(1935)

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7/10
There's still some life left in this old dog yet
Spondonman26 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I've seen only a handful of films starring Seymour Hicks, they've all been pleasant but I still haven't grasped what made him such a "distinguished" British actor. Of course he may have been coasting in here, at 64 years old playing the 62 year old main character who was playing 45. I've seen this film a couple of times since I taped it from UK Channel 4 on 1st April 1992 – thankfully and amazingly someone else in the UK taped (and digitised) it because my VHS copy recently bit the dust.

The story of fairly old man but extremely young at heart, married to and in a loving relationship with a woman young enough to be his granddaughter and with a baby, maintaining the pretence to her that he's 45 with two little boys until his aged and sharp tongued mother arrives and who relishes having a heart-to-heart with the wife. Ferocious and farcical complications arise! Hicks' two middle-aged sons are Miles Malleson and Kynaston Reeves both looking ancient even then and deliberately made up to emphasise the contrast. Eva Moore was unforgettable a few years before as the cracked Rebecca Femm in the Old Dark House, she was merely borderline sinister here. The acting is OK while the sets and photography are surprisingly good for a film careful of its budget.

So is it worth valuable time? I admit I like it – it's a charming window on a dead world of forgotten people performing a creaky talky story at 20 mph. It was made while Julius Hagan was in charge of Twickenham Studios who was determined to produce better quality British films than the usual quota quickies on show and believe it or not, this is class compared to most British films from 1935! It won't be everyone's cup of tea but remember to give it the proper respect due to age.
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6/10
Vintage Wine
CinemaSerf9 February 2023
Oh darlings; this is a kindly little story about an gentleman in his early sixties (Seymour Hicks) whose family have decided that he must end his profligate ways and come back home to live in his family's vineyard home. Unsurprisingly when we meet his family - elderly mother, sister, two sons and a really quite annoying grand-daughter - he regales against this proposition and returns to Rome. It's only there that we discover he has a secret and when his family have a guardian appointed to stop him further disposing of the family fortune it all, well, hits the fan. Hicks is on good form, though the part is hardly demanding, the humour a touch on the repetitive side and the comedy not too farcical to make one cringe in (not so eager) anticipation. Miles Malleson (bedecked in a cracking beard - who was 47 at the time of filming) makes for a interesting choice as one of his sons, as does Kynaston Reeves as the other (who was 42) but that all just adds to the daftness of the whole thing. Forgettable, I'd say - and maybe twenty minutes too long - but it raises a smile now and again if you've a forgiving nature....
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5/10
A lesser vintage
malcolmgsw17 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Seymour Hicks plays a member of a respected wine growing family in the Champagne area.His family are outraged by his behaviour,living with a mistress in Rome.They are determined that he is going to stay home in future and mends his ways.However it turns out that he is married with a 3 month old son.His wife has been lead to believe that he is 45 years old with 2 young sons from a previous marriage.Hicks escapes the family home and goes back to his wife.However his family are following him.Hicks has to invent some tall stories to cover his situation.However his mother arrives and tells the wife all.His mother becomes aware that he is married with a baby.His wife decides to punish him for his lies.Of course everything ends happily.A few laughs here and there
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5/10
Vintage Wine review
JoeytheBrit20 April 2020
A 62-year-old man's who has fooled his much younger wife into believing he is only 45 fears the worst when he discovers that his overbearing relatives are coming to visit. Seymour Hicks - remembered, if at all, for his portrayal of Scrooge in 1935 - is the best thing about this silly farce, which he tries hard to lift above the level of mediocrity. It starts brightly, but the ageing husband's secret is revealed too early, leaving the plot with nowhere to go for the last half-hour.
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4/10
Slow moving English melodrama full of good ideas and bad acting
OldieMovieFan4 June 2023
Claire Luce was a favorite of Fred Astaire, playing across from him onstage in 'The Gay Divorcee.' Tragically she suffered a terrible accident in the famous table routine at the end of that play and never danced again. Legend has it that Astaire pushed hard to get Claire to play the movie with him, but this is difficult to believe since it was widely known she could no longer dance at all. Pandro Berman, RKO's producer, had seen that play and bought the book to make into a film and regardless of Fred's memory of events, Berman placed Ginger Rogers in the famous role (Rogers, too, had a bad fall in that same routine). Watching Claire in films like 'Vintage Wine' makes it obvious that Berman made the right choice; she doesn't have the ability to take over scenes, and her glamor shots simply aren't glamorous. Had RKO had made this film in Hollywood instead of in England, there would have been at least 10 actresses who would have gotten this role before Claire. She could act, but she had a slight screen presence and a heavy tread. Eva Moore completely outshines her. Regardless of Astaire's views, it's easy to see why she had a very, very short film career.

