Johnny Frenchman (1945) Poster

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7/10
Vive la difference entre les Francais et les Anglais
howardmorley29 March 2010
I voted this film a very creditable 7/10 and was thoroughly entertained and amused by the good hearted and competing French vs English culture as it related to international fishing rights.The star of this film for me was Francoise Rosay who played a redoubtable Breton widow who has a son Yan, (played by that stalwart of British post war films which required a romantic French hero - Paul Dupuis).Francoise was born in 1891 and appeared in many French & English films and was perfectly cast as Lanec.She has some amusing battles with feisty Nat Pomeroy (Tom Walls) who is the local harbour master (and life boat volunteer) of a Cornish fishing town who has to keep an eye out for poaching French fishermen inside the English 3 mile fishing limit off the coast.

Nat, (a presumed widower), has an attractive daughter, Sue Pomeroy, played by the equally attractive Patricia Roc.Tom and Patricia had previously appeared together in "Love Story" (1944) with Margaret Lockwood and Stewart Granger which was also set in Cornwall.In the latter film Tom had an avuncular relationship with Patricia so these two actors very easily relaxed into their part of father and daughter in "Johnny Frenchman".Although Sue has been friends since childhood with Bob Tremayne (Ralph Michael) she is undecided whether she wants to marry him despite Bob's urging.

The action of "Johnny Frenchman" opens in March 1939 and leads up to June 1940.There is a scene in a Breton port where the French play host to "les Rosbifs" together with a wrestling match amongst the Cornish and Gallic fishermen where Yan breaks a bone whilst wrestling Bob, his love rival.Of course Sue has fallen for Yan and after a talk between Yan & Bob, (who has by now been called up into the navy), this is OK with Bob.All good natured stuff and I wondered whether Lanec and Nat would marry also as they seemed a perfect foil for each other.
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7/10
Early Ealing Comedy
JamesHitchcock14 March 2016
"Johnny Frenchman" is an early Ealing Comedy, produced by Michael Balcon with a screenplay by T.E.B. Clarke. It is relatively little-known when compared to films like "Kind Hearts and Coronets" or "The Ladykillers", but does, however, share one characteristic with three other well-known Ealing films, "Whisky Galore", "Passport to Pimlico" and "The Titfield Thunderbolt". All four are set in a small, tightly-knit community, whether that be a Hebridean island, a working-class London neighbourhood, a rural English village or, as here, a small fishing port in Cornwall.

The story opens in March 1939. The fishermen of the port of Trevannick have a long-standing rivalry with their French counterparts from Brittany, the main cause of which is the French habit of fishing illegally in British territorial waters. Matters are not helped when, during a supposed goodwill visit by some of the Cornish men to Brittany, a French fisherman breaks a leg in a wrestling match. Another important plot strand deals with the love-triangle between Sue Pomeroy, daughter of the Cornish harbour-master, her long-term sweetheart Bob and Yann, a handsome young Breton fisherman. This situation does not improve feelings between the two communities, especially as Yann's mother Florrie, who owns her own boat, is one of the most flagrant breachers of the anti-poaching laws, laws which it falls to Sue's father Nat to enforce. ("Florrie", incidentally, does not seem a very French name. Possibly her true name is something else and "Florrie" a nickname bestowed by her English rivals).

The film was made in 1945, at the end of the war, and like most British films from this period is essentially propaganda. The latter part of the film takes place after the war has broken out, when the two communities realise that they must put aside their differences and make common cause against their mutual enemy, something which becomes all the more important after France is occupied by the Nazis in 1940. Not all wartime propaganda films, however, were deadly serious, and the tone here remains essentially comic.

