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B&W,
100 min.
Released:
May 1, 1946 (20th Century Fox)
Cast:
Jennifer Jones (as Cluny Brown), Charles Boyer, Peter Lawford,
Helen Walker, Reginald Gardiner, Reginald Owen, Sir C. Aubrey
Smith, Richard Haydn, Sara Allgood, Florence Bates.
Director:
Ernst Lubitsch
Producer: Ernst Lubitsch
Complete
Credits at IMDB
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Not available
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Not available
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CLUNY
BROWN
What
is an uncle to do with a niece who has a passion for plumbing
and innocently tends to have a little too much to drink in
the company of strangers? Domestic service is the only
option Uncle Arn (Billy Bevan) can think of, so he sends Cluny
Brown (Jones) to work at Carmel Manor, a beautiful English
country estate. Cluny's miserable days are brightened
by Adam Belinski (Charles Boyer), who is a guest in the Carmel
home. Cluny had previously met Belinski on one of her plumbing
expeditions and they immediately bonded and recognized each
other as "displaced souls". Cluny, however, puts all
romantic notions aside and instead focuses her affection on
Mr. Wilson (Richard Haydn), a nerdy chemist who still lives
with his dour mother (Una O'Connor). Her future plans of becoming
his wife, however, are dashed when Mr. Wilson and his mother
frown upon Cluny's plumbing talents during the middle of Mrs.
Wilson's birthday party. Mr. Belinski, feeling that he has
lost Cluny to Mr. Wilson, leaves Carmel Manor. He leaves
Cluny a gift and a special message which makes Cluny realize
his true intentions. Will Cluny catch Mr. Belinski before
he gets away?
Cluny
Brown (based on the novel by Margery Sharp)
was the last film to be completed by Ernst Lubitsch,
a director who was adept at satirical and sophisticated
comedies. Jennifer started work on this film following
the completion of Duel
In The Sun but post production problems
delayed the release of that film. As a result, Cluny
Brown opened six months earlier than Duel.
True to Lubitsch form, Cluny Brown was
a film that offered deft humor while poking
fun at upper class England.
It
is a shame that Jennifer only made two comedies
(the other being Beat
The Devil) in her entire career because
she obviously had a knack for comic timing.
Her performance in Cluny Brown is seen
today by many as her most relaxed and displays none
of the neurotic shadings that crept into some of
her later films.
Interesting
Tidbit - This film was filmed on the Song
of Bernadette set. The crew restructured
the town to look like a modern English village.
Back
to Film Index
Duel
In The Sun 
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