There are some of good ideas in 'Vintage Wine' but they're often wasted - like the guardian, assigned by the court, who simply disappears and is never heard from again.

These kinds of films were made to meet British regulatory environment - RKO had to make a certain number of films in England in order to sell their movies in England. This movie is very slow, very English, and quite likely it played the late night run in theaters and promptly vanished. And yet it is full of interesting ideas, worth watching once, although not for any of the acting.

One truly wishes for one of the great Hollywood actresses of that day - Harlow, Loy, Rogers, Dunne, Hopkins or one of the Bennetts - across from say, Francis X. Bushman.
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5/10
Vintage Wine
Prismark1020 June 2023
A vintage British comedy of the Poinot family led by elderly matriarch Josephine Popinot.

They are a wealthy French family who make champagne. Concerns are raised as her son Charles Popinot (Seymour Hicks) as been living it up with a mistress in Rome.

Josephine plans to travel to Rome to have a showdown and maybe wrest control back of the family business from Charles.

Only Charles does not have a mistress. He has a wife of two year who has also given him an infant son.

The trouble is his wife thinks that Charles is in his 40s. He is in his 60s, has two grown up children and a granddaughter.

The truth comes out when they all arrive in Rome. It leaves Charles in the dog house with his wife and his mother.

Adapted from a stage play, this is a farce but it does not really translate well on film. It is amiable enough and fast moving.
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8/10
As Young as You Feel
boblipton10 August 2016
Seymour Hicks' elderly sons think he is losing it at 62. He lives in Rome, instead of the ancestral champagne estates, has a mistress and has squandered a third of his fortune. They conspire with his mother to trap him on the estate with them as guardians. Little do they know the reality: he is married to Claire Luce, who thinks him 45 and they have a six- month-old son.

It's an amusing situation and Seymour Hicks -- best remembered these days for playing Scrooge for forty years on the stage and twice on film -- plays it to the hilt, full of twitches, while Miss Luce plays a veddy English Sicilian girl. The standout performance is Eva Moore as Hicks' mother.

It's a three-act stage comedy, opened out with some tracking shots and you may downgrade it slightly for that. However, this cut-glass farce is played impeccably by practiced hands and kept me laughing when I first saw it (when I was 62).
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9/10
Fun and quirky
daveintrunch26 June 2017
For me this has a period charm all of its own. I found the comedy, especially that of Seymour Hicks to be in some ways surprisingly modern. The plot is utterly absurd and all the better for it. It is played full force and everyone looks to be thoroughly enjoying themselves. It's an early film, and not on a huge budget but just go with the flow and you'll enjoy it as it relentlessly pokes fun at the generation gap - all four of them!
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9/10
I'd like a bottle of what he's been drinking.
mark.waltz12 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Sir Seymour Hicks is best known for a B version of "Scrooge", released the same year as this rambunctious comedy about a 65 year old man who passes as 45 (and looks younger than his stuffy two sons), hiding the secret that he's married to a pretty blonde 20 something who has even fathered a baby. That secret is about to be exposed causing the wife (Claire Luce) to punish him by pretending to be considering separating from him when the older members of his family show up to expose him and try to gain control of his fortune.

"You're the first of my family who is ever dare to attack me. I love you for it", says Eva Moore, the 85 year old matriarch of the family (and Hicks' mother) who can sing to be a great great grandmother. Best known for her repeated declaration of "No beds! They can't have beds!" in "The Old Dark House", Moore steals every moment that she is on screen. The one time mother-in-law of Laurence Olivier, she's up there with Jessie Ralph, May Robson, Ethel Griffies, Edna May Oliver and much later Judith Lowry for playing octegenarian senior women who evoke fear and command respect with their acidic tongues.

This is delightfully funny even if the story is totally ridiculous. As the audience meets each member of the family which includes two lovely women Luce's age) and a feisty teenager who keeps trying to get her great grandfather involved in her games, it gets funnier and funnier, especially when Hicks makes his entrance. The art direction is superb, and the film flows by without a dull moment. Hicks and Moore are certainly award-worthy for their timelessly hysterical performances.
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