Thunder in the City | |
Director: | Marion Gering |
Producer: | Alexander Esway (producer) Richard Vernon (assistant producer) |
Starring: | See below |
Music: | Miklós Rózsa |
Cinematography: | Alfred Gilks |
Editing: | Arthur Hilton |
Studio: | Atlantic Film Company |
Distributor: | United Artists (UK) Columbia Pictures (US) |
Runtime: | 87 minutes (US) 88 minutes (UK) |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Gross: | $300,000[1] |
Thunder in the City is a 1937 British drama film directed by Marion Gering and starring Edward G. Robinson, Luli Deste, Nigel Bruce and Ralph Richardson.[2]
An American salesman with radically successful methods visits England ostensibly to learn a more dignified manner of salesmanship. He is mistaken for a millionaire by a cash-poor family of noble ancestry with a stately home to sell which he can't afford to buy. But by working with them instead he finds romance and equal success in business with his old marketing techniques.
Main dramatic Score by Miklos Rozsa.
Writing for The Spectator in 1937, Graham Greene gave the film a poor review, labeling it "worst English film of the quarter". Greene criticized the special effects and its "complete ignorance - in spite of its national studio - of English life and behaviour". Conceding that the film is, after all, a fantasy, Greene nonetheless complains that "even a fantasy needs some relation to life".[3]