Barnacle Bill (1957 film)

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Barnacle Bill
Directed by Charles Frend
Produced by Michael Balcon
Written by T.E.B. Clarke
Starring Alec Guinness
Music by Henry Mancini
Cinematography Douglas Slocombe
Editing by Jack Harris
Distributed by Metro Goldwyn Mayer
Running time 87 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Barnacle Bill (released in the U.S. as All at Sea) is a 1957 Ealing Studios comedy film, starring Alec Guinness as an unsuccessful navy man as well as six of his maritime ancestors.

Contents

[edit] Plot

William Horatio Ambrose (Guinness) wants desperately to live up to the proud family tradition; the Ambroses have always been mariners, hence their family motto, Omnes per Mare (All at Sea). In six humorous vignettes, Guinness portrays some of them, starting with a confused caveman pioneer and ending with his own father's ignominious demise at the Battle of Jutland. Ambrose has a debilitating problem however: he gets violently seasick at the slightest excuse. As a result, his contribution to World War II consists of testing cures for the malady.

When he retires from the Royal Navy as a captain, he purchases a dilapidated amusement pier (the closest thing to a command of his own) with his life savings. The workers are an apathetic bunch, led by an insolent Figg (Victor Maddern), who quits as soon as the new owner begins imposing some semblance of discipline. With the assistance of his new second in command, Tommy (Percy Herbert), and much hard work, Ambrose soon has the pier repaired.

Ambrose is greeted as a naval hero after drifting to France.
Ambrose is greeted as a naval hero after drifting to France.

Then he has to deal with the local town council, headed by the crooked Mayor Crowley (Maurice Denham) and the hostile Arabella Barrington (Irene Browne), who mistakes him for a peeping tom when they first meet. Every time he comes up with an ingenious way to make his business profitable, they see to it that the council outlaws it. When Crowley decides to confiscate and demolish Ambrose's pier and Barrington's bathing huts (under compulsory purchase) to further his own business interests, she resigns from the council and informs Ambrose. He counters by registering his property as a "foreign" naval vessel (christened the Arabella), under the flag of the easygoing country of Liberama, which puts it outside the town's jurisdiction. He soon attracts many happy, paying passengers for his stationary inaugural "cruise".

Thwarted, Crowley hires Figg to take his dredger and demolish the structure late at night. Using a seasickness remedy suggested by Barrington, Ambrose is able to take to sea and foil the scheme (with his ghostly ancestors watching approvingly), but in the process, part of the pier becomes detached and floats away. He remains aboard to prevent salvagers from claiming it and drifts over to France, where he is hailed as a great naval hero.

[edit] Cast

  • Alec Guinness as Captain William Horatio Ambrose. This was the last film Guinness made for Ealing Studios. By coincidence, the first Ealing movie he starred in was Kind Hearts and Coronets, in which he also played multiple roles. Guinness actually served in the Royal Navy in World War II.
  • Irene Brown as Mrs Barrington
  • Maurice Denham as Mayor Crowley
  • Percy Herbert as Tommy
  • Victor Maddern as Figg

[edit] References

[edit] External links