Where There's a Will | |
Director: | William Beaudine |
Producer: | Michael Balcon |
Starring: | Will Hay H. F. Maltby Graham Moffatt Norma Varden |
Music: | Bretton Byrd |
Cinematography: | Charles Van Enger |
Editing: | Terence Fisher |
Distributor: | Gainsborough Pictures |
Runtime: | 80 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Where There's a Will is a 1936 British comedy film directed by William Beaudine and starring Will Hay, Graham Moffatt and Norma Varden. It features an incompetent solicitor who unwittingly becomes party to a bank robbery.
The film marked the first appearance of Graham Moffatt in a Will Hay film. Moffatt acted as a straight man to Hay, along with Moore Marriott, beginning in the film Windbag the Sailor.
Will Hay plays the penniless, bungling solicitor Benjamin Stubbins, who arrives at his office to find his insolent office boy (Graham Moffatt) with his feet up on the desk, reading a wild west magazine, that Hay confiscates so that he can read it later.
Stubbins later takes a job from a group of Americans who claim they want him to track down some ancestors of theirs in Scotland. In reality, however, they want to use his office so they can rob a safe in the room immediately below his office. Stubbins takes the job (which is designed to keep him out of the office).
In the end Stubbins realises his mistake and at a Christmas Eve fancy dress party he informs a group of carol singing policeman about the Americans’ nefarious activities.
It was an early film from producer Ted Black who would make many of Hay's classic films.[1]