London Belongs to Me

London Belongs to Me

1948107 min
7.0/10
Drama

Plot Summary

Classic British drama about the residents of a large terrace house in London between Christmas 1938 and September 1939. Percy Boon lives with his mother in a shared rented house with an assortment of characters in central London. Although well intentioned, he becomes mixed up with gangsters and murder. The story focuses on the effects this has on Percy and the other residents.

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👥Cast (38)

Richard Attenborough

Richard Attenborough

Percy Boon

Alastair Sim

Alastair Sim

Mr. Squales

Fay Compton

Fay Compton

Mrs. Josser

No Image

Stephen Murray

Uncle Henry

Wylie Watson

Wylie Watson

Mr. Josser

Susan Shaw

Susan Shaw

Doris Josser

Hugh Griffith

Hugh Griffith

Headlam Fynne

Joyce Carey

Joyce Carey

Mrs Vizzard

No Image

Ivy St. Helier

Connie Coke

Andrew Crawford

Andrew Crawford

Bill

Eleanor Summerfield

Eleanor Summerfield

The Blonde

Jack McNaughton

Jack McNaughton

Jimmy

🎬Crew

Director

Sidney Gilliat

Writers

J.B. Williams, Sidney Gilliat

Producers

Frank Launder, J. Arthur Rank, Sidney Gilliat

🖼️Gallery (1 images)

London Belongs to Me backdrop 1

🏷️Keywords

gangstersuspicion of murder1930s

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

7/9/2022

Richard Attenborough leads a somewhat disjointed cast in this rather lengthy drama. He is "Percy", a rather impressionable young man who lives with his beloved mother (Gladys Henson) in a boarding house amidst a host of interesting lodgers. Sadly for him, he is soon mixed up with the wrong sort - some small time hoodlums - and becomes a murder suspect. I suppose the house to be a metaphor for the broader United Kingdom following the end of WWII - a collection of the aspirational, the optimistic, and the resigned - but there are too many characters for us to keep tabs on, and though the efforts from Alastair Sim as the Dickensianly titled "Mr. Squales"; Stephen Murray, the lovely Fay Compton ("Mrs. Josser") and a superb series of scenes, rather late in the day, from Hugh Griffith all stand up fine on their own, the film as a combination piece is pretty much all over the place. Attenborough tries hard, and at times he does fire on all cylinders, but he isn't quite good enough to pull all the strands together, nor is the Sidney Gilliat direction/screenplay, so it can come across as just a little too much of an episodic compendium of loosely connected stories rather than a cohesive feature. Still, it does provide us with quite an interesting observation of post war London and of a way of communal life now (mercifully) long gone for most of us.

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