Small Hotel | |
Director: | David MacDonald |
Producer: | Robert Hall |
Based On: | the play Small Hotel by Rex Frost |
Starring: | Gordon Harker Marie Lohr Janet Munro |
Music: | Louis Levy |
Cinematography: | Norman Warwick |
Editing: | Seymour Logie |
Studio: | A Welwyn Films Ltd. Production |
Distributor: | Associated British-Pathé (UK) |
Runtime: | 58 min[1] |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Small Hotel is a 1957 British 'B' comedy film directed by David MacDonald and starring Gordon Harker, Marie Lohr, John Loder, and Janet Munro.[2] It was written by Wilfred Eades based on the 1955 play of the same name by Rex Frost.[3]
Albert, a crafty old waiter in a country hotel known as The Jolly Fiddler, teaches the younger staff how to maximise their tips and get rid of surplus food in the kitchen.
He suddenly finds he must work new tricks on management after being told he is too old for the job and will be replaced by a hard-nosed young waitress, named Miss Mallet.
TV Guide gave the film two out of five stars and called it an "Average comedy."[4]
In the Radio Times, David McGillivray rated the film two out of five stars, calling it "no great shakes as comedy, but interesting as a vehicle built around a much-loved British star at the end of his career."[5]
Britmovie noted, "Twenty years after appearing on stage in this lively Rex Frost play, in his penultimate film Gordon Harker reprises the role of a belligerent hotel waiter having to use all his wit and cunning to save his job. This low-budget film features Harker in typically jovial form, dominating comic proceedings with typical polished expertise, and with a less assured cast this thin comedy wouldn’t be worthwhile. There are early roles for Billie Whitelaw and Janet Munro, and the doughty Irene Handl is cast as the hotel’s spirited cook."[6]
It was one of 15 films selected by Steve Chibnall and Brian McFarlane in The British 'B' Film, as among the most meritorious of the B films made in Britain between World War II and 1970. They especially praised the performances of Lohr, Handl and Harker.[7]