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'''''Whisky Galore!''''' is a 1949 British [[comedy film]] produced by [[Ealing Studios]], starring [[Basil Radford]], [[Bruce Seton]], [[Joan Greenwood]] and [[Gordon Jackson (actor)|Gordon Jackson]]. It was the directorial debut of [[Alexander Mackendrick]]; the screenplay was by [[Compton Mackenzie]], based on his 1947 novel ''[[Whisky Galore (novel)|Whisky Galore]]'', and [[Angus MacPhail]]. The story—based on a true event—concerns a shipwreck off a fictional Scottish island, the inhabitants of which have run out of whisky because of [[Rationing in the United Kingdom|wartime rationing]]. The islanders find out the ship is carrying 50,000 cases of whisky, which they salvage, against the opposition of the local [[HM Customs and Excise|Customs and Excise]] men.
'''''Whisky Galore!''''' is a 1949 British [[comedy film]] produced by [[Ealing Studios]], starring [[Basil Radford]], [[Bruce Seton]], [[Joan Greenwood]] and [[Gordon Jackson (actor)|Gordon Jackson]]. It was the directorial debut of [[Alexander Mackendrick]]; the screenplay was by [[Compton Mackenzie]], based on his 1947 novel ''[[Whisky Galore (novel)|Whisky Galore]]'', and [[Angus MacPhail]]. The story—based on a true event—concerns a shipwreck off a fictional Scottish island, the inhabitants of which have run out of whisky because of [[Rationing in the United Kingdom|wartime rationing]]. The islanders find out the ship is carrying 50,000 cases of whisky, which they salvage, against the opposition of the local [[HM Customs and Excise|Customs and Excise]] men.


''Whisky Galore!'' was filmed on the island of [[Barra]]; the weather was so poor that the production over-ran its 10-week schedule by five weeks, and the film went £20,000 over budget. The initial cut of the film was considered poor by [[Michael Balcon]], the head of the studio, so one of Ealing's directors, [[Charles Crichton]], added additional footage and re-edited the film prior to its release. Like others of the [[Ealing comedies]], ''Whisky Galore!'' explores the actions of a small insular group facing and overcoming a more powerful opponent. An unspoken sense of community runs through the film, and the story reflects a time when the [[British Empire]] was weakening.
''Whisky Galore!'' was filmed on the island of [[Barra]]; the weather was so poor that the production over-ran its 10-week schedule by five weeks, and the film went £20,000 over budget. [[Michael Balcon]], the head of the studio, considered the initial cut of the film was poor, and one of Ealing's directors, [[Charles Crichton]], added additional footage and re-edited the film prior to its release. Like others of the [[Ealing comedies]], ''Whisky Galore!'' explores the actions of a small insular group facing and overcoming a more powerful opponent. An unspoken sense of community runs through the film, and the story reflects a time when the [[British Empire]] was weakening.


''Whisky Galore!'' was well-received on its release. It came out in the same year as ''[[Passport to Pimlico]]'' and ''[[Kind Hearts and Coronets]]'', leading to 1949 being remembered as one of the peak years of the Ealing comedies. In the US, where ''Whisky Galore!'' was renamed ''Tight Little Island'', the film became the first from the studios to achieve box office success. It was followed by a sequel, ''[[Rockets Galore!]]''. ''Whisky Galore!'' has since been adapted for the stage, and [[Whisky Galore! (2016 film)|a remake]] was released in 2016.
''Whisky Galore!'' was well received on its release. It came out in the same year as ''[[Passport to Pimlico]]'' and ''[[Kind Hearts and Coronets]]'', leading to 1949 being remembered as one of the peak years of the Ealing comedies. In the US, where ''Whisky Galore!'' was renamed ''Tight Little Island'', the film became the first from the studios to achieve box office success. It was followed by a sequel, ''[[Rockets Galore!]]''. ''Whisky Galore!'' has since been adapted for the stage, and [[Whisky Galore! (2016 film)|a remake]] was released in 2016.
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==Plot==
==Plot==
The inhabitants of the isolated Scottish island of Todday in the [[Outer Hebrides]] are largely unaffected by wartime rationing until 1943, when the supply of [[whisky]] runs out. As a result, gloom descends on the disconsolate islanders. In the midst of this catastrophe, Sergeant Odd returns on leave to court Peggy, the daughter of the local shopkeeper, Joseph Macroon. Meanwhile, Macroon's other daughter, Catriona, has just become engaged to a meek schoolteacher, George Campbell, although Campbell's stern, domineering mother refuses to give her approval.
The inhabitants of the isolated Scottish island of Todday in the [[Outer Hebrides]] are largely unaffected by wartime rationing until 1943, when the supply of [[whisky]] runs out. As a result, gloom descends on the disconsolate islanders. In the midst of this catastrophe, Sergeant Odd returns on leave frm the army to court Peggy, the daughter of the local shopkeeper, Joseph Macroon. Odd had previously assisted with setting up the island's [[Home Guard (United Kingdom)|Home Guard]] unit. Meanwhile, Macroon's other daughter, Catriona, has just become engaged to a meek schoolteacher, George Campbell, although Campbell's stern, domineering mother refuses to give her approval.


During a night-time storm, the freighter S.S. ''Cabinet Minister'' runs aground near Todday in heavy fog and begins to sink. Two local inhabitants, the Biffer and Sammy MacCodrun, row out to lend assistance, and learn from its departing crew that the cargo consists of 50,000 cases of whisky. They quickly spread the news.
During a night-time storm, the freighter S.S. ''Cabinet Minister'' runs aground near Todday in heavy fog and begins to sink. Two local inhabitants, the Biffer and Sammy MacCodrun, row out to lend assistance, and learn from its departing crew that the cargo consists of 50,000 cases of whisky. They quickly spread the news.


Captain Waggett, the stuffy English commander of the local [[Home Guard (United Kingdom)|Home Guard]], orders Odd to guard the cargo, but Macroon casually remarks that, by long-standing custom, a man cannot marry without hosting a ''[[rèiteach]]''—a Scottish betrothal ceremony—in which whisky must be served. Taking the hint, the sergeant allows himself to be overpowered, and the locals manage to offload a large number of cases before the ship goes down. Campbell had been sent to his room by his mother for a prior transgression, but is persuaded to leave through the window and assist with the salvage by MacCodrun. This proves fortunate, as Campbell rescues the Biffer when he is trapped in the sinking freighter. The whisky also gives the [[teetotal]] Campbell the courage to stand up to his mother and insist that he will marry Catriona.
Captain Waggett, the stuffy English commander of the local [[Home Guard (United Kingdom)|Home Guard]], orders Odd to guard the cargo, but Macroon casually remarks that, by long-standing custom, a man cannot marry without hosting a ''[[rèiteach]]''—a Scottish betrothal ceremony—in which whisky must be served. Taking the hint, the sergeant allows himself to be overpowered, and the locals manage to offload a large number of cases before the ship goes down. Campbell had been sent to his room by his mother for a prior transgression, but is persuaded to leave through the window and assist with the salvage by MacCodrun. This proves fortunate, as Campbell rescues the Biffer when he is trapped in the sinking freighter. The whisky also gives the previously [[teetotal]] Campbell the courage to stand up to his mother and insist that he will marry Catriona.


