"The Halfway House" is one of the strangest films from the 1940s I can recall having seen. This is not a bad thing, as it abounds with originality and is well worth seeing.
The story is set during WWII and the film consists of many stories and characters who all share one thing in common...they all have gone to the same quaint Welsh inn to take their vacations. But most of these people are carrying burdens of one sort or another...such as broken marriages, sons killed in the war, ill health and much more. What none of them realize for some time is that this house is somehow back in time...and it's somehow a year earlier! Why and what all this means, you'll just have to see for yourself.
The film has exceptional writing and very nice acting. Stick with it, as it does start slowly and a few of the characters are at first rather annoying.
The Halfway House
1944
Action / Drama / Fantasy / Mystery / Sci-Fi
The Halfway House
1944
Action / Drama / Fantasy / Mystery / Sci-Fi
Plot summary
A group of travellers, each with a personal problem that they want to hide, arrives at a mysterious Welsh country inn. There is a certain strangeness in the air as they are greeted by the innkeeper and his daughter (Mervyn Johns and his real life daughter Glynis Johns). Why are all the newspapers a year old ? And why doesn't Gwyneth seem to cast a shadow ?
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An exercise in liminality
THE HALFWAY HOUSE is another spooky drama from Ealing Studios; anyone who enjoyed their sublime anthology DEAD OF NIGHT will be sure to like this one too. The slow-pased story involves a bunch of characters who through various twists of fate come to stay at the titular location, a country inn hosted by the excellent Mervyn Johns as the nervy proprietor. His real-life daughter Glynis is around too. After the usual camaraderie the characters begin to notice odd things about the location, although the plot twist will be very obvious from the outset for any modern viewers. Still, this is well acted and well directed, exploring wartime nihilism, nostalgia, and liminality in a fresh and moving way.
Ealing with feeling.
Ealing Studio's The Halfway House is a heartwarming supernatural wartime parable intended to raise morale in its blitzed British audience with the message that, despite such troubled times, the United Kingdom shall prevail, whilst at the same time lifting the spirits of the bereaved by suggesting that death isn't the end. There's also time to bash those who remain neutral during wartime or who try to profit from the conflict.
These messages are hammered home rather heavily, but do not stop the movie from being an enjoyable time; if anything, the film's status as wartime propaganda only makes it more interesting. Of course, a cracking cast doesn't hurt, and this one's got great performances to spare: Mervyn Johns plays Rhys, the ghostly landlord of the titular inn, and his real-life daughter Glynis plays his on-screen daughter Gwyneth (whose husky Welsh lilt is particularly appealing). Support is given by a range of reliable character actors, including Tom Walls and Françoise Rosay as a couple who are struggling with the loss of their son, Esmond Knight as terminally ill conductor David Davies, Guy Middleton and Alfred Drayton as a couple of racketeers, and Valerie White and Richard Bird as an estranged couple whose daughter (played by a young and very plummy Sally Ann Howes ) tries to get her parents back together.
Before the halfway mark of The Halfway House, I had guessed that the visitors to the inn were dead (victims of an air raid),but I was wrong, and glad to be so. Instead of taking this trite route, the film treads another path, with a Twilight Zone-style time twister plot and an ending that sees each person finding redemption and leaving with hope in their hearts. It's the kind of feel-good finalé that makes the film ideal for a rainy Sunday afternoon.
6.5 out of 10, rounded up to 7 for lovely Glynis.