THE TITFIELD THUNDERBOLT: Blu-ray (Ealing Studios, 1953) Film Movement
English farce has a comedic styling all its own – prone, either to
discrete understatement (ergo, finding the joy and laughter to be had from life’s
organic gestation within a scene) or wild-exaggeration (broad-painted
caricature, run haplessly amok). We get a little of each in Charles Crichton’s The
Titfield Thunderbolt (1953); a bon vivant’s master class in how to keep all
these variables of the classic screwball in play, yet with a uniquely ‘English’
tone that sets it apart from the American derivative. At the heart of The
Titfield Thunderbolt is a tale of a small middle-class community pooling
its resources to achieve an impossible dream – that of a stay against the march
of time and forced obsolescence in the name of progress – not always as ‘progressive’
as it may at first appear. Indeed, the
picture was loosely inspired by L.T.C. Rolt’s Railway Adventure (published
in 1952) – Rolt, the honorary manager of a group of volunteers who successfully
ran their own indie railroad for two years. Ealing Studios, known then for its
serious dramas, with an occasional George Formby comedy to emerge, would
officially enter its golden age as the purveyors of English farce with The
Titfield Thunderbolt – one of three handsomely crafted offerings made in
the same year.
T.E.B. Clarke’s screenplay drew heavily on Rolt’s real-life restoration
of the Talyllyn narrow-gauge railway in Wales.
Amalgamating the names of two actual villages – Limpsfield and Titsey,
the latter very near Clarke’s homestead in Oxted, in addition to kick-starting
Ealing’s gilded age of comedy, The Titfield Thunderbolt would also mark the
studio’s first to be shot in 3-strip Technicolor. The picture is immeasurably blessed by Ealing’s
formidable roster of familiar faces; top-billed Stanley Holloway, as Walter
Valentine, the boozy and vivacious man of means who views his investment in Titfield’s
foundering rail system as a grand lark on which he may daily indulge his predilection
for strong drink inside its club car; George Relph, absolutely charming as the nervous,
and even more readily befuddled Vicar of Titfield, Sam Weech; Naughton Wayne,
as George Blakeworth, the perennially stuffed shirt with his heart in the right
place; John Gregson, level-headed, impassioned as Squire Gordon Chesterford, and finally, Hugh Griffith, the perpetually inebriated
conductor, Dan Taylor.
The Titfield Thunderbolt was shot – mostly - near Bath, Somerset, on the
shuddered Camerton branch of the Bristol and North Somerset Railway, reopened
for filming. Titfield’s railway station was actually located in Monkton Combe,
while the village itself was nearer Freshford, with additional scenes lensed at
the disused Dunkerton Colliery. Interestingly, the actual locomotive depicted
in the movie was an amalgam of several different actual engines, props and
models. For the scene where an intoxicated Walter and Dan steal a ‘replacement
locomotive’ after Titfield’s engine is unceremoniously derailed by Alec Pearce’s
(Ewan Roberts) competing bus-line interests, art director, C.P. Norman
effectively created a parade-like float by mounted the hollow chassis of an
actual locomotive to the undercarriage of a two-ton Bedford truck, driven with
rubber padding strapped to its weighty iron wheels, to make it appear as though
the engine was actually being driven through the streets of Woodstock,
Oxfordshire on bare concrete. The sequence depicting the actual derailment of
the first No. 1401, careening off the dismantled tracks into a steep valley,
was achieved with skillful miniatures and a few full-scale inserts of various
parts of the locomotive coming loose and veering off on their own. The
Thunderbolt was an actual antique, the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Lion,
built in 1838 and thus, at the time of the making of this movie, 114-years-old.
Repainted in gaudy red and green livery to show off Technicolor to its best advantage,
the Lion sustained minor damage when it was gingerly rammed in the film by its
loose-fitting club car. For the scene in which the citizens of Titfield
convince the museum to lend them this famous relic, the long-since demolished Imperial
Institute near Royal Albert Hall in South Kensington, London was employed with
a studio-built model substituted for the real thing.
