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Quicknation The Ladykillers
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The Ladykillers is a 1955 British film. It is one of a series of classic post-war Ealing Studios comedies and is considered by many to be one of Ealing's real 'gems'.
The Coen Brothers remade the film in 2004. The remake, in contrast to the original, was a critical flop. The 1955 version Directed by Alexander Mackendrick, 'The Ladykillers' stars Alec Guinness, Cecil Parker, Herbert Lom, Peter Sellers, Danny Green, Jack Warner and Katie Johnson. Frankie Howerd also has a cameo role as an agitated market fruit seller American William Rose wrote the screenplay for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay and won the Bafta Award for Best British Screenplay. He claims to have dreamed the entire movie and merely had to remember the details when he awoke. The plot of the film is simple enough: an especially unpleasant criminal, Professor Marcus (Guinness), rents a room in the rundown King's Cross house of a bewilderingly innocent old lady, Mrs. "Lop Sided" Wilberforce (Johnson) - who lives alone with her parrots. From that room the Professor and his gang of curious characters plot a sophisticated armed car robbery, while convincing Mrs. Wilberforce, by playing records, that they are in fact musicians using the room for rehearsal space. After the successful robbery things quickly start to go wrong: Mrs Wilberforce finds out that Professor Marcus et al. have committed a robbery and the villains, in turn, try to kill her to prevent her from talking. With this aim in mind, slowly but surely, the gang falls apart in a series of double-crosses executed under the cover of passing trains, through which a targeted but marvellously untroubled Mrs. Wilberforce wanders untouched... Although there are many first rate performances in this film, it is perhaps Alec Guiness who steals the show and thus it is interesting to note that the Alec Guinness role was originally written for Alastair Sim. (In fact Guinness's performance appears to be a very good Alastair Sim impersonation). A radio adaptation of the film was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on January 13, 1996. In 2000, readers of was remade by the Coen Brothers in 2004 with Tom Hanks. It co-starred J. K. Simmons, Marlon Wayans, Tzi Ma ( is also the first Coen film in which Ethan and Joel Coen share both producing and directing credit; previously Ethan had always been credited as producer, and Joel as director. The movie soundtrack by T-Bone Burnett features traditional gospel music composed by Thomas A. Dorsey and Blind Willie Johnson, . In the remake the setting is moved to Saucier, Mississippi, home of a riverboat casino. Hanks rents a room in the house of a widow (Hall). He persuades her to allow him and his gang, posing as a Renaissance musical ensemble, to rehearse in her dirt-walled cellar. From there they secretly tunnel into the counting room of the nearby casino. The film was a critical and financial failure and the Coen Brothers received their worst reviews to date. |
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