The Fallen Idol

Alternate title(s):
Foreign Title:
Date: January 01, 1948 to December 31, 1948
Dates Note: 1948
Country of Origin: United Kingdom
Place of Origin: United Kingdom
Languages:
Color: B&W
Silent: No
Based On:
Additional Info:


Curator Notes

Film Series/Exhibition Title: 
Fallen Idols: Graham Greene on Screen
Description: 

The New Yorker’s Anthony Lane called The Fallen Idol “the most tightly drawn of all” the collaborations between writer Graham Greene and director Carol Reed. Lane writes, “Ralph Richardson plays Baines, the butler at a foreign embassy in London. The ambassador has gone away, leaving his young son, Philippe (Bobby Henrey), in the care of Baines and the hectoring Mrs. Baines (Sonia Dresdel). The plot, deft and quick, is rich in secrets. . . . As a study of the child who sees but cannot fully understand, the movie reaches back to Henry James’s What Maisie Knew, and as an introduction to the clammy grip of Greene it remains unsurpassed.”

Authors/Roles: 
,
Film Series/Exhibition Title: 
In Focus: Writing for Cinema
Description: 

The New Yorker’s Anthony Lane called The Fallen Idol “the most tightly drawn of all” the collaborations between writer Graham Greene and director Carol Reed. Lane writes, “Ralph Richardson plays Baines, the butler at a foreign embassy in London. The ambassador has gone away, leaving his young son, Philippe (Bobby Henrey), in the care of Baines and the hectoring Mrs. Baines (Sonia Dresdel). The plot, deft and quick, is rich in secrets. . . . As a study of the child who sees but cannot fully understand, the movie reaches back to Henry James’s What Maisie Knew, and as an introduction to the clammy grip of Greene it remains unsurpassed.”

Authors/Roles: 


Related People