The Titfield Thunderbolt opens, appropriately enough, with a daily commute
through the picturesque countryside connecting the village of Titfield to that
comparatively big-city metropolis of Mallingford, under main titles joyously scored
by George Auric. The joie de vivre in these opening scenes is short-lived as
Titfield is informed their quaint branch is to be permanently shuddered. For
the railway, the concern is purely monetary, and actually, much desired by bus
operators, Alec Pearce and Vernon Crump (Jack McGowran)
who are seeking their own transportation monopoly. Learning of the railway’s
decision, Vicar Sam Weech, a slightly dotty railway enthusiast, and Gordon
Chesterford, Titfield’s squire, elect to take over the line, setting up their
own indie company through a Light Railway Order. Pitching their idea to the
affluent Walter Valentine, Chesterford and Weech quickly acquire a valiant
compatriot in their endeavor, provided Valentine can exploit the line to sell
booze in the club car. Alas, these three aspiring impresarios are barely
successful at convincing the Ministry of Transport to grant them the order.
Instead, Ruddock (Michael Trubshawe), the Minister of Transport affords these fledgling
entrepreneurs a month's trial, at the end, the line must pass final inspection to
make the Order permanent. Buoyed in their optimism, the town rallies to preserve
the line, its citizens pulling together in everything from the beautification
of the station, to daily management of the line’s operations. Much to Pearce
and Crump’s chagrin, clientele eager to ride the Titfield Thunderbolt steadily
grows, generating outside interests in the town and the line; both, having caught
the popular imagination in the press.
While the town revel in their good fortune, Pearce and Crump plot a sinister
revenge, aided by steam roller operator, Harry Hawkins (Sidney James), who
harbors an unhealthy hatred of the line, largely due to his gal/pal, Joan’s (Gabrielle
Brune) chronic delay of their engagement as she becomes more and more enamored
with aiding in the railway’s success. On one of its routine runs, Hawkins
sabotages the line’s water tower. Quick thinking prevails, as Weech and the supportive
passengers sprint across an open field to a nearby manor house, raided for all
manner of buckets, bushels and baths to carry fresh water from a nearby stream,
back and forth to fill the Thunderbolt’s steam tanks. Recognizing the line’s
greatest virtue is its impregnable volunteers, Crump makes a pitch to
Chesterford to become partners. Chesterford absolutely refuses to entertain such
a merger, forcing Crump and Pearce to hire Hawkins to help them derail the locomotive
the night before the line's inspection. Under the cover of night, this trio of
sabotaging cohorts dismantle a portion of the track near a very steep valley. Meanwhile,
the village’s solicitor, Blakeworth, deducing something sinister afoot, hurriedly
dresses and proceeds to walk down to the shed where the Thunderbolt is housed. Alas, Blakeworth is too late. Hawkins has
already hooked up the Thunderbolt to his steam roller, towing it to the point
of no return before letting it slide down the hill toward inevitable oblivion. Blakeworth,
valiantly climbs aboard and tries to avert this disaster.
Tragically, the train derails. Blakeworth is thrown from the wreckage; spared
his life, though not the indignation of being arrested by a constable as the
suspected saboteur. Weech and Chesterford are disheartened until Weech spies an
old etching of the original Thunderbolt, long-since housed as a museum artifact.
While Valentine and Dan get quietly snookered, concocting an idiotic plan to
steal a locomotive from Mallingford’s railway roundhouse, Weech springs
Blakeworth from jail and implores him to convince the museum to loan them the
original Thunderbolt. The town, again, rallies to the cause, stealing Dan’s portable
home and mounting it to a chassis as a make-shift passenger car to be towed
behind the engine. Alas, the couplings do not match, as the original
Thunderbolt is from an earlier vintage.
So, the cars are rigged with mere rope to hold them together. Meanwhile,
Valentine and Dan are momentarily successful at breaking into Mallingford’s
rail yards and absconding with a locomotive they proceed to drive through the
streets and into the forest, pursued by the local constabulary. Too intoxicated
to see the forest for the trees – literally – Dan crashes against a large oak.
He and Valentine are arrested and charged with a litany of infractions.
As the sun dawns on the day of inspection, Weech and Chesterford brace
themselves for a bumpy ride. Unsuspecting
of the events already transpired, Pearce and Crump prepare to take on
passengers, instead, amazed to see the vintage Thunderbolt already stoked and
waiting at the station with a bustling platform of patrons eager to board.
