Tamahine is a 1963 British comedy film directed by Philip Leacock and starring Nancy Kwan, Dennis Price and John Fraser.[1] It was written by Denis Cannan.
Tamahine | |
---|---|
Directed by | Philip Leacock |
Written by | Denis Cannan |
Produced by | John Bryan |
Starring | Nancy Kwan John Fraser Dennis Price |
Cinematography | Geoffrey Unsworth |
Edited by | Peter Tanner |
Music by | Malcolm Arnold |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner-Pathé Distributors (UK) Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (U.S.) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
A Polynesian woman who believes she can change the culture of Hallow School, a British boys' boarding school.
Plot
editWhen her father dies, orphan teenager Tamahine is sent from her South Pacific island home to live with Charles Poole, her father's cousin and the headmaster of Hallow, a prestigious all-male school in England. Richard, Charles' son and school student, falls in love with her, but she considers him tabu because of the closeness of their family relationship. Another suitor is the art master, Clove, after he breaks up with Charles' daughter Diana.
Meanwhile, Tamahine has trouble adjusting to the puzzling social mores of her new home, exasperating Charles, but making him start to question his own joyless existence. In the end, Richard convinces Tamahine that their connection is distant enough that marrying him does not violate English tabus, while Clove resigns to go paint in a foreign land, accompanied by Diana. The film leaps ahead several years, showing a scruffily bearded Charles enjoying life on Tamahine's island, while Richard takes his place as headmaster, watched by Tamahine and their children.
Theme
editA French Mistress, three years earlier (1960), used the same theme of a visiting foreign teacher at a British school causing a cultural clash.
Cast
edit- Nancy Kwan as Tamahine
- John Fraser as Richard Poole
- Dennis Price as Charles Poole
- Coral Browne as Mme. Becque
- Dick Bentley as storekeeper
- Derek Nimmo as Clove
- Justine Lord as Diana
- James Fox as Oliver
- Michael Gough as Cartwright
- Allan Cuthbertson as housemaster
- Howard Marion-Crawford as housemaster
- William Mervyn as Lord Birchester
- Robin Stewart as fiend
- Bee Duffell as nun
Production
editThe story was filmed at Wellington College in county Berkshire.[citation needed]
Release
editThe film had its World Premiere on 18 July 1963 at the Empire, Leicester Square in London's West End.[2]
Reception
editThe Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Nancy Kwan bustles on a single note of monotonous provocation through this thin, depressingly familiar and weakly scripted story, whose triple peaks of invention involve Tamahine displaying herself before the school in her underwear, placing a chamber-pot on a steeple, and winning most of the events in the school sports. Both characters and acting are inevitably conventional, and only Dennis Price manages to inject a little wit and style. The colour and settings, however, are rather attractive, and lend the whole thing a certain faint, nostalgic charm (sports day, tea on the lawn, punting on the river, etc., etc.)."[3]
Variety wrote: "Whether Tamahine is intended as a sharp, sophisticated sex comedy or a satirical joshing of the British public school system (which is as near as possible to the U.S. high school regime) is a perplexing thought. But it turns out to be an uneasy blend of both and does not quite come off."[4]
Home releases
editThe film was released as a Region 2 Dvd in the UK.[5]
References
edit- ^ "Tamahine". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
- ^ The Times, 18 July 1963, Page 2
- ^ "Tamahine". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 30 (348): 133. 1 January 1963 – via ProQuest.
- ^ "Tamahine". Variety. 231 (11): 6. 7 August 1963 – via ProQuest.
- ^ https://www.amazon.co.uk/Tamahine-DVD-Nancy-Kwan/dp/B00TFANQG6
External links
edit