Store

Adelphi Collection Volume 3: The Crowded Day/Song of Paris

A vintage double bill of drama and comedy from British director John Guillermin - The Crowded Day (1954) and Song of Paris (1952). The Crowded Day (1954) is a bittersweet comedy-drama that sees five young women's lives intertwine in a tale of shop-floor intrigue. Set against the busy backdrop of a department store in postwar London, and with interiors shot at Bourne & Hollingsworth on Oxford Street adding authenticity, this engaging, tightly-written ensemble piece is bustling with familiar faces from the golden era of British cinema, including John Gregson, Joan Rice, Thora Hird, Vera Day, Edward Chapman, Rachel Roberts, Dora Bryan, Dandy Nicholls, Prunella Scales, Sid James and Richard Wattis. A high-quality comedy-drama aimed squarely at the women's market, and billed as 'a story of shop girls and their men'. The Crowded Day was perhaps the most ambitious production of the family-run Adelphi film company. Still resonant today, it offers both top-drawer entertainment and a fascinating insight into women's lives, experiences and aspirations - from fashions to family - in the post-war period. Song of Paris (1952) is a charming romantic comedy which sees an archetypal Englishman - suavely played by Dennis Price - return from a jaunt abroad to face a dastardly foreign Count in a duel for the hand of a beautiful mademoiselle.

£10.99
Buy
 

Related Products

When Comedy Was King

When Comedy Was King
£5.49

Take a fun filled trip back to a bygone era with the greatest silent comedians of all time. Charlie Chaplin Buster Keaton Laurel & Hardy Ben Turpin and Snub Pollard were just a few of the comedic geniuses who spread laughter and happiness to millions accross the world.Without having to speak a single word their crazy antics had us in stitches. Theirs was a world of zany situations uproarious sight-gags fast-paced car chases and elaborately staged pranks. Director Robert Youngson chose from hundreds of hours of vintage film clips to bring you the funniest scenes from these comedy greats.

Young at Heart (Douglas, 1954)

Young at Heart (Douglas, 1954)
£5.99

Young at Heart sees Frank Sinatra play Barney Sloan - a cynical, down-on-his-luck musician, who reluctantly agrees to help his composer friend Alex Burke (Gig Young) with a new comedy he is working on. However, Barney gains a new perspective on life and love when he meets Alex's irrepressibly perky fiancee, Laurie (Doris Day) - and promptly falls in love with her! A charming, lively musical remake of the 1938 film 'Four Daughters', with Sinatra offering definitively gloomy renditions of 'Someone to Watch Over Me' and 'One More for My Baby' before Day manages to put a smile on his face. Score by Cole Porter and George & Ira Gershwin.

Sidewalks of New York

Sidewalks of New York
£5.99

Urban romantic comedy - and homage to the films of Woody Allen - directed by Edward Burns. Shot in mock-documentary style, the film follows a day in the lives of six New Yorkers, Tommy (Edward Burns), Maria (Rosario Dawson), Ben (David Krumholtz), Ashley (Brittany Murphy), Griffin (Stanley Tucci) and Annie (Heather Graham) as they fall in and out of their various inter-related relationships on the streets of the Big Apple.