glimmer),
Moyra Fraser
(Annabel)

Similar movies
  
Laughter in Paradise (1951)

Left Right and Centre is a 1959 British satirical comedy film directed by Sidney Gilliat and starring Ian Carmichael, Patricia Bredin, Richard Wattis, Eric Barker and Alastair Sim. It was produced by Frank Launder. A political comedy, it follows the events of a by-election in a small English town.

Contents

Plot

Robert Wilcot, a popular television personality, is selected as the Conservative candidate for the provincial town of Earndale in the upcoming by-election. His selection is mostly due to the influence of his uncle, Lord Wilcot a powerful local figure. His opponent is to be Stella Stoker, a fishmonger's daughter with a degree from the London School of Economics who has been chosen to stand for the Labour Party.

Travelling up on the train to Earndale, the two candidates meet and while she quickly works out who he is, he remains ignorant of her true identity. To try to show off he begins to tell her about his selection for the seat and how he expects to win. He describes his opponent as a bluestocking. He also inadvertently reveals embarrassing details to her such as the fact that he has scarcely been to Earndale in his life and that his family once controlled the seat as a rotten borough. Once they arrive at Earndale station, he is soon made aware of his mistake. The electoral agents of both candidates are furious to discover they have been fraternising on the train.

Wilcot goes to visit his uncle, and finds him to be an eccentric who has turned his country house into a money-making operation for visiting coach parties of tourists. It appears that he has engineered Robert Wilcot's selection as a candidate in order to spark public interest in the election, boosting his own business. It is also clear that the political contest is added to by the enmity of the two electoral agents the Tory Harding-Pratt and Labour's Bert Glimmer.

Once on the stump the two candidates keep running into each other around Earndale, at one point during a factory visit leading to a shouting match. Both begin to become entranced by the other, and become convinced they are falling in love. This comes to a head during the hustings at Wilcot Hall where they are caught embracing in the maze by their respective agents. Burying the hatchet, the two agents try to foil the potential romance. Despite repeated attempts to break up the candidates they continue a covert relationship.

Main cast

  • Ian Carmichael - Robert Wilcot
  • Patricia Bredin - Stella Stoker
  • Richard Wattis - Harding-Pratt
  • Eric Barker - Bert Glimmer
  • Alastair Sim - Lord Wilcot
  • Moyra Fraser - Annabel
  • Jack Hedley - Bill Hemmingway
  • Gordon Harker - Hardy
  • William Kendall - Pottle
  • Anthony Sharp - Peterson
  • George Benson - Egerton
  • Leslie Dwyer - Alf Stoker
  • Moultrie Kelsall - Grimsby Armfield
  • Jeremy Hawk - TV interviewer
  • Russell Waters - Mr. Bray
  • Olwen Brookes - Mrs. Samson
  • John Salew - Mayor
  • Bill Shine - Basingstoke
  • Erik Chitty - Deputy returning officer
  • Redmond Phillips - Mr. Smithson
  • Irene Handl - Mrs. Maggs
  • John Sharp - Mr. Reeves
  • Supporting cast

  • Douglas Ives - Plumber
  • Olaf Pooley - TV newscaster
  • Hattie Jacques - Woman in car
  • Frederick Leister - Himself
  • Frank Atkinson - Railway Porter
  • Eamonn Andrews - Himself
  • Gilbert Harding - Himself
  • Carole Carr - Herself
  • Josephine Douglas - Herself
  • Cameo/Uncredited cast

  • Fred Griffiths - Billingsgate Porter
  • Victor Harrington - Man at Wilcot Priory
  • Philip Latham - Reporter
  • Jim O'Brady - Billingsgate Porter
  • References

    Left Right and Centre Wikipedia
    Left Right and Centre IMDb Left Right and Centre themoviedb.org


    Similar Topics