Escapade (1955) Poster

(1955)

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7/10
Overly ambitious, but enjoyable
Tryavna19 November 2005
In the mid-1950s (as the British film industry was going through yet another crisis), independent producer David Angel turned out a series of modest but extremely intelligent films, of which the best are this one, "The Sea Shall Not Have Them" (with Michael Redgrave), "Cast a Dark Shadow" (with Dirk Bogarde), and "Carve Her Name With Pride" (with the underrated Virginia McKenna). These films boasted top-notch scripts and actors, but were hampered somewhat by their production values.

In the case of "Escapade," we have a fine cast and plot: John Mills plays a professional pacifist who can't seem to control the violence simmering within his own marriage to Yvonne Mitchell. Fearing a divorce, their sons concoct a plan to put their father's ideas into more pragmatic action; they steal a small airplane, which they plan to fly to Vienna in a calculated stunt that will bring attention to their own pacifist values and that will bring their family closer together. All of this causes much consternation for their school's headmaster, the great Alastair Sim.

In my opinion, Sim makes this movie. So fantastic was his comic timing that he steals every scene he's in -- even from the usually reliable John Mills. Two of Mills' sons are played by Andrew Ray (of "The Mudlark") and Peter Asher (brother of the more famous actress Jane Asher). One of their schoolmates is played by Jeremy Spencer (who would go on to appear in "Summertime" and "The Prince and the Showgirl"). Fans of British cinema should also keep a sharp look-out for character actor Richard Wattis who appears uncredited early on.

Such a cast makes it impossible for any movie to be bad, and indeed, "Escapade" is about 3/4 of a really good movie. Everything is fine while director Philip Leacock keeps a light touch, portraying the ease with which the schoolboys outsmart their parents and teachers. But the final act of the film loses its sense of humor and turns a little mawkish and sentimental. Writer Donald Ogden Stewart (who had already been blacklisted in Hollywood and wrote this screenplay under the pseudonym Gilbert Holland) tries to cram too many serious statements into the last 15 minutes: we get comments on the values of the press, on the potential for world peace, on the idealism of youth and the cynicism of adults, etc. As a result, the finale takes itself too seriously. What we really need is a director like Billy Wilder at the helm -- someone who could undercut the seriousness in order to curtail the sentimentalism. Part of the problem is probably due to the origins of the story as a play, and although Stewart manages to "open" the play successfully, the central gimmick (the fact that we never see Mills' eldest son) is what keeps me from being won over by the film's finale. I just have no reason to idolize/idealize the 16-year-old maverick we never see.

But these few complaints shouldn't stop you from watching this movie. In fact, these weaknesses are admirable because they illustrate just how intelligent the movie is.
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7/10
Schoolboy's escapade saves the world in 1955.
ianlouisiana28 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
"Escapade" was originally a stage play set in the study of the Hampden's home.The radio (or wireless as it was referred to) plays a vital part in keeping the audience abreast of the offstage developments.Written a few years before John Osborne blew the drawing-room drama out of the water,it is one of the last "middle-class family crisis" theatrical pieces more suited to the mid nineteen thirties than the "imminent nuclear holocaust" period in which it was set. The rather naive plot with it's sub-texts about individual sacrifice,the basic nobility of man and the triumph of innocence over evil belongs to the era of the "League of Nations" and Neville Chamberlain appeasing that strange little Mr Hitler. A public schoolboy steals an aeroplane and flies to a "Peace Conference" somewhere in Europe to draw the delegates' attention to the precepts of pacifism as propounded by his father.He crashes and everybody realises that war is a bad thing. Mr John Mills plays the father very much in his "middle period"style, now being rarely cast as an archetypal cockney/northerner,soon to develop into the superb character actor he would become.Miss Yvonne Mitchell is his wife.Not perhaps a taxing role,but one to which she brought honesty and sincerity.She was on the cusp of a long and successful career on television as was Mr Philip Leacock,the director. Mr Alistair Sim as the headmaster is not so very different from Mr Alistair Sim as the headmaster in half a dozen other British films,no bad thing,you might think. There are references to Greek mythology,strange nicknames (Daventry is known as "L.W." because Daventry was a radio station on the Long Wave band of a British wireless of the era)ladies dabbing their eyes and steely jawed paters.We are very much in Terence Rattigan territory here. If you never went to a school where boys referred to each other by their surnames,never wanted to fly a Hawker Hunter and never had a headmaster who said "This is going to hurt me more than it hurts you",I doubt if you'll get much out of "Escapade". On the other hand,if you remember Anne Ziegler and Webster Booth,Rawicz and Landauer and Vic Oliver with affection it will be absolutely your cup of tea.
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7/10
Strange little film with some good outcomes
SimonJack25 June 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Escapade" is billed as a comedy and drama, but it has more in a rather strange plot. This isn't a film with witty dialog or humorous antics. The humor comes from a number of directions. One is the boys of a school as they carry out a plot planned by a leader whom we never see. The 16-year-old boy, Icarus, has two younger brothers in the school. They are at risk of being expelled because of their disruptions and rebellious activities.