A battle of wits ensues between Waggett, who wants to confiscate the salvaged cargo, and the islanders. Waggett brings in Macroon's old [[HM Customs and Excise|Customs and Excise]] nemesis, Mr Farquharson, and his men to search for the whisky. Forewarned, islanders manage to hide the bottles in various ingenious places, including the ammunition cases that Waggett ships off the island. When the whisky is discovered in the cases, Waggett is recalled to his superiors on the mainland to explain himself, leaving the locals triumphant.
A battle of wits ensues between Waggett, who wants to confiscate the salvaged cargo, and the islanders. Waggett brings in Macroon's old [[HM Customs and Excise|Customs and Excise]] nemesis, Mr Farquharson, and his men to search for the whisky. Forewarned, islanders manage to hide the bottles in various ingenious places, including the ammunition cases that Waggett ships off the island. When the whisky is discovered in the cases, Waggett is recalled to his superiors on the mainland to explain himself, leaving the locals triumphant.
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===Filming===
===Filming===
{{Location map|Scotland Outer Hebrides|label=Barra|mark=red_pog.svg |lat=56.98|long=-7.46|width=200|caption=[[Barra]], [[Outer Hebrides]], where ''Whisky Galore!'' was filmed}}
{{Location map|Scotland Outer Hebrides|label=Barra|mark=red_pog.svg |lat=56.98|long=-7.46|width=200|caption=[[Barra]], [[Outer Hebrides]], where ''Whisky Galore!'' was filmed}}
Filming began in July 1948 on the island of [[Barra]]; a unit of 80 staff from Ealing was on location. As most of the established production staff were working on other films at Ealing, many of Mackendrick's team were inexperienced.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=24}}{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=149}} On what was supposed to be the first day of filming, Mackendrick threw away the script and had Mackenzie and MacPhail re-write it over two days. For a box of cigars, Mackenzie was persuaded to add material to the script from his 1943 novel ''Keep the Home Guard Turning''.{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Event occurs at 14:30–14:55}} Mackenzie played no part after the initial filming: according to the film historian Colin McArthur, Mackenzie had an "impatient disengagement from the filming and marketing".{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=15}}{{efn|At heart, Mackenzie was an [[imperialist]] and had an opportunity to travel to India to write a history of the [[Indian Army]].{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=15}}}} The summer of 1948 brought heavy rain and gales and the shoot ran five weeks over its planned 10-week schedule and the film went £20,000 over budget.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=24}}{{efn|£2,000 in 1948 equates to approximately £{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|20000|1948|r=-3}}}} in {{CURRENTYEAR}}, according to calculations based on the [[Consumer Price Index (United Kingdom)|Consumer Price Index]] measure of inflation.{{sfn|Clark|2018}}}}
Filming began in July 1948 on the island of [[Barra]]; a unit of 80 staff from Ealing was on location. As most of the established production staff were working on other films at Ealing, many of Mackendrick's team were inexperienced.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=24}}{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=149}} On what was supposed to be the first day of filming, Mackendrick threw away the script and had Mackenzie and MacPhail rewrite it over two days. For a box of cigars, Mackenzie was persuaded to add material to the script from his 1943 novel ''Keep the Home Guard Turning''.{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Event occurs at 14:30–14:55}} He played no part after the initial filming: according to the film historian Colin McArthur, Mackenzie had an "impatient disengagement from the filming and marketing".{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=15}}{{efn|At heart, Mackenzie was an [[imperialist]] and had an opportunity to travel to India to write a history of the [[Indian Army]].{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=15}}}} The summer of 1948 brought heavy rain and gales and the shoot ran five weeks over its planned 10-week schedule and the film went £20,000 over budget.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=24}}{{efn|£2,000 in 1948 equates to approximately £{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|20000|1948|r=-3}}}} in {{CURRENTYEAR}}, according to calculations based on the [[Consumer Price Index (United Kingdom)|Consumer Price Index]] measure of inflation.{{sfn|Clark|2018}}}}


The church hall on the island was converted into a makeshift studio, which included basic soundproofing. Everything had to be brought from the mainland for filming and many of the sets had been pre-fabricated in Ealing; the islanders were perplexed by some of the items the crew brought with them, such as the artificial rocks they added to the already rock-strewn landscape.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=147}}{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Events occur at 13:35–13:45 and 21:50–21:57}} The studio also had to send out three cases of dummy whisky bottles, as the island was short of the real equivalent because of [[Rationing in the United Kingdom|rationing]].{{sfn|Hutchinson|2007|p=140}}
The church hall on the island was converted into a makeshift studio, which included basic soundproofing. Everything had to be brought from the mainland for filming and many of the sets had been prefabricated in Ealing; the islanders were perplexed by some of the items the crew brought with them, such as the artificial rocks they added to the already rock-strewn landscape.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=147}}{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Events occur at 13:35–13:45 and 21:50–21:57}} The studio also had to send out three cases of dummy whisky bottles, as the island was short of the real equivalent because of [[Rationing in the United Kingdom|rationing]].{{sfn|Hutchinson|2007|p=140}}


With only one small hotel on the island, the cast were housed with the islanders, which had the advantage that it helped the actors pick up the local accent for the film. One local, who was adept at [[Scottish country dance|Scottish dancing]], stood in as the [[body double]] for Greenwood in the ''rèiteach'' scene; Greenwood, a talented ballet dancer, could not master the steps of the [[Reel (dance)|reel]], and the feet of one of the islanders was used.{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Events occur at 17:50–18:10 and 21:35–21:45}}
With only one small hotel on the island, the cast were housed with the islanders, which had the advantage that it helped the actors pick up the local accent for the film. One local, who was adept at [[Scottish country dance|Scottish dancing]], stood in as the [[body double]] for Greenwood in the ''rèiteach'' scene; Greenwood, a talented ballet dancer, could not master the steps of the [[Reel (dance)|reel]], and the feet of one of the islanders was used.{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Events occur at 17:50–18:10 and 21:35–21:45}}


There was tension between Danischewsky and Mackendrick during filming, which led to disagreements; this included a difference of opinion concerning the moral tone of the film. Mackendrick sympathised with the pompous, high-minded attempts of Waggett to foil the looting, while Danischewsky's sympathy lay with the islanders and their removal of the drink.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=27}}{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=149}} Mackendrick later said: "I began to realise that the most Scottish character in ''Whisky Galore!'' is Waggett the Englishman. He is the only [[Calvinist]], puritan figure – and all the other characters aren't Scots at all: they're Irish!"{{sfn|Romney|2011|p=42}}
There was tension between Danischewsky and Mackendrick during filming, which led to disagreements; this included a difference of opinion concerning the moral tone of the film. Mackendrick sympathised with the high-minded attempts of the pompous Waggett to foil the looting, while Danischewsky's sympathy lay with the islanders and their removal of the drink.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=27}}{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=149}} Mackendrick later said: "I began to realise that the most Scottish character in ''Whisky Galore!'' is Waggett the Englishman. He is the only [[Calvinist]], puritan figure – and all the other characters aren't Scots at all: they're Irish!"{{sfn|Romney|2011|p=42}}


Mackendrick was unhappy with the film; as the cast and crew were preparing to return to London, he told Gordon Jackson that the film would "probably turn out to be a dull documentary on island life".{{sfn|Hutchinson|2007|p=141}} He later said "It looks like a home movie. It doesn't look like it was done by a professional at all. And it wasn't".{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=150}}
Mackendrick was unhappy with the film; as the cast and crew were preparing to return to London, he told Gordon Jackson that the film would "probably turn out to be a dull documentary on island life".{{sfn|Hutchinson|2007|p=141}} He later said "It looks like a home movie. It doesn't look like it was done by a professional at all. And it wasn't".{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=150}}


