Almost a Honeymoon | |
---|---|
Directed by | Norman Lee |
Written by | Walter Ellis (play) Kenneth Horne Ralph Neale |
Produced by | Warwick Ward |
Starring | Tommy Trinder Linden Travers Edmund Breon Frederick Burtwell |
Cinematography | Bryan Langley |
Edited by | Ted Richards |
Music by | John Reynders |
Production company | Welwyn Studios |
Distributed by | Associated British |
Release date |
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Running time | 80 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Almost a Honeymoon is a 1938 British comedy film directed by Norman Lee and starring Tommy Trinder, Linden Travers and Edmund Breon. [1] It was based on the 1930 play Almost a Honeymoon by Walter Ellis, previously filmed in 1930. [2] Its plot is about a young man who urgently needs to find a wife so that he can get a lucrative job in the colonial service, and sets out to persuade a woman to marry him.
It was shot at the Welwyn Studios of Associated British outside London. The film's sets were designed by the art director Duncan Sutherland.
Allmovie wrote, "nothing really happens (this is a 1938 film), but you can't censor the gleam in the supporting characters' eyes." [3]
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Almost a Honeymoon is a 1930 British comedy film directed by Monty Banks and starring Clifford Mollison, Dodo Watts and Donald Calthrop. It was based on the play Almost a Honeymoon by Walter Ellis. A second adaptation was made in 1938. It was made by British International Pictures at their Elstree Studios.
Almost a Honeymoon is a 1930 play by Walter Ellis. It debuted at the Garrick Theatre in London and later enjoyed a successful run at the Apollo Theatre. A farce it concerns a young man who has secured a lucrative post in the colonial service. His problem is that the post requires him to be married, and he has just a day to find a woman to be his wife.
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