The headmaster of the school dislikes expulsions partly because he sees it reflecting on the failure of the school. The film opens with John and Stella Hampden, parents of the three boys, in a serious argument. He is an active pacifist, apparently in some paid working role, and she has felt slighted by his lack of attention to her or the family. He's obsessive in his pacifism to the point of neglect and lousy parenting. She's planning to leave him.

The headmaster calls on them with the threat of expulsion, and news of the latest student caper in which their sons have gone missing. The couple forget their squabbling and head to the school with the headmaster. The boys stay hidden as a newspaper reporter shows up at the school for the story. Other boys in the school are part of the planned plot, but they even seem left out of the conclusion.

The oldest son, Icarus, has stolen a plane, which he had learned to fly, and is heading for Vienna. It's sort of a prank for peace. At the time of this film, the Soviet Union and West were developing nuclear weapons and involved in an arms race. By the end of the story, it has highlighted ironies and hypocrisies of the time. At home, a pacifist activist father who can't keep peace in his own family. The international arms race, to maintain peace. And more.

As stated early, this is an odd little film with different twists and jabs. All of the cast are fine. John Mills and Yvonne Mitchell play the Hampdens, and Alastair Sim is the headmaster, Dr. Skillingworth.
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Delightful
lordhack_996 September 2003
The action in this charming (yes) Cold War comedy centers around the brilliant, extraordinary son of Mills - a son who is never seen, but who has become a school hero, then a national, and finally, an international hero! At turns moving and hilarious, this film is how a highly civilised people react to the dread of atomic war - I refer to the writers. The enemy is hardly the West, of course, but amongst the freest of humanity, complacency and lassitude reign. But in this wonderful tale, one boy ignites (almost literally - you will know what I mean) the minds of young Britons.
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7/10
"My boys steal a plane? Ridiculous!"
hwg1957-102-26570431 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
About half an hour into this film I thought, where is it going? There is a quarrelling couple, a shooting at a school, missing boys, intrigue and comedy too but what is it all about? Well it does work itself out and gets to a moving ending, making interesting points on the way without being precious or preachy. Based upon a stage play that is opened out skilfully into a movie with good dialogue. The director Philip Leacock keeps the film moving along nicely as the story develops. There are good turns from Alastair Sim as the head, Marie Lohr as the grandmother and Colin Gordon as the reporter but even these fine actors are eclipsed by the troupe of young male actors playing the boarding school pupils. They were all excellent. This was a surprisingly good film.
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6/10
Escapade
CinemaSerf14 November 2022
This is quite a fun little gem stolen, as usual, by Alastair Sim as the headmaster "Dr. Skillingworth". This time, though, he is not in his "St. Trinians" guise - here he has to manage three typically mischievous brothers who have a grand design. That plan is not so much anti-education, but aimed at their ever rowing parents: pacifist John Mills and the kindly, but at the end of her tether Yvonne Mitchell whose marriage appears to be teetering on the edge of divorce. It's quite a clever premiss - do parents who send their kids away to school gain or lose from their respective experiences? Mills isn't up to much, sadly - he over-acts the role, but the boys do well as does their pal "L. W. Hartley" (Jeremy Spenser) and Colin Gordon's meddling journalist "Deeson". I hadn't heard of this until yesterday, but I'm glad I watched it.
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5/10
Flight of fancy
malcolmgsw19 August 2019
John Mills plays a pacifist who is always in a shouting match with his wife Yvonne Mitchell.His children decide to fly in a plane to Vienna to deliver a peace petition.All rather nebulous.
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8/10
Exceptional, thought-provoking British (comedy) boarding school drama with a great cast
jacobs-greenwood18 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by Philip Leacock, with a screenplay by Donald Ogden Stewart that was based a play by Roger MacDougall, this exceptional British (comedy) drama exceeds expectations regardless of its rather simple "solution" to a complex political problem. It's one of the better boarding school movies I've seen, with a terrific cast of young actors whose performances are entirely credible.

