Timbuctoo (film)
Timbuctoo | |
---|---|
Directed by | Walter Summers Arthur B. Woods |
Written by | Walter Summers |
Produced by | Walter Summers |
Starring | Henry Kendall Margot Grahame |
Cinematography | James Wilson |
Music by | Idris Lewis |
Distributed by | British International Pictures |
Release date | April 1933 |
Running time | 72 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Timbuctoo is a 1933 British comedy film, co-directed by Walter Summers and Arthur B. Woods for British International Pictures, and starring Henry Kendall and Margot Grahame. Although BIP had a reputation for churning out films quickly and cheaply, in this case they allocated enough of a budget to finance location filming in Africa.[1]
Plot
The film's slight storyline concerns a man (Kendall) who has a violent quarrel with his family over his fiancée (Grahame). Feeling totally upset, he wants to get away from all the conflict and decides to travel overland to Timbuktu with its legendary reputation as one of the most remote and mysterious places in the world. As soon as his fiancée learns of his departure, she vows to do the same thing and challenges herself to arrive in Timbuktu before him. Much of the film is essentially taken up with travelogue sequences of African natives and habitats.
Cast
- Henry Kendall as Benedict
- Margot Grahame as Elizabeth
- Emily Fitzroy as Aunt Augusta
- Hubert Harben as Uncle George
- Jean Cadell as Wilhelmina
- Victor Stanley as Henry
- Una O'Connor as Myrtle
- Edward Cooper as Steven
Availability
Timbuctoo does not appear ever to have been shown on television in the UK, nor has it been made available commercially; however, unlike many quota quickie productions of the 1930s, the film has survived and is available to view by appointment at any of the Mediatheques run by the British Film Institute.[2] Although the film is billed as a comedy, it contains a sequence of a hippopotamus being hunted and killed which some modern viewers have found extremely unpleasant and distressing.[citation needed]
References
- ^ Walter Summers Wood, Linda. BFI Screen Online. Retrieved 19-10-2010
- ^ Mediatheque films Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine British Film Institute. Retrieved 19-10-2010