Distracted, Pearce crashes their bus into the police van transporting Valentine
and Dan to jail. Assuming the police already know they are guilty of sabotage, Crump
fumbles a confession and escape. He is apprehended, along with Pearce and promptly
charged with the crime. Short of a conductor, Weech accepts aid from the Bishop
of Wechester, Ollie Matthews (Godfrey Tearle),
a fellow railway enthusiast. The train, slightly delayed, nevertheless departs
with the stuffy inspector on board, along with the police escorting Crump,
Pearce, Dan and Valentine to prison. On route, the Thunderbolt’s feeble
coupling fails, leaving the passenger car behind. Distracting the inspector,
Chesterford convinces Hawkins to loan them his steel tow chain as a temporary
fix; Joan, agreeing to marry Hawkins immediately if he will comply. Despite
these delays, the Thunderbolt pulls into Mallingford only nine minutes late. The
basic requirements having been met; the inspector grants the village a permanent
Order to operate. As everyone offer a celebratory cheer, Weech’s exhausted
elation is priceless.
The Titfield Thunderbolt is a cordial – if occasionally, too-too quaint –
charmer. It is virtual impossible not to become wholly invested in the
picture’s sincerity and communal spirit. Virtually all of its appeal resides in
the brilliant ensemble – each, a genuinely appealing character, straight out of
‘Character-ville’. It is the interaction between these unaffectedly gifted
and droll thespians, most seasoned with the ripening of age to a finite
precision in their craft, that remains priceless, even when T.E.B. Clarke’s
screenplay deviates into mildly contrived scenarios that could never come off
in real life. Observing these underdogs in their dogged pursuit to succeed is
as rewarding. Tragically, Godfrey Tearle, who played the spirited Matthews,
would die of a heart attack in 1953. Sixty-eight at the time of filming, he was
required to perform heavy labor, shoveling coal aboard the Thunderbolt in the
final scenes; some, suggesting the intensity he displayed, hastened his
ultimate demise. The greater irony, of course, is that the events, as depicted
in The Titfield Thunderbolt would eventually befall many small branch
rail lines in England. Clarke, a
neighbor of Richard Beeching, then Director of ICI, would bear witness to
Beeching’s 1963 report ‘The Re-shaping of British Railways’ –
effectively to restructure the nationalized railroad, resulting in the wholesale
closure of many branches without warning.
The Titfield Thunderbolt arrives on Blu-ray via Film Movement’s alliance with
StudioCanal to distribute their restorations state’s side. The restoration
efforts here, conducted at Pinewood Studios, while yielding an image quality
that is light years ahead of anything this movie has looked like since its
theatrical premiere, is still somewhat wanting. There are only a handful of
examples of mis-registration of the 3-strip dupe negatives. But color balancing
has not been sufficiently addressed. For one, flesh tones can appear quite
anemic – and pink – in spots and downright jaundice-yellow in others. For
another, the lushness of the color on the whole just seems a tad off. Green
fields are glowing emerald, as example. The 2K scan with grading by Vincent Narduzo
(who also remastered Black Narcissus, arguably, with infinitely better
results), crisps up, with a few minor scenes still looking soft and/or
blurry. Scenes shot in broad daylight glow
with the brilliance of vintage Technicolor and close-ups are impressively
detailed. But there is some serious, if intermittent, fluctuations in color.
Scenes shot day-for-night, are appropriately bathed in rich blues, blacks and
grays. The image does tend to slightly lean toward a yellow-ish tint. We get a
2.0 DTS mono audio track, adequately preserved with minimal distortion. Extras
are a truncated hot mess of oddities, beginning with a brief ‘making of’ that
is two-thirds choice reflection, loosely strung together, but ending abruptly
in mid-thought. There are also featurettes showing Douglas Slocombe’s behind-the-scenes
16mm color footage while working on the movie. These suffer from interminable
interlacing and digital combing, making the footage virtually unwatchable. There
is also a featurette on the actual Lion locomotive – again, too brief, riddled
in interlaced video, and, handled with a matter-of-fact ennui. We also get an
audio only excerpt of an interview with Slocombe and Crichton, and finally,
trailers. Bottom line: The Titfield Thunderbolt is a joyful little
programmer worthy of your time. The Blu-ray, while a vast improvement, is not
perfect. The extras are forgettable at best. Judge and buy accordingly.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
3.5
EXTRAS
2.5
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