The British film BANK HOLIDAY, also known in the United States as THREE ON A WEEKEND, is an interesting movie which mixes melodrama, romance, and observations of various characters vacationing at a seaside resort.
Catharine (Margaret Lockwood), a nurse, has planned to go away for a long holiday weekend at the beach with her boyfriend Geoffrey (Hugh Williams). Catharine's feelings for her beau seem tepid, at best, and while on holiday she is also haunted by thoughts of a young man named Stephen (John Lodge), who lost his wife in childbirth just before Catharine left for the weekend.
The film juxtaposes Catharine and Geoffrey's awkward weekend with Stephen walking the streets of London remembering his lost love. Catharine ultimately must decide whether to go ahead and share a hotel room with Geoffrey (not an issue one would expect in a U.S. film of this era) or follow her instincts and return to London to help Stephen.
The above scenes are interspersed with what was apparently meant to be comic relief, profiling a lower-class family with a pub-crawling father and ill-mannered urchins, as well as a couple of lovelorn ladies who are in town for a "Miss England" beauty contest. (As a side note, I suspect the name of the family's youngest child, Marina, was inspired by the popular Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent, who married into the British royal family in 1934.) There are a few nice moments in these sequences, particularly near the end of the film, but they go on a bit long; Margaret Lockwood's character is the heart of the film.
I enjoyed the depiction of everyday British life, including the crowds on the escalators in the train station, the Loew's movie theater showing SILLY SYMPHONIES, and Stephen passing by landmarks such as Admiralty Arch. And I'm curious to know -- did holiday-ers at crowded resorts in that era really sleep on the beach, or was that dreamed up for the movie?
John Lodge, who played Stephen, was an American actor whose credits included playing John Brooke in the Katharine Hepburn version of LITTLE WOMEN. After WWII he left films for politics, becoming governor of Connecticut and then an ambassador in the Eisenhower, Nixon, and Reagan administrations.
Linden Travers (from THE LADY VANISHES) plays Stephen's wife. The cast also includes Felix Aylmer, Rene Ray, and Merle Tottenham. Michael Rennie is credited as being a guardsman -- I need to rewind and take another look!
This movie was shot in black and white. It runs 86 minutes.
BANK HOLIDAY is one of several films in which Margaret Lockwood was directed by Carol Reed. Their other notable titles included THE STARS LOOK DOWN (1940), with Lockwood's costar from THE LADY VANISHES (1938), Michael Redgrave; and NIGHT TRAIN TO MUNICH (1940) with Rex Harrison.
BANK HOLIDAY is not available on DVD or VHS in the United States. It's available in the UK on Region 2 DVD as part of the Margaret Lockwood Collection.
This film was recently shown on Turner Classic Movies so it may turn up there again in the future.
All in all, BANK HOLIDAY is a pleasant film which is worth the investment of time.
Tonight's Movie: Bank Holiday (1938)
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