===Post-production===
===Post-production===
Balcon disliked the completed rough cut of ''Whisky Galore!''—mostly put together from the [[Dailies|rushes]]—and his initial thought was to cut its running time down to an hour and classify it as a [[second feature]].{{sfn|McArthur|2003|pp=27–28}} He did not provide Mackendrick with another directoral role, but assigned him to [[second unit]] work.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|pp=182–183}} The initial editing had been done by Joseph Sterling, who was relatively inexperienced. Another of Ealing's directors, [[Charles Crichton]], added additional footage at Ealing Studios and re-edited the film back to the version Mackendrick had filmed.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|pp=24, 27–28}}{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Event occurs at 41:40–41:50}} Crichton said "All I did was put the confidence back in the film".{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Event occurs at 41:50–42:00}} The Crichton version was the one released into cinemas.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=28}}
Balcon disliked the completed rough cut of ''Whisky Galore!''—mostly put together from the [[Dailies|rushes]]—and his initial thought was to cut its running time down to an hour and classify it as a [[second feature]].{{sfn|McArthur|2003|pp=27–28}} He did not provide Mackendrick with another directoral role, but assigned him to [[second unit]] work.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|pp=182–183}} The initial editing had been done by Joseph Sterling, who was relatively inexperienced. Another of Ealing's directors, [[Charles Crichton]], added additional footage at Ealing Studios and re-edited the film closer to the version Mackendrick had filmed.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|pp=24, 27–28}}{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Event occurs at 41:40–41:50}} Crichton said "All I did was put the confidence back in the film".{{sfn|''Distilling Whisky Galore!'', 8 January 1991|loc=Event occurs at 41:50–42:00}} The Crichton version was the one released into cinemas.{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=28}}


Mackendrick was still not satisfied with the final film and thought it looked like an amateur work. Because of financial pressures on the studio he decided to release it with little promotion.{{efn|Two previous films from Ealing, ''[[Saraband for Dead Lovers]]'' and ''[[Scott of the Antarctic (film)|Scott of the Antarctic]]'' (both 1948) had been expensive to produce and neither had a good return at the box office.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=150}}}} [[John Jympson]], one of the editors at Ealing, recommended the film to his father, Jympson Harman, the film critic for ''[[The Evening News (London newspaper)|The Evening News]]''. Although there was to be no [[Film screening#Critic screenings|trade viewing]], Harman and several other press reviewers visited the studios to see the film. They all wrote good reviews, which forced Balcon to provide funds for promotion.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|pp=150–151}}
Mackendrick was still not satisfied with the final film and thought it looked like an amateur work. Because of financial pressures on the studio Balcon decided to release it with little promotion.{{efn|Two previous films from Ealing, ''[[Saraband for Dead Lovers]]'' and ''[[Scott of the Antarctic (film)|Scott of the Antarctic]]'' (both 1948) had been expensive to produce and neither had a good return at the box office.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=150}}}} [[John Jympson]], one of the editors at Ealing, recommended the film to his father, Jympson Harman, the film critic for ''[[The Evening News (London newspaper)|The Evening News]]''. Although there was to be no [[Film screening#Critic screenings|trade viewing]], Harman and several other press reviewers visited the studios to see the film. They all wrote good reviews, which forced Balcon to provide funds for promotion.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|pp=150–151}}


Danischewsky later called the film "the longest unsponsored advertisement ever to reach cinema screens the world over"; the whisky producer [[The Distillers Company]] later presented those associated with the film a bottle of whisky each, given at a dinner at the [[Savoy Hotel]], London.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|pp=151–152}}
Danischewsky later called the film "the longest unsponsored advertisement ever to reach cinema screens the world over"; the whisky producer [[The Distillers Company]] later presented those associated with the film a bottle of whisky each, given at a dinner at the [[Savoy Hotel]], London.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|pp=151–152}}
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==Release and reception==
==Release and reception==
''Whisky Galore!'' was released into UK cinemas on 16 June 1949;{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=81}} the film was financially successful.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=51}} In France, the film was retitled ''Whisky à gogo''; the name was later used as that of a discothèque in Paris.{{sfn|Doggett|2016|p=353}} It was released into the US in December 1949,{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=81}} though because of restrictions on the use of the names of alcoholic drinks in titles, the film was renamed ''Tight Little Island''.{{sfn|Fidler|1949|p=12}} The film was given an open certification in most territories, allowing people of all ages to see it, but in Denmark it was restricted to adults only. The Danish censor explained "There is in this film an obvious disregard for ordinary legislation, in this case the law against smuggling ... Also, we believed that it was damaging for children to see alcohol portrayed as an absolute necessity for normal self-expression".{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=81}}
''Whisky Galore!'' was released into UK cinemas on 16 June 1949{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=81}} and was financially successful.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=51}} In France, the film was retitled ''Whisky à gogo''; the name was later used as that of a discothèque in Paris.{{sfn|Doggett|2016|p=353}} ''Whisky Galore!'' was released into the US in December 1949,{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=81}} though because of restrictions on the use of the names of alcoholic drinks in titles, the film was renamed ''Tight Little Island''.{{sfn|Fidler|1949|p=12}} The film was given an open certification in most territories, allowing people of all ages to see it, but in Denmark it was restricted to adults only. The Danish censor explained "There is in this film an obvious disregard for ordinary legislation, in this case the law against smuggling ... Also, we believed that it was damaging for children to see alcohol portrayed as an absolute necessity for normal self-expression".{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=81}}


Critics warmly praised ''Whisky Galore!'' on its release.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=151}} The reviewer [[C. A. Lejeune]], writing in ''[[The Observer]]'', considered it "a film with the French genius in the British manner",{{sfn|Lejeune|1949|p=6}} while the reviewer for ''[[The Manchester Guardian]]'' thought the film was "put together with ... tact and subtlety",{{sfn|"New Films in London". ''The Manchester Guardian''}} and [[Henry Raynor]], in ''Sight & Sound'' magazine, called it "one of the best post-war British films".{{sfn|Raynor|1950|p=68}} Several critics identified the script as excellent and ''The Manchester Guardian''{{'}}s reviewer thought that the main credit for the film should be given to Mackenzie and MacPhail for the story.{{sfn|"New Films in London". ''The Manchester Guardian''}} Lejeune thought that the story was treated "with the sort of fancy that is half childlike and half agelessly wise: it accepts facts for what they are and only tilts their representation, ever so slightly, towards the fantastic and the humorous".{{sfn|Lejeune|1949|p=6}}
Critics warmly praised ''Whisky Galore!'' on its release.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=151}} [[C. A. Lejeune]], writing in ''[[The Observer]]'', considered it "a film with the French genius in the British manner";{{sfn|Lejeune|1949|p=6}} the reviewer for ''[[The Manchester Guardian]]'' thought the film was "put together with ... tact and subtlety",{{sfn|"New Films in London". ''The Manchester Guardian''}} and [[Henry Raynor]], in ''Sight & Sound'' magazine, called it "one of the best post-war British films".{{sfn|Raynor|1950|p=68}} Several critics identified the script as excellent and ''The Manchester Guardian''{{'}}s reviewer thought that the main credit for the film should be given to Mackenzie and MacPhail for the story.{{sfn|"New Films in London". ''The Manchester Guardian''}} Lejeune thought that the story was treated "with the sort of fancy that is half childlike and half agelessly wise: it accepts facts for what they are and only tilts their representation, ever so slightly, towards the fantastic and the humorous".{{sfn|Lejeune|1949|p=6}}


