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A Matter of Life and Death (1946)
Director: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
Movie review
From Time Out London
You’d never guess, until perhaps the final, magnificent ‘trial’ scene, that Powell and Pressburger’s post-war film grew out of the Ministry of Information’s desire for a film celebrating British-American relations. RAF pilot Peter Carter (David Niven, below) falls in love with Boston-born radio operator June (Kim Carter) at an unfortunate moment: just as he’s plunging to the ground in a burning plane. It’s after he hits the ground that the conceit kicks in: colour disappears and we’re in a black-and-white heaven, where clerks are waiting for Peter – only he got lost in typically English fog and has met up with June and fallen in love. What to do? Especially when a village doctor is prepared to fight Peter’s case at the highest levels of justice. When the camera pulls back from the celestial court towards the end to reveal an audience of thousands – most of them combatants – Powell and Pressburger apply the weight of six years of war to this loopy love story.Author: Dave Calhoun
Time Out London Issue 1988, Sept 25 - October 1
User reviews of this film
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- Meddons said...
- Posted on Oct 06 2008 19:03 film me up
- Report as inappropriate
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- LU said...
- Posted on Sep 26 2007 14:05 GREAT FILM CLASSIC. ROMANCE, WAR,HEAVEN AND COURTROOM DRAMA ALL ROLLED INTO ONE!
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Cast & crew
Director: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
Producer: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
Cast: David Niven, Kim Hunter, Roger Livesey, Raymond Massey, Marius Goring, Robert Coote, Abraham Sofaer, Kathleen Byron, Richard Attenborough, Bonar Colleano full cast
Rated: U
Duration: 104 mins
UK Release: Sep 26 2008
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