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Last Holiday
 
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Last Holiday

Alec Guinness , Beatrice Campbell , Henry Cass    VHS Tape
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Alec Guinness delivers a masterful, not-to-be-missed performance in a brilliant screenplay by J. B. Priestley that combines irony, humor, and tenderness. Shy George Bird (Guinness) learns his days are numbered, so he decides to take a "last holiday." He withdraws his life savings and dashes off to a fashionable seaside resort, where he is taken for a man of substance and becomes a favorite with his newfound aristocratic friends.

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5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars A dark, superior British comedy, Jan 28 2003
By 
DJ Joe Sixpack (...in Middle America) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Last Holiday (VHS Tape)
A young Alec Guinness stars in this clever story of a mild-mannered, average sort of fellow who is told by his doctor that he has only days, perhaps weeks left to life. On medical advice, Guinness quits his job, liquidates his life savings, and goes off to a posh country resort on one last, luxuriously bittersweet holiday. Naturally, once he's given up all hope, everything in his life starts coming up roses: mistaken as a man of means by the hotel's inquisitive clientele, Guinness finds all sorts of new creative, financial and romantic opportunities arising out of nowhere. J. B. Priestley's script is in part a wry, piercing comment on Great Britain's class-bound society, where initiative and imagination were stifled by prejudice and regimentation... Only because he feels he has nothing left to lose does Guinness's George Bird work up the nerve to give business tycoons and Lords of Parliament a piece of his mind; once he does they recognize him as a man of great standing. Politics aside, though, this is also a very entertaining and somewhat sad little comedy, with an twist ending that happy, happy Hollywood wouldnt touch with a ten-foot pole. Recommended.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.3 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)

39 of 39 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Ain't What You Do (It's the Way That You Do It), July 11 2001
By Kathy Fennessy - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Last Holiday (VHS Tape)
Alec Guinness is in top form in this dark comedy about an unexceptional, practically invisible salaryman who decides to take one last vacation upon learning that he only has a short time to live. The seemingly innocuous, inauspicious George Bird is exactly the kind of role that Sir Alec was born to play. Bird goes through some big changes throughout this seemingly slight entertainment, but Guinness makes every one of them believable and consistently goes for more than the easy laugh.

Be forewarned that the film does not end on a happy note. I was expecting to be entertained--and I was--but I was surprised at how moved I was by the ending (which is both sudden and ironic). Although Last Holiday isn't as well known as many of Guinness' Ealing-era comedies (most notably 1948's Kind Hearts and Coronets), it should be. It really isn't a slight entertainment at all. On the contrary, it's more substantial than most, dealing as successfully as it does with the notion that it isn't how long you live but how well, and features one of this great actor's finest, most indelible performances. The colorful supporting cast (including the ubiquitous Wildrid Hyde-White and Bernard Lee of James Bond's "M" fame) is with him all the way. A keeper.

17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A dark, superior British comedy, Jan 27 2003
By DJ Joe Sixpack - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Last Holiday (VHS Tape)
A young Alec Guinness stars in this clever story of a mild-mannered, average sort of fellow who is told by his doctor that he has only days, perhaps weeks left to life. On medical advice, Guinness quits his job, liquidates his life savings, and goes off to a posh country resort on one last, luxuriously bittersweet holiday. Naturally, once he's given up all hope, everything in his life starts coming up roses: mistaken as a man of means by the hotel's inquisitive clientele, Guinness finds all sorts of new creative, financial and romantic opportunities arising out of nowhere. J. B. Priestley's script is in part a wry, piercing comment on Great Britain's class-bound society, where initiative and imagination were stifled by prejudice and regimentation... Only because he feels he has nothing left to lose does Guinness's George Bird work up the nerve to give business tycoons and Lords of Parliament a piece of his mind; once he does they recognize him as a man of great standing. Politics aside, though, this is also a very entertaining and somewhat sad little comedy, with an twist ending that happy, happy Hollywood wouldnt touch with a ten-foot pole. Recommended.

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Low-key, touching masterpiece, Feb 2 2002
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
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This review is from: Last Holiday (VHS Tape)
George Bird is an unimportant cog in the merchant machine when he learns that he has Lampington's Disease--invariably fatal. Through luck--meeting a beneficent salesman looking for the perfect man for an estate-sale bounty--and fatalism--losing any inhibition against speaking his true thoughts--the down-to-earth, plain-spoken words of Bird strike a spark in a broad range of characters at a posh resort and change the course of more than a few lives. Guinness is real, honest, and touching in his best role ever, in my mind. If the ending is sentimental and cutting at the same time, well, good for these old black-and-white movies. Bird is a prince among men in his triumph of substance over style and appearance.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 15 reviews  4.3 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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