The acting was also praised by many critics; Lejeune wrote that the actors portray "real people doing real things under real conditions",{{sfn|Lejeune|1949|p=6}} while the reviewer for ''[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]]'' considered that "a talented cast sees to it that no island character study shall go unnoticed", while the lead roles "make the most of their opportunities".{{sfn|"Whisky Galore (1948)". ''The Monthly Film Bulletin''}} The critic for the ''Manchester Guardian'' considered Radford to have played his part "with unusual subtlety" and thought that among the remainder of the cast "there are so many excellent performances that it would be unfair to pick out two or three names for special praise".{{sfn|"New Films in London". ''The Manchester Guardian''}} The critic [[Bosley Crowther]], writing in ''[[The New York Times]]'', thought that Radford and Watson were the stand-out actors of the film, although he also considered the rest of the cast strong.{{sfn|Crowther|1950|p=1}}
The acting was also praised by many critics; Lejeune wrote that the actors portray "real people doing real things under real conditions",{{sfn|Lejeune|1949|p=6}} and the reviewer for ''[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]]'' considered that "a talented cast sees to it that no island character study shall go unnoticed", while the lead roles "make the most of their opportunities".{{sfn|"Whisky Galore (1948)". ''The Monthly Film Bulletin''}} The critic for the ''Manchester Guardian'' considered Radford to have played his part "with unusual subtlety" and thought that among the remainder of the cast "there are so many excellent performances that it would be unfair to pick out two or three names for special praise".{{sfn|"New Films in London". ''The Manchester Guardian''}} The critic [[Bosley Crowther]], writing in ''[[The New York Times]]'', thought that Radford and Watson were the stand-out actors of the film, although he also considered the rest of the cast strong.{{sfn|Crowther|1950|p=1}}


The film surprised many at Ealing Studios for the level of popularity it gained in the US, where it became Ealing's first to achieve box office success.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=151}} For Crowther, "the charm and distinction of this film reside in the wonderfully dry way it spins a deliciously wet tale".{{sfn|Crowther|1950|p=1}} The reviewer T. M. P. in ''The New York Times'' wrote that the film was "another happy demonstration of that peculiar knack British movie makers have for striking a rich and universally appealing comic vein in the most unexpected and seemingly insular situations".{{sfn|T. M. P.|1949|p=33}}
The film surprised many at Ealing Studios for the level of popularity it gained in the US, where it became Ealing's first to achieve box office success.{{sfn|Sellers|2015|p=151}} For Crowther, "the charm and distinction of this film reside in the wonderfully dry way it spins a deliciously wet tale".{{sfn|Crowther|1950|p=1}} T. M. P. in ''The New York Times'' wrote that the film was "another happy demonstration of that peculiar knack British movie makers have for striking a rich and universally appealing comic vein in the most unexpected and seemingly insular situations".{{sfn|T. M. P.|1949|p=33}}


''Whisky Galore!'' was nominated for the [[British Academy Film Award]] for [[BAFTA Award for Best British Film|Best British Film]], alongside ''Passport to Pimlico'' and ''Kind Hearts and Coronets'', although they lost to ''[[The Third Man]]'' (1949).{{sfn|"Film: British Film in 1950". British Film Institute}}
''Whisky Galore!'' was nominated for the [[British Academy Film Award]] for [[BAFTA Award for Best British Film|Best British Film]], alongside ''Passport to Pimlico'' and ''Kind Hearts and Coronets'', although they lost to ''[[The Third Man]]'' (1949).{{sfn|"Film: British Film in 1950". British Film Institute}}


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
''Rockets Galore'', Mackenzie's sequel to ''Whiskey Galore!'', was adapted and filmed as ''[[Rockets Galore!]]'' in 1958, with direction from [[Michael Relph]]. Danischewsky provided the screenplay, and several of the personnel who filmed ''Whisky Galore!'' also worked on ''Rockets Galore!''{{Thinsp}}{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=100}}{{sfn|Rockets Galore (1958)". British Film Institute}} ''Whisky Galore!''—along with Mackendrick's other Scottish-based Ealing comedy ''The Maggie'' (1954)—had an influence over later Scottish-centred films, including ''[[Laxdale Hall]]'' (1953), ''[[Brigadoon (film)|Brigadoon]]'' (1954), ''[[The Wicker Man]]'' (1973), ''[[Local Hero (film)|Local Hero]]'' (1983) and ''[[Trainspotting (film)|Trainspotting]]'' (1996).{{sfnm|Romney|2011|1p=42|Cramb|2016|2p=5|Mortimer|2015|3p=413}}{{sfn|Duguid|Freeman|Johnston|Williams|2012|p=225}} Much of the influence is because of the Kailyard effect used in ''Whisky Galore!''{{sfn|Cramb|2016|p=5}}
''Rockets Galore'', Mackenzie's sequel to ''Whiskey Galore!'', was adapted and filmed as ''[[Rockets Galore!]]'' in 1958, with direction from [[Michael Relph]]. Danischewsky provided the screenplay, and several of the personnel who filmed ''Whisky Galore!'' also worked on ''Rockets Galore!''{{Thinsp}}{{sfn|McArthur|2003|p=100}}{{sfn|Rockets Galore (1958)". British Film Institute}} ''Whisky Galore!''—along with Mackendrick's other Scottish-based Ealing comedy ''The Maggie'' (1954)—had an influence over later Scottish-centred films, including ''[[Laxdale Hall]]'' (1953), ''[[Brigadoon (film)|Brigadoon]]'' (1954), ''[[The Wicker Man]]'' (1973), ''[[Local Hero (film)|Local Hero]]'' (1983) and ''[[Trainspotting (film)|Trainspotting]]'' (1996).{{sfnm|Romney|2011|1p=42|Cramb|2016|2p=5|Mortimer|2015|3p=413}}{{sfn|Duguid|Freeman|Johnston|Williams|2012|p=225}} Much of the influence is because of the Kailyard effect used in ''Whisky Galore!'', according to the author Auslan Cramb.{{sfn|Cramb|2016|p=5}}


''Whisky Galore!'' was produced at the same time as ''Passport to Pimlico'' and ''Kind Hearts and Coronets''; all three comedies were released into UK cinemas over two months.{{sfn|Barr|1977|p=80}} Brian McFarlane, writing for the ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', states that although it was not an aim of releasing the three films together, together they "established the brand name of 'Ealing comedy'";{{sfn|McFarlane|2005}} Duguid writes that the three films "forever linked 'Ealing' and 'comedy' in the public imagination".{{sfn|Duguid|2013}} The film historians Duguid, Lee Freeman, Keith Johnston and Melanie Williams consider 1949 was one of two "pinnacle" years for Ealing, the other being 1951, when ''[[The Man in the White Suit]]'' and ''[[The Lavender Hill Mob]]'' were both released.{{sfn|Duguid|Freeman|Johnston|Williams|2012|p=9}}
''Whisky Galore!'' was produced at the same time as ''Passport to Pimlico'' and ''Kind Hearts and Coronets''; all three comedies were released into UK cinemas over two months.{{sfn|Barr|1977|p=80}} Brian McFarlane, writing in the ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', states that although it was not an aim of releasing the three films together, together they "established the brand name of 'Ealing comedy'";{{sfn|McFarlane|2005}} Duguid writes that the three films "forever linked 'Ealing' and 'comedy' in the public imagination".{{sfn|Duguid|2013}} The film historians Duguid, Lee Freeman, Keith Johnston and Melanie Williams consider 1949 was one of two "pinnacle" years for Ealing, the other being 1951, when ''[[The Man in the White Suit]]'' and ''[[The Lavender Hill Mob]]'' were both released.{{sfn|Duguid|Freeman|Johnston|Williams|2012|p=9}}


