Production manager: L.C. Rudkin. Assistant director: Norman Priggen. Sound supervisor: Stephen Dalby. Sound recording: Len Hammond. Associate producer: Sidney Cole. Producer: Michael Balcon. Ealing Studios, London.
Copyright 23 May 1950 by Ealing Studios, Ltd. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. U.S. release through Universal-International: February 1951. New York opening at the Paris: 26 February 1951. U.K. release through General Film Distributors: October 1950. Australian release: 18 September 1952. 7,100 feet. 79 minutes. Cut by British Empire Films to 6,252 feet (including "General Exhibition" Censorship Certificate) in Australia, in order to release the picture as a 70- minute second feature.
SYNOPSIS: Johnny Brent, kept away from school by scarlet fever quarantine, is playing on the beach when he sees a smaller child with a large, impressive magnet. The other