Drama / Conspiracy / Comedy
1951 / 85 minutes
RATING: 8/10
Planned obsolescence – it’s why you have to replace your 5-year-old laptop even though it’s working fine, but it won’t run any of today’s programs.
That’s also what this 75-year-old film is all about. Oscar-winner Alec Guinness plays Sydney Stratton, a chemist who has invented something absolutely brilliant – a fabric that never wears out and never needs cleaning. But his textiles boss isn’t as happy about this innovation as you might expect. In fact the whole textiles industry seem to be set on putting an end to Sydney because if his invention gets out, no one will need to buy clothes more than once!
This is a spoof of the conspiracy genre – a quirky comedy that’s likely more relevant today than it was way back when. There’s also a dash of romance with Daphine, the daughter of Sydney’s boss, taking a compassionate interest in the embattled inventor.
Cautions
While watching this with my kids, the one point I ended up explaining is a scene in which Daphine seems to be trying to seduce Sydney for money. She isn’t. Her (at this point it would be fair to say former) fiancé has just revealed himself as someone more motivated by money than principle. So, yes, Daphine is trying to seduce Sydney, but not for money. She’s trying to see whether he, too, is the sort of man who will abandon his principles in the face of temptation. And, as she explains to him afterwards, if he’d succumbed, “I would have strangled you.”
Conclusion
I hadn’t thought of this one as a possibility for my kids, and started watching it on my own. But like a lot of the black and white classics I’ve reviewed, there was something here that grabbed my kids’ attention, and one by one they joined me. It was only afterwards that I noticed other reviewers were pitching this as a family-friendly classic.
But I think if I’d pitched it to my girls, they wouldn’t have been all that enthused. So, maybe start this one playing, and just see who joins you.