In 2009, ''Whiskey Galore!'' was adapted for the stage as a musical; under the direction of Ken Alexander, it was performed at the [[Pitlochry Festival Theatre]].{{sfn|"Stage Design; Going off-screen". ''Design Week''}} In June 2016 [[Whisky Galore! (2016 film)|a remake]] of the film was premiered at the [[Edinburgh International Film Festival]]; [[Eddie Izzard]] played Waggett and [[Gregor Fisher]] took the role of Macroon.{{sfn|Macnab|2016|p=41}} The critic Guy Lodge, writing for ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'', thought it an "innocuous, unmemorable remake" that there was "little reason for it to exist".{{sfn|Lodge|2017}} In contrast, [[Kate Muir]], writing in ''[[The Times]]'' thought "the gentle, subversive wit of the 1949 version has been left intact".{{sfn|Muir|2017}}
In 2009, ''Whiskey Galore!'' was adapted for the stage as a musical; under the direction of Ken Alexander, it was performed at the [[Pitlochry Festival Theatre]].{{sfn|"Stage Design; Going off-screen". ''Design Week''}} In June 2016 [[Whisky Galore! (2016 film)|a remake]] of the film was premiered at the [[Edinburgh International Film Festival]]; [[Eddie Izzard]] played Waggett and [[Gregor Fisher]] took the role of Macroon.{{sfn|Macnab|2016|p=41}} The critic Guy Lodge, writing for ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'', thought it an "innocuous, unmemorable remake" that there was "little reason for it to exist".{{sfn|Lodge|2017}} In contrast, [[Kate Muir]], writing in ''[[The Times]]'' thought "the gentle, subversive wit of the 1949 version has been left intact".{{sfn|Muir|2017}}

Revision as of 10:21, 17 November 2019

Whisky Galore!
UK film poster by Tom Eckersley
Directed byAlexander Mackendrick
Written by
Produced byMichael Balcon
Starring
CinematographyGerald Gibbs
Edited byJoseph Sterling
Music byErnest Irving
Production
company
Distributed byGeneral Film Distributors (UK)
Release date
  • 16 June 1949 (1949-06-16) (UK)
Running time
82 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Whisky Galore! is a 1949 British comedy film produced by Ealing Studios, starring Basil Radford, Bruce Seton, Joan Greenwood and Gordon Jackson. It was the directorial debut of Alexander Mackendrick; the screenplay was by Compton Mackenzie, based on his 1947 novel Whisky Galore, and Angus MacPhail. The story—based on a true event—concerns a shipwreck off a fictional Scottish island, the inhabitants of which have run out of whisky because of wartime rationing. The islanders find out the ship is carrying 50,000 cases of whisky, which they salvage, against the opposition of the local Customs and Excise men.

Whisky Galore! was filmed on the island of Barra; the weather was so poor that the production over-ran its 10-week schedule by five weeks, and the film went £20,000 over budget. Michael Balcon, the head of the studio, considered the initial cut of the film was poor, and one of Ealing's directors, Charles Crichton, added additional footage and re-edited the film prior to its release. Like others of the Ealing comedies, Whisky Galore! explores the actions of a small insular group facing and overcoming a more powerful opponent. An unspoken sense of community runs through the film, and the story reflects a time when the British Empire was weakening.

Whisky Galore! was well received on its release. It came out in the same year as Passport to Pimlico and Kind Hearts and Coronets, leading to 1949 being remembered as one of the peak years of the Ealing comedies. In the US, where Whisky Galore! was renamed Tight Little Island, the film became the first from the studios to achieve box office success. It was followed by a sequel, Rockets Galore!. Whisky Galore! has since been adapted for the stage, and a remake was released in 2016.

Plot

The inhabitants of the isolated Scottish island of Todday in the Outer Hebrides are largely unaffected by wartime rationing until 1943, when the supply of whisky runs out. As a result, gloom descends on the disconsolate islanders. In the midst of this catastrophe, Sergeant Odd returns on leave frm the army to court Peggy, the daughter of the local shopkeeper, Joseph Macroon. Odd had previously assisted with setting up the island's Home Guard unit. Meanwhile, Macroon's other daughter, Catriona, has just become engaged to a meek schoolteacher, George Campbell, although Campbell's stern, domineering mother refuses to give her approval.

During a night-time storm, the freighter S.S. Cabinet Minister runs aground near Todday in heavy fog and begins to sink. Two local inhabitants, the Biffer and Sammy MacCodrun, row out to lend assistance, and learn from its departing crew that the cargo consists of 50,000 cases of whisky. They quickly spread the news.

Captain Waggett, the stuffy English commander of the local Home Guard, orders Odd to guard the cargo, but Macroon casually remarks that, by long-standing custom, a man cannot marry without hosting a rèiteach—a Scottish betrothal ceremony—in which whisky must be served. Taking the hint, the sergeant allows himself to be overpowered, and the locals manage to offload a large number of cases before the ship goes down. Campbell had been sent to his room by his mother for a prior transgression, but is persuaded to leave through the window and assist with the salvage by MacCodrun. This proves fortunate, as Campbell rescues the Biffer when he is trapped in the sinking freighter. The whisky also gives the previously teetotal Campbell the courage to stand up to his mother and insist that he will marry Catriona.

A battle of wits ensues between Waggett, who wants to confiscate the salvaged cargo, and the islanders. Waggett brings in Macroon's old Customs and Excise nemesis, Mr Farquharson, and his men to search for the whisky. Forewarned, islanders manage to hide the bottles in various ingenious places, including the ammunition cases that Waggett ships off the island. When the whisky is discovered in the cases, Waggett is recalled to his superiors on the mainland to explain himself, leaving the locals triumphant.

Cast

Production

Compton Mackenzie, the writer of both the source novel and the screenplay, in a 1914 photograph

Pre-production

Whisky Galore! was produced by Michael Balcon, the head of Ealing Studios; he appointed Monja Danischewsky as the associate producer.[1] Danischewsky had been employed in the studio's advertising department, but was becoming bored by the work and was considering a position in Fleet Street;[2] Whisky Galore! was his first job in production.[1] The film was produced at the same time as Passport to Pimlico and Kind Hearts and Coronets,[3] and with the studio's directors all working on other products, Danischewsky asked Balcon if Alexander Mackendrick, one of Ealing's production design team, could take the role. Balcon did not want novices as producer and director, and persuaded Danischewsky to select someone else. They asked Ronald Neame to direct, but he turned the offer down and Mackendrick was given the opportunity to make his debut as a director.[4] With studio space limited by the other films being produced, Balcon insisted that the film had to be made on location.[5]

The screenplay for Whisky Galore! was written by Compton Mackenzie and Angus MacPhail, based on Mackenzie's own novel; he received £500 for the rights to the book and a further £1,000 because of the film's profitability.[6] Mackendrick and Danischewsky also worked on the script before further input from the writers Elwyn Ambrose and Donald Campbell and the actor James Robertson Justice, who also appeared in the film.[7] The film and novel's story was based on an incident in the Second World War, when the cargo ship SS Politician ran aground off the north coast of Eriskay in the Outer Hebrides. Local inhabitants from the island and from nearby South Uist heard that the ship was carrying 22,000 cases of whisky; they rescued up to 7,000 cases from the wreck before it sank. Mackenzie, a Home Guard commander on the island, took no action against the removal of the whisky or those who took it;[8][9] Charles McColl and Ivan Gledhill, the local Customs and Excise officers, undertook raids and arrested many of those who had looted whisky.[10]