It's eventually revealed that, frustrated by their parents' lack of progress on an issue of the day, these committed, intelligent youngsters execute their own plan to make a powerful, symbolic gesture of hope that earns their initially disapproving elders' respect. Another strength of the story is the very real (troubled marriage) relationship between John (John Mills) Hampden, a pacifist, and his wife Stella (Yvonne Mitchell), whose three boys are intimately involved in the secret plot. Alastair Sim plays Dr. Skillingworth, the proud headmaster at the boarding school; Colin Gordon plays Deeson, a nosy reporter that learns of the boys' plot. Marie Lohr plays Stella Hampden, the boys' loyal, faithful grandmother.

Ironically, the mastermind behind the plot, appropriately named Icarus, is never seen in the film. His brothers, the oldest Max (Andrew Ray) and youngest Johnny (Peter Asher), go along on the secret mission while L.W. (nicknamed for the "long wave" hair) Daventry (Jeremy Spenser), Paton (Nicholas Edmett), Potter (Christopher Ridley), and Warren (Sean Barrett), among others, "hold down the fort" and otherwise occupy the adults until the Hampden boys can accomplish the task. Colin Freear appears briefly as Dr. Skillington's son Richard, who's kept in the dark by the other boys because it's thought that he's "rat fink" spy who might give away their secret.

Several themes including adult hypocrisy, youthful idealism, and freedom of the press are also contained within what ultimately provides a time capsule of the Cold War era and the quest for peace. In an act which should sound familiar to those who remember when West German student Mathias Rust flew a small plane from Hamburg to Moscow, landing in Red Square near the Kremlin some twenty years ago, the fictional Hampden boys steal a plane in attempt to fly it to a peace conference in Vienna (on the other side of the Swiss Alps) while their classmates execute a well planned misinformation campaign to confuse and befuddle their parents and school's officials.

Mr. & Mrs. Hampden's marital woes, Dr. Skillingworth's admiration for his students' capabilities (and Icarus's genius), and Deeson's prying which leads to unwanted publicity more than satisfactorily fill in the gaps of this thought provoking, intelligent movie.
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4/10
A pacifist by conviction but not by nature.
mark.waltz3 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Trouble builds in the marriage of John Mills and Yvonne Mitchell as issues of their sons Andrew Ray and Peter Asher are revealed by their schooolmaster Alastair Sim which stems from Mills' stance as a pacifist. These issues include Ray using a gun in school and flying a plane, as well as being involved in general disorder. The oh so polite way that Mills and Mitchell deal with these issues starts to grate on the nerves after a while, an indication that their lack of successful discipline has led to these actions. It's indicated in the opening scene that Mills is involved in some sort if political cause that has left his wife and children especially completely neglected, and they have lashed out psychologically in a way that goes against their father's convictions.