Like "The Titfield Thunderbolt", but unlike some of the other Ealing comedies, "Johnny Frenchman" was largely shot on location. There is some striking black-and-white photography of the Cornish coastline, with Mevagissey standing in for the fictional Trevannick. There are some amusing contributions from Tom Walls as the blustering Nat and Françoise Rosay as the sharp-tongued Florrie. This is not a film in the same class as the likes of "Kind Hearts and Coronets" or "Passport to Pimlico"; it lacks the element of satire at the expense of the authorities, something for which the later peacetime Ealings were to become noted. Seventy years on, however, it holds up better than a lot of wartime propaganda movies. 7/10
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6/10
A Rosay Between Two Thorns
writers_reign26 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
If you can get past the accents, the sound and the simplistic, formulaic plot, this is a pleasant enough time capsule albeit one with an outstanding lead performance from Francoise Rosay that is so far superior to the others that it unbalances the film. All the Cornish villagers speak with markedly English accents none more so than love interest Patricia Roc who is as close to cut-glass as makes no difference. The sound is 'clean' even when the background is turbulent and has that slightly 'hollow' quality that betrays its studio origin and there has been no attempt to lay an FX track that would fool a three-year old. Tibby Clarke clearly phoned his screenplay in from a corner table in the Savoy Silver Grill but, hey, this was 1945 and that post-war hysteria would make anything acceptable. See it for Rosay.
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Very decent old movie that is worth watching
richard.fuller111 June 2001
Wonderful old film about French and English in Cornwall, living side-by-side and arguing over fishing rights. Light-hearted moments are included, such as an Englishman telling a derogatory joke about French and none of the French laugh at it, and he hedges and haws his way on through his speech, a neighborly sporting event and a concert cancelled because the performers fought during rehearsal. The movie may seem to focus on the young Frenchman and the English lass and their romance, but the real stars are his French mother and her English father. Fran Rosay as the French mother especially compels the movie right up until the end. There are no Hollywood stars in here to steal the show, not even a recognizeable face or two. What a treat. If it ever comes on again, make plans to set a program to record it and watch it later. I had this and Buster Crabbe's Tarzan on tape at the same time, and, thinking I would watch the best one last, I watched Johnny Frenchman first. Turns out, I should have watched Buster Crabbe first! Johnny Frenchman was a delight.
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5/10
Long forgotten Ealing film
malcolmgsw26 February 2016
This is a curiously timed Ealing film.It was released in the UK in October 1945.It's main theme seems to be promoting Anglo French entente.therefore one would think that it would have been a better film for a year earlier.There is no doubt that Francois Rosay acts everyone else off the screen,even Tom Walls who overcast wildly in most of his films and was bad at taking direction.As has been mentioned Patricia Fox is totally out of place with her RADA accent.I found this film rather overlong at 100 minutes.I last saw this at the NFT about 20 years ago,and have only gotten around to viewing the DVD 7 years after buying it.So not particularly memorable.
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9/10
A window into another era
HillstreetBunz21 May 2016
Other reviewers have detailed the plot of this marvellous little film, I watched it this morning where it was shown on UK television on the London Live channel (who have lately started to schedule a lot of little seen British films from the 40s and 50s). Story review aside, the film is a window on lost ways of life, lost communities, cultures, and unlike an historical pic, these worlds were extant as the film was made (though at the very end of their time). A curious insight into pre war local/international rivalries in fishing communities that straddled the channel for 100s of years. The War changes everything in the picture, as in life it seems to have brought to an end centuries of tradition (such as wearing local costume for the Brettoniers). I cannot leave off without saying how wonderful Francoise Rosy is. She brings a life to the picture that makes it fresh decades after it might have been forgotten. truly interesting and entertaining.
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8/10
Froggy Went a Courtin.'
morrison-dylan-fan2 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Happily surprised to see her appear in The Halfway House (1944-also reviewed) after having first seen her in the stunning Le Grand Jeu (1934-also reviewed),I was thrilled to find on Talking Pictures free online catch-up service, an Ealing movie that I've not heard of before, starring Francoise Rosay, which led to me going to meet Johnny.

View on the film:

Listening in on the radio to the fall of France taking place, the screenplay by Ealing regular T. E. B. Clarke travels to Cornwall for a culture clash Comedy, which places an emphasis on the shared bonds the locals gradually find they have with the French shipping crew, which includes being on the Allies side of WWII.

Greeting the French crew with the locals calling them "Froggy" whenever they get the chance, Clarke supplies the crew and the locals with hilarious dialogue in the hard shoulder of disagreement they give each other, which Clarke gradually grinds down, as both sides discover a level of respect for the other.

Filmed on location in the Cornish fishing port of Mevagissey , director Charles Frend & Michael Powell's The Phantom Light (1935-also reviewed) cinematographer Roy Kellino serve up a slice of Ealing class with a wonderful Comedy atmosphere of winding dolly and panning shots bringing a real sense of how tight-knitted the locals are, (a recurring theme in films from Ealing studios) and how brisk the French crew are, in throwing any insult they receive, right back at the locals.

Reuniting from The Halfway House the year before, Francoise Rosay and Tom Walls both give fantastic performances as Lanec and Nat, with the duo visible enjoying wrapping one-liners round each other, as they robustly argue like an old married couple, in the culture clash of Johnny and the Frenchman.
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