The plot underwent some modification and condensation from the novel, with a lot of the background removed; in particular, much of the religious aspect of the novel was left out, with the novel's Protestant Great Todday and Roman Catholic Little Todday being merged into the single island of Todday.[11] Mackenzie was annoyed with aspects of the adaptation and, referring to the removal of the religious divide, described the production as "[a]nother of my books gone west".[12]

Alastair Sim was offered the role of Joseph Macroon in the film, but turned it down, to avoid being typecast as "a professional Scotsman".[13] It had been Mackenzie's ambition to appear in a film, and he was given the role of Captain Buncher, the master of SS Cabinet Minister, as Politician was renamed in the book and film.[2] Most of the cast were Scottish—with the exception of two of the lead actors, Basil Radford and Joan Greenwood—and many of the islanders from Barra were used as extras.[8]

In May 1950 the British Film Institute's monthly publication, Sight & Sound, estimated the film's budget to be around £100,000.[14][a] The following month, Balcon wrote to the magazine to complain that "Your estimate of the cost is wrong by more than a thousand or two". He also stated in his letter that the film "over-ran its budget by the unprecedented figure of 60 per cent to 70 per cent".[16] Roger Hutchinson, who wrote a history of the sinking of Politician, states that the budget was £60,000.[2]

Filming

Barra is located in Outer Hebrides
Barra
Barra
Barra, Outer Hebrides, where Whisky Galore! was filmed

Filming began in July 1948 on the island of Barra; a unit of 80 staff from Ealing was on location. As most of the established production staff were working on other films at Ealing, many of Mackendrick's team were inexperienced.[17][18] On what was supposed to be the first day of filming, Mackendrick threw away the script and had Mackenzie and MacPhail rewrite it over two days. For a box of cigars, Mackenzie was persuaded to add material to the script from his 1943 novel Keep the Home Guard Turning.[19] He played no part after the initial filming: according to the film historian Colin McArthur, Mackenzie had an "impatient disengagement from the filming and marketing".[20][b] The summer of 1948 brought heavy rain and gales and the shoot ran five weeks over its planned 10-week schedule and the film went £20,000 over budget.[17][c]

The church hall on the island was converted into a makeshift studio, which included basic soundproofing. Everything had to be brought from the mainland for filming and many of the sets had been prefabricated in Ealing; the islanders were perplexed by some of the items the crew brought with them, such as the artificial rocks they added to the already rock-strewn landscape.[21][22] The studio also had to send out three cases of dummy whisky bottles, as the island was short of the real equivalent because of rationing.[23]

With only one small hotel on the island, the cast were housed with the islanders, which had the advantage that it helped the actors pick up the local accent for the film. One local, who was adept at Scottish dancing, stood in as the body double for Greenwood in the rèiteach scene; Greenwood, a talented ballet dancer, could not master the steps of the reel, and the feet of one of the islanders was used.[24]

There was tension between Danischewsky and Mackendrick during filming, which led to disagreements; this included a difference of opinion concerning the moral tone of the film. Mackendrick sympathised with the high-minded attempts of the pompous Waggett to foil the looting, while Danischewsky's sympathy lay with the islanders and their removal of the drink.[25][18] Mackendrick later said: "I began to realise that the most Scottish character in Whisky Galore! is Waggett the Englishman. He is the only Calvinist, puritan figure – and all the other characters aren't Scots at all: they're Irish!"[9]

Mackendrick was unhappy with the film; as the cast and crew were preparing to return to London, he told Gordon Jackson that the film would "probably turn out to be a dull documentary on island life".[26] He later said "It looks like a home movie. It doesn't look like it was done by a professional at all. And it wasn't".[27]

Post-production

Balcon disliked the completed rough cut of Whisky Galore!—mostly put together from the rushes—and his initial thought was to cut its running time down to an hour and classify it as a second feature.[28] He did not provide Mackendrick with another directoral role, but assigned him to second unit work.[29] The initial editing had been done by Joseph Sterling, who was relatively inexperienced. Another of Ealing's directors, Charles Crichton, added additional footage at Ealing Studios and re-edited the film closer to the version Mackendrick had filmed.[30][31] Crichton said "All I did was put the confidence back in the film".[32] The Crichton version was the one released into cinemas.[33]

Mackendrick was still not satisfied with the final film and thought it looked like an amateur work. Because of financial pressures on the studio Balcon decided to release it with little promotion.[d] John Jympson, one of the editors at Ealing, recommended the film to his father, Jympson Harman, the film critic for The Evening News. Although there was to be no trade viewing, Harman and several other press reviewers visited the studios to see the film. They all wrote good reviews, which forced Balcon to provide funds for promotion.[34]

Danischewsky later called the film "the longest unsponsored advertisement ever to reach cinema screens the world over"; the whisky producer The Distillers Company later presented those associated with the film a bottle of whisky each, given at a dinner at the Savoy Hotel, London.[35]

Music

"Brochan Lom", the puirt à beul music sung during the film

The music for Whisky Galore! was composed by Ernest Irving, who had been involved in several other productions for Ealing Studios. His score incorporated adaptations of themes from Scottish folk music to include in his compositions,[36] and used the Scotch snap musical form to reinforce the theme.[37] The musicologists Miguel Mera and David Burnand write that Irving's score "Seems positively lush with its expansive seascapes and emotive expressions of anxiety in the community".[38] The opening music to the film begins with English brass notes, but this changes to Scottish melodies; Mera and Burnand describe how the "balance of material evokes the English-Scottish relationship which will emerge in the film's story".[39]

One scene in the film, soon after the first whisky has been rescued from the ship, shows the male islanders celebrating the return of whisky to the island by drinking and singing in unison in puirt à beul (trans: "mouth music"). According to McArthur, the music and the action show a social, communal event, with whisky the central focus of their enjoyment.[40] The tune was "Brochan Lom", a nonsense song about porridge.[41] The scene mixed the professional actors and local islanders; Crichton said it was not possible to differentiate between the two in the final film.[42]

Scottish folk music is used for the accompaniment of the eightsome reel, which is danced at the rèiteach. According to the music historian Rosemary Coupe, the dance and music are "a vibrant expression of the Scottish spirit, second only to the 'water of life' itself".[43]

Themes

Whisky Galore! primarily centres on the conflict between two men, Macroon and Waggett; women have what McArthur describes as "peripheral roles".[44] Much of the film's humour is at the expense of Waggett, and the film historian Mark Duguid considers there is a "cruel bite" to it.[8] Waggett is described by the cultural historian Roger Rawlings as a fish-out-of-water on Todday;[45] he is the intruder in a film that contains what the film historian Christine Geraghty describes as "a narrative of rural resistance".[46] Not all outsiders to the island are intruders: the other Englishman, Sergeant Odd, "acts as the audience's entry point into the community",[47] and immerses himself into the island's ways.[48]

Jonny Murray, the professor of film and visual culture, considers the Scottish characters in the film as stereotypes: "the slightly drunk, slightly unruly local, the figures who are magically cut adrift or don't seem to respect at all the conventions of how we live in the modern world".[49] He likens the film's portrayals of the Scottish to the portrayals in the Kailyard school of literature, which represents a false image of Scotland.[49][e] The film historian Claire Mortimer sees the Western Isles as portrayed as "being a magical space which is outside of time and the 'real' world".[50] This is true of both Whisky Galore! and Mackenzie's other Scottish-based Ealing comedy, The Maggie (1954). Both films evoke "a tension between myth and reality in the portrayal of the idyllic island community".[51]

