The
usual suspects were on hand for Thanksgiving at my house, which this year also
happened to fall on my birthday. 18 altogether of friends and family were
there, though a few left early while a few others arrived late so 14 was the
maximum at any one moment. The standard advice to avoid politics on such
occasions is sound, and was very nearly obeyed. It was “very nearly” rather
than “entirely” only because food itself is political nowadays. I suppose it
always has been to some degree, but it is more fiercely so today. Enough
tolerance was demonstrated all around to keep things mostly congenial however.
There were dishes on hand for vegans and carnivores alike. (I’m unabashedly one
of the latter.) It was nice to catch up with everybody in person rather than
through social media. Remarkably, no one at the table had a nose in a phone.
That was nice, too.
When
the table was cleared, the fridge filled with leftovers, the sink left for
later, and the guests departed, the question arose of how to employ the time
before the arrival of the sandman. “Turkey coma” is something of a misnomer,
since I always have been exceedingly awake after over-indulging in
poultry, sides, and desserts. It is true, though that I’m not ever motivated to
do anything useful in that condition. A movie was the obvious answer. Two
20-something friends have been rewatching all the Harry Potter movies the past week because the films remind them of
what they charmingly and without sense of irony call their youth. This brought
to my mind another flick set in a British school: The Belles of St. Trinian’s (1954).
My
first instinct was to recommend the movie to the two Millennials, but first
instincts are not always wise. If they were, enough intelligence for second
thoughts never would have evolved in hominins. That’s not to say we often make
use of it. I’ve made the mistake before of trying to introduce favorite books
and films to people for whom they were unsuited, only to bore the recipients to
tears. No snobbery is intended by “unsuited”: few of those recommendations were
highbrow, and I’ve received my share of recommendations for which I was unsuited,
too. When it comes to classic films (“classic” in the sense of older than the
1990s rather than necessarily “great” or even good), young people generally
have to find their own way to them. They can’t be pushed, or they will dislike
them on principle. So, as quiet returned to the house Thursday evening I spun
up the DVD for myself.
Ronald
Searle infused his 1940s cartoons with a dark humor much of a kind with that of
Charles Addams. The hellion schoolgirls of St. Trinian’s were a recurring subject
for him. Searle is not as well-known today on this side of the pond as he was
during what I call (with quite proper lack of irony) my youth. Back then The Belles of St. Trinian’s and its
sequels aired frequently on television. They haven’t for the past few decades,
and the 2007 St. Trinian’s sank like
a stone. Searle is worth rediscovering. He occupies a space on my shelf next to
Addams. The 1954 movie remains the definitive adaptation, and if you have found
your own way to classic films but haven’t yet seen this one, do yourself a
favor and do so.
Alistair
Sim is marvelous in a dual role as the headmistress Millicent Fritton and as her
underworld brother Clarence. Millicent describes her educational philosophy
thus: “in other schools girls are sent out quite unprepared into a merciless
world, but when our girls leave here, it is the merciless world which has to be
prepared.” The plot involves a race horse owned a sultan father of new student:
he had chosen St. Trinian’s for her only because it was near his horses.
Millicent hatches a scheme to rescue the near-bankrupt school by betting on the
horse though Clarence and the Sixth Form girls have contrary plans. In a
subplot, police Sgt. Ruby Gates (Joyce Grenfell) goes undercover as a substitute
teacher to uncover illegal activities at the school. There is a thoroughly
enjoyable celebration of anarchy throughout the film. Keep in mind it is 1954,
and the flick is intended to be kid-friendly, so don’t expect Quentin Tarantino,
but it is still as much fun to watch as it was when I first saw it decades ago.
It wrapped up my Thursday nicely.
Field hockey at St.
Trinian’s
I looked for The Belles of St. Trinian’s, but Netflix doesn't have it and Amazon only has it in a buy feature in PAL format, which doesn't help much in the American market. That seems like the type thing though that TCM used to show back in the day.
ReplyDeleteI ran across this blog, and thought I'd pass it along to you:
http://fakenous.net/
A search shows that The Belles of St. Trinian's is indeed hard to find in Region 1 DVD format at present. Not impossible though. It turned up here: https://www.vermontmoviestore.com/products/belles-of-st-t?_pos=1&_sid=0274be1c4&_ss=r . I don't know why Amazon doesn't carry it; I suspect it would be a few dollars cheaper there.
DeleteBTW, for reasons known to himself alone, Searle (d. 2011) drew his last St. Trinian’s cartoon in 1953. In that year (two decades before Alice Cooper) he blew up the school. He wrote: “St. Trinian’s has gone. Encouraged by the success of recent atomic explosions in the Pacific, the school Nuclear Fission experts threw themselves into their experiments with renewed enthusiasm and with the help (thanks to certain old girls) of some newly acquired top secret information, achieved their objective at midnight last night.”
Thanks for the link. Not many sites try to look at things from more than one side anymore.