While this is well acted and has a few great ideas, the film rambles a bit in the way it somewhat lectures the audience and unfolds the plotline. For some reason, the kids end up in foreign lands in a bit of a convoluted twist as the plot development of the stolen plane takes flight. These and other twists are head holding moments of "what the..." feelings taking over with the bizarre actions of the father making no sense at times let alone what the sobscdo. Marie Love is the most interesting member of the cast as Mills' mother, for some reason having the same first name as her daughter-in-law. This is one of those films where you have to acknowledge that just because it's written on the paper doesn't mean that it's going to be believable. A family drama with political leanings and social morals that just left me cold.
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10/10
The mystery of a boy scheduled for expulsion from school.
clanciai17 June 2018
Philip Leacock was an expert on filming children, and every film of his is a masterpiece, not just because of the children, but they are usually highly sophisticated, intelligent and interesting plots of steadily increasing suspense. Here is a mystery from the beginning which you only get vague hints of by the strange manoeuvres of the boys, so you as the audience will be as befuddled as the headmaster (Alastair Sim) not being able to make head or tail of anything.

John Mills is excellent as usual as the aggressive pacifist, and no wonder his wife cannot stand him. It gradually appears that they have several children and not just the one clandestinely reading comics when he should go to sleep. The topic of the comics will emerge as an interesting clue to the whole story, as the children see more clearly what the grown-ups are up to than they themselves - "Newspapers are comics for grown-ups, and the problem is they take them seriously."

The great architecture of the film is the towering mystery as it eventually climaxes in sensational glory, dwarfing the whole political world to children's play, while the children are the ones who do something about it. It's one of the most wonderful boys' film ever made, and typical is, that once you have seen it you look forward to see it again.
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9/10
Another British Film Masterpiece
johndunbar-580-92054328 June 2018
Only the Brits could make such a sentimental film without making it seem 'corny'. The story is nothing less than hilarious yet reverberates with an optimism and endorsement concerning the idealism of youth. Even without that, the immaculate acting of screen giants like John Mills and Alistair Sym make it nothing less than a film masterpiece. No serious film viewer can afford to miss this one.
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8/10
Intelligent antiwar film with Greek mythology thrown in
adrianovasconcelos1 October 2023
According to Greek mythology, Icarus was the son of master craftsman Daedalus, who became famous for creating a labyrinth no one could get out of, and who built wings glued with wax for him and son Icarus to fly over the walls of a prison in which they had been placed by King Minos of Crete. The myth says the son ignored his father's advice not to fly close to the sun and, as a result, his wings melted and he fell to the ocean and drowned.

ESCAPADE cleverly mixes that tale of antiquity with a group of children putting together an initially unexplained but ultimately rather preposterous plot to prevent marital dissolution - which, the film subliminally suggests, lies at the root of social decay and crime.

Unbeknown to well known writer and pacifist John Hampden (engagingly played by John Mills, who threatens violence despite peddling peace), his sons are trying to save his marriage and their own way of life by hatching the abovementioned covert plot that also finds roots in the Cold War, with Vienna the chosen location for landing an aircraft because the main powers (UK, US, France and USSR) are all present in it.

His drive and speeches for peace notwithstanding, Mills overlooks his beautiful wife's need to be cherished and loved, thereby causing anxiety among his three sons: Icarus, Max and Johnny.

The names tell you that Icarus stands for someone different, a soaring soul - brilliant chemistry student and a "natural" at flying aircraft as a young teenager. Like all types of intelligence and genius, Icarus is more heard of than understood or definable. So Icarus is never seen, which I find a really fit and intelligent choice.

Alastair Sim is the headmaster of the school attended by the three boys, and he comes into the fray because gifted Icarus has built a pistol and fired a ball bearing into the leg of a teacher. Sim steals the show. His broguish and yet hypnotic diction kept me waiting for his next scene. He too learns from the boys he teaches and guides, always humble and with a fine sense of humor.

Yvonne Mitchell also conveys very convincingly her frustration at feeling ignored, and not quite clarifying to hubby Mills the reasons for wanting separation.

A message from the unseen Icarus puts the human condition and his antiwar quest in perspective: if it is acceptable to send 18 year olds to war and by extension to probable death, why not do so at 16 or even earlier (at birth, for instance?)

It is a thought-provoking message at a time when the world had recently come out of war, but it remains applicable in 2023, with Russia launching war to retake Ukraine, and many longterm low impact conflicts raging around the globe.

I admit that I found it trying to follow the thread and that I did not endorse the behavior of the enigmatic youngsters but ultimately these 79 minutes were definitely worth it. 8/10.
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