Berkeley Square
Berkeley Square

Berkeley Square (1933)

5.7 ? Sep 15, 1933 1h 24m

Overview

A young American man is transported back to London in the time shortly after the American Revolution and meets his ancestors.

Genres

Fantasy Romance

Release Date

September 15, 1933

Rating

5.7 /10

Runtime

1h 24m

Leslie Howard

Leslie Howard

Peter Standish

Heather Angel

Heather Angel

Helen Pettigrew

Valerie Taylor

Valerie Taylor

Kate Pettigrew

Irene Browne

Irene Browne

Lady Ann Pettigrew

Beryl Mercer

Beryl Mercer

Mrs. Barwick

Colin Keith-Johnston

Colin Keith-Johnston

Tom Pettigrew

Alan Mowbray

Alan Mowbray

Major Clinton

Juliette Compton

Juliette Compton

Duchess of Devonshire

Betty Lawford

Betty Lawford

Marjorie Frant

Ferdinand Gottschalk

Ferdinand Gottschalk

Mr. Throstle

Samuel S. Hinds

Samuel S. Hinds

The American Ambassador

Olaf Hytten

Olaf Hytten

Sir Joshua Reynolds

David Torrence

David Torrence

Lord Stanley

Lionel Belmore

Lionel Belmore

Innkeeper (uncredited)

Tom Ricketts

Tom Ricketts

Town Crier (uncredited)

Hylda Tyson

Maid (uncredited)

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

6.0/10

Jun 13, 2022

I found Oscar-nominated Leslie Howard just a little too earnest in this tale of an American scientist "Peter Standish" who inherits a London house from a distance cousin. Upon arrival, he starts to feel a curious bond with the place and as he discovers more about the house, his ancestry and a diary detailing much of the 1780s London society in which it's writer lived, he becomes - somewhat inexplicably - convinced that he is going to travel back through time. Low and behold on the exact date and time expected, he walks into an 18th century home where he meets his soon to be fiancée "Kate" (Valerie Taylor) and her beautiful younger sister "Helen" (Heather Angel). He is an instant hit in society circles but struggles to contain his knowledge of the future and after a particularly uncomfortable conversation with the Duchess of Devonshire (Juliette Compton) finds himself in immediate need to get back to his own timeline. He confides his predicament to his new love "Helen" and his dilemmas begin to mount up... It's an intriguing concept, and there is plenty of subliminal social comment too. "Standish" is abhorred by the depravity, poverty and cruelty he sees when first in London - but it has also got quite a bit of a rather ungainly American superiority complex about it, too - the "Land of the Free" stuff as though 1780s Britain was some sort of demagogue's paradise. Howard was in the original 1928 stage play, so knows the part backwards and there are some nice cameos from Alan Mowbray and Beryl Mercer to help nudge it along but it runs too much to gloopy melodrama, and though not a bad film, I just think it couldn't quite decide what it wanted to be, or for whom, and I found it's romanticised moralising a bit annoying. Stylish though, looks good.

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