Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Mar 12, 2010 · The Boulting brothers also take a satirical look at the press – in the way that the press hone in on the ‘warm human story’ of Stanley’s relationship with Cynthia when Cox calls in the newspapers, and in the way that the press jump on the bandwagon, with photographs of the couple and headlines such as ‘Salute Stanley Windrush!’.

  2. Twin brothers, John Edward and Roy Alfred Clarence Boulting, born at Bray, Buckinghamshire, on 21 December 1913, constitute one of those producer-director teams responsible for so much notable British cinema. For most of their careers, one produced while the other directed, but the product remained essentially a 'Boulting Brothers film'.

  3. The twin brothers were born to Arthur Boulting and his wife Rosetta (Rose) née Bennett in Bray, Berkshire, England, on 21 December [2] 1913. John was the elder by half an hour. John was named Joseph Edward John Boulting and Roy was named Alfred Fitzroy Clarence Boulting. Their elder brother Sydney Boulting became an actor and stage producer as ...

  4. Jan 18, 2015 · Peter Sellers and Ian Carmichael star in the Boulting brothers' witty and sharp comedy about Britain's class divide in the late 1950s. Philip French reviews this classic film for The Guardian.

  5. Jun 29, 2012 · (John Boulting, 1947) The Boulting brothers' brilliant, cruel, noir-ish Graham Greene adaptation makes fine use of its locations: it takes place, not only in a jolly pre-war seaside town but in ...

  6. Jul 30, 2013 · Based on a true story, this tale of a German priest interned for defying the regime found great favour with critics and public alike. Refused permission to produce the film before the war for fear of offending Hitler’s government, the Boulting brothers found the authorities more than receptive to the idea by 1940 and the film’s indictment of Nazism and emotional power guaranteed its success.

  7. The Family Way is a 1966 British comedy-drama film produced and directed by John and Roy Boulting, respectively, and starring father and daughter John Mills and Hayley Mills. [3] Based on Bill Naughton 's play All in Good Time (1963), [4] with screenplay by Naughton, the film began life in 1961 as the television play Honeymoon Postponed. [5]