McArthur, in his work comparing Whisky Galore to The Maggie, identifies what he sees as "the Scottish Discursive Unconscious" running through the film: an examination of the ethnicity of "the Scots (in particular the Gaelic-Speaking, Highland Scots) as having an essential identity different from—indeed, in many respects the antithesis of—the Anglo-Saxon identified by (a certain class of) Englishmen".[52] According to McArthur, this view of the Scots has permeated much of British culture, influenced by Sir Walter Scott, Felix Mendelssohn, James Macpherson, Sir Edwin Landseer, Sir Harry Lauder and Queen Victoria.[53] The critic John Brown argues that the film, created by outsiders to the community, tries to "embody some kind of definitive essence", but fails to do so, although the result is not unsympathetic.[54]

According to Mera and Burnand, the islanders "relish their isolation and simple way of life and go to considerable lengths to protect it against a moral code imposed from outside".[55] An unspoken sense of community runs through the film, according to Geraghty, such as in salvaging the whisky, and particularly in the rèiteach scene; immediately coming from that celebration, the islanders come together to hide the whisky when they hear the customs men are on their way.[56]

The film historians Anthony Aldgate and Jeffrey Richards describe Whisky Galore! as a progressive comedy because it upsets the established social order to promote the well-being of a community.[57] In this, and in the rejection of the colonial power by a small community, Aldgate and Richards compare the film to Passport to Pimlico.[58] The device of pitting a small group of British against a series of changes to the status quo from an external agent leads the British Film Institute to consider Whisky Galore!, along with other of the Ealing comedies, as "conservative, but 'mildly anarchic' daydreams, fantasies".[59] Like other Ealing comedies, Whisky Galore! concerned the actions of a small insular group facing and overcoming a more powerful opponent. The film historian George Perry writes that in doing so the film examines "dogged team spirit, the idiosyncrasies of character blended and harnessed for the good of the group".[60] Like Passport to Pimlico, Whisky Galore! "portrays a small populace closing ranks around their esoteric belief system that English law cannot completely contain".[61] And, along with the other Ealing comedies, this rejection of power and law reflects a time when the British Empire was weakening.[61]

Release and reception

Whisky Galore! was released into UK cinemas on 16 June 1949[62] and was financially successful.[63] In France, the film was retitled Whisky à gogo; the name was later used as that of a discothèque in Paris.[64] Whisky Galore! was released into the US in December 1949,[62] though because of restrictions on the use of the names of alcoholic drinks in titles, the film was renamed Tight Little Island.[65] The film was given an open certification in most territories, allowing people of all ages to see it, but in Denmark it was restricted to adults only. The Danish censor explained "There is in this film an obvious disregard for ordinary legislation, in this case the law against smuggling ... Also, we believed that it was damaging for children to see alcohol portrayed as an absolute necessity for normal self-expression".[62]

Critics warmly praised Whisky Galore! on its release.[66] C. A. Lejeune, writing in The Observer, considered it "a film with the French genius in the British manner";[67] the reviewer for The Manchester Guardian thought the film was "put together with ... tact and subtlety",[68] and Henry Raynor, in Sight & Sound magazine, called it "one of the best post-war British films".[69] Several critics identified the script as excellent and The Manchester Guardian's reviewer thought that the main credit for the film should be given to Mackenzie and MacPhail for the story.[68] Lejeune thought that the story was treated "with the sort of fancy that is half childlike and half agelessly wise: it accepts facts for what they are and only tilts their representation, ever so slightly, towards the fantastic and the humorous".[67]

The acting was also praised by many critics; Lejeune wrote that the actors portray "real people doing real things under real conditions",[67] and the reviewer for The Monthly Film Bulletin considered that "a talented cast sees to it that no island character study shall go unnoticed", while the lead roles "make the most of their opportunities".[70] The critic for the Manchester Guardian considered Radford to have played his part "with unusual subtlety" and thought that among the remainder of the cast "there are so many excellent performances that it would be unfair to pick out two or three names for special praise".[68] The critic Bosley Crowther, writing in The New York Times, thought that Radford and Watson were the stand-out actors of the film, although he also considered the rest of the cast strong.[71]

The film surprised many at Ealing Studios for the level of popularity it gained in the US, where it became Ealing's first to achieve box office success.[66] For Crowther, "the charm and distinction of this film reside in the wonderfully dry way it spins a deliciously wet tale".[71] T. M. P. in The New York Times wrote that the film was "another happy demonstration of that peculiar knack British movie makers have for striking a rich and universally appealing comic vein in the most unexpected and seemingly insular situations".[72]

Whisky Galore! was nominated for the British Academy Film Award for Best British Film, alongside Passport to Pimlico and Kind Hearts and Coronets, although they lost to The Third Man (1949).[73]

Legacy

Rockets Galore, Mackenzie's sequel to Whiskey Galore!, was adapted and filmed as Rockets Galore! in 1958, with direction from Michael Relph. Danischewsky provided the screenplay, and several of the personnel who filmed Whisky Galore! also worked on Rockets Galore![74][75] Whisky Galore!—along with Mackendrick's other Scottish-based Ealing comedy The Maggie (1954)—had an influence over later Scottish-centred films, including Laxdale Hall (1953), Brigadoon (1954), The Wicker Man (1973), Local Hero (1983) and Trainspotting (1996).[76][77] Much of the influence is because of the Kailyard effect used in Whisky Galore!, according to the author Auslan Cramb.[49]

Whisky Galore! was produced at the same time as Passport to Pimlico and Kind Hearts and Coronets; all three comedies were released into UK cinemas over two months.[3] Brian McFarlane, writing in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, states that although it was not an aim of releasing the three films together, together they "established the brand name of 'Ealing comedy'";[78] Duguid writes that the three films "forever linked 'Ealing' and 'comedy' in the public imagination".[8] The film historians Duguid, Lee Freeman, Keith Johnston and Melanie Williams consider 1949 was one of two "pinnacle" years for Ealing, the other being 1951, when The Man in the White Suit and The Lavender Hill Mob were both released.[79]

In 2009, Whiskey Galore! was adapted for the stage as a musical; under the direction of Ken Alexander, it was performed at the Pitlochry Festival Theatre.[80] In June 2016 a remake of the film was premiered at the Edinburgh International Film Festival; Eddie Izzard played Waggett and Gregor Fisher took the role of Macroon.[81] The critic Guy Lodge, writing for Variety, thought it an "innocuous, unmemorable remake" that there was "little reason for it to exist".[82] In contrast, Kate Muir, writing in The Times thought "the gentle, subversive wit of the 1949 version has been left intact".[83]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ £100,000 in 1948 equates to approximately £4,593,000 in 2024, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[15]
  2. ^ At heart, Mackenzie was an imperialist and had an opportunity to travel to India to write a history of the Indian Army.[20]
  3. ^ £2,000 in 1948 equates to approximately £919,000 in 2024, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[15]
  4. ^ Two previous films from Ealing, Saraband for Dead Lovers and Scott of the Antarctic (both 1948) had been expensive to produce and neither had a good return at the box office.[27]
  5. ^ Murray describes Kailyard as "images of Scotland that portrayed it as parochial, cut off from the modern world, small-town, hapless lads, winsome lassies. They certainly weren't something you could recognise yourself in".[49]

References

  1. ^ a b Sellers 2015, p. 146.
  2. ^ a b c Hutchinson 2007, p. 135.
  3. ^ a b Barr 1977, p. 80.
  4. ^ Sellers 2015, pp. 146–147.
  5. ^ Distilling Whisky Galore!, 8 January 1991, Event occurs at 11:15–11:30.
  6. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 20.
  7. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 26.
  8. ^ a b c d Duguid 2013.
  9. ^ a b Romney 2011, p. 42.
  10. ^ "Customs and Excise". Merseyside Maritime Museum.
  11. ^ McArthur 2003, pp. 16–18.
  12. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 16.
  13. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 34.
  14. ^ "The Front Page". Sight & Sound.
  15. ^ a b Clark 2018.
  16. ^ "Whisky Galore". Sight & Sound.
  17. ^ a b McArthur 2003, p. 24.
  18. ^ a b Sellers 2015, p. 149.
  19. ^ Distilling Whisky Galore!, 8 January 1991, Event occurs at 14:30–14:55.
  20. ^ a b McArthur 2003, p. 15.
  21. ^ Sellers 2015, p. 147.
  22. ^ Distilling Whisky Galore!, 8 January 1991, Events occur at 13:35–13:45 and 21:50–21:57.
  23. ^ Hutchinson 2007, p. 140.
  24. ^ Distilling Whisky Galore!, 8 January 1991, Events occur at 17:50–18:10 and 21:35–21:45.
  25. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 27.
  26. ^ Hutchinson 2007, p. 141.
  27. ^ a b Sellers 2015, p. 150.
  28. ^ McArthur 2003, pp. 27–28.
  29. ^ Sellers 2015, pp. 182–183.
  30. ^ McArthur 2003, pp. 24, 27–28.
  31. ^ Distilling Whisky Galore!, 8 January 1991, Event occurs at 41:40–41:50.
  32. ^ Distilling Whisky Galore!, 8 January 1991, Event occurs at 41:50–42:00.
  33. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 28.
  34. ^ Sellers 2015, pp. 150–151.
  35. ^ Sellers 2015, pp. 151–152.
  36. ^ Duguid et al. 2012, p. 107.
  37. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 35.
  38. ^ Mera & Burnand 2006, p. 62.
  39. ^ Mera & Burnand 2006, p. 63.
  40. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 47.
  41. ^ Sturman 2019, p. 2034.
  42. ^ Distilling Whisky Galore!, 8 January 1991, Event occurs at 42:00–42:20.
  43. ^ Coupe 2010, p. 716.
  44. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 11.
  45. ^ Rawlings 2017, p. 73.
  46. ^ Geraghty 2002, pp. 39–40.
  47. ^ Geraghty 2002, p. 46.
  48. ^ Geraghty 2002, pp. 46–47.
  49. ^ a b c d Cramb 2016, p. 5.
  50. ^ Mortimer 2015, p. 413.
  51. ^ Mortimer 2015, p. 411.
  52. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 8.
  53. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 12.
  54. ^ Brown 1983, p. 41.
  55. ^ Mera & Burnand 2006, p. 61.
  56. ^ Geraghty 2002, p. 44.
  57. ^ Aldgate & Richards 1999, p. 155.
  58. ^ Aldgate & Richards 1999, pp. 157–158.
  59. ^ Duguid et al. 2012, p. 137.
  60. ^ Perry 1981, p. 111.
  61. ^ a b Rawlings 2017, p. 74.
  62. ^ a b c McArthur 2003, p. 81.
  63. ^ Sellers 2015, p. 51.
  64. ^ Doggett 2016, p. 353.
  65. ^ Fidler 1949, p. 12.
  66. ^ a b Sellers 2015, p. 151.
  67. ^ a b c Lejeune 1949, p. 6.
  68. ^ a b c "New Films in London". The Manchester Guardian.
  69. ^ Raynor 1950, p. 68.
  70. ^ "Whisky Galore (1948)". The Monthly Film Bulletin.
  71. ^ a b Crowther 1950, p. 1.
  72. ^ T. M. P. 1949, p. 33.
  73. ^ "Film: British Film in 1950". British Film Institute.
  74. ^ McArthur 2003, p. 100.
  75. ^ Rockets Galore (1958)". British Film Institute.
  76. ^ Romney 2011, p. 42; Cramb 2016, p. 5; Mortimer 2015, p. 413.
  77. ^ Duguid et al. 2012, p. 225.
  78. ^ McFarlane 2005.
  79. ^ Duguid et al. 2012, p. 9.
  80. ^ "Stage Design; Going off-screen". Design Week.
  81. ^ Macnab 2016, p. 41.
  82. ^ Lodge 2017.
  83. ^ Muir 2017.

Sources

Books

  • Aldgate, Anthony; Richards, Jeffrey (1999). Best of British: Cinema and Society from 1930 to Present. London: I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1-86064-288-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Barr, Charles (1977). Ealing Studios. Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7153-7420-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Doggett, Peter (2016). Electric Shock: From the Gramophone to the iPhone – 125 Years of Pop Music. London: Random House. ISBN 978-0-09-957519-1. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Duguid, Mark; Freeman, Lee; Johnston, Keith M.; Williams, Melanie (2012). Ealing Revisited. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-84457-510-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Geraghty, Christine (2002). British Cinema in the Fifties: Gender, Genre and the 'New Look'. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-69464-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Hutchinson, Roger (2007). Polly: The True Story Behind Whisky Galore. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing. ISBN 978-1-8401-8071-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • McArthur, Colin (2003). Whisky Galore! and the Maggie: A British Film Guide. London: I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1-86064-633-1. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mera, Miguel; Burnand, David (2006). European Film Music. Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7546-3659-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mortimer, Claire (2015). "Alexander Mackendrick. Dreams, Nightmares, and Myths in Ealing Comedy". In Horton, Andrew; Rapf, Joanna E. (eds.). A Companion to Film Comedy. Chichester, West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 409–431. ISBN 978-1-1191-6955-0. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Perry, George (1981). Forever Ealing. London: Pavilion Books. ISBN 978-0-907516-60-6. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Rawlings, Roger (2017). Ripping England!: Postwar British Satire from Ealing to the Goons. Albany, NY: SUNY Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-6733-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Sellers, Robert (2015). The Secret Life of Ealing Studios. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-78131-397-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Sturman, Janet (2019). The SAGE International Encyclopedia of Music and Culture. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1-5063-5338-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)

Journals and magazines

Newspapers

  • Cramb, Auslan (28 December 2016). "How Compton Mackenzie may have helped to pave the way for Trainspotting". The Daily Telegraph. p. 5. {{cite news}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Crowther, Bosley (15 January 1950). "In Blythe Spirits". The New York Times. p. 1. {{cite news}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Fidler, Jimmie (23 November 1949). "Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood". The Joplin Globe. p. 12. {{cite news}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Lejeune, C. A. (19 June 1949). "Tipping a Winner". The Observer. p. 6. {{cite news}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Macnab, Geoffrey (5 July 2016). "A Toast to Whimsy and Nostalgia". The Independent. p. 41. {{cite news}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Muir, Kate (5 May 2017). "Whisky Galore!". The Times. Retrieved 16 November 2019. {{cite news}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help) (subscription required)
  • "New Films in London". The Manchester Guardian. 18 June 1949. p. 5.
  • Romney, Jonathan (24 July 2011). "Another Shot of Scotch on the Rocks with a Splash of Wit". The Independent on Sunday. p. 42. {{cite news}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • T. M. P. (26 December 1949). "Based on Compton Mackenzie Novel". The New York Times. p. 33.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)

Websites

Other

  • Cooper, Derek (8 January 1991). Distilling Whisky Galore! (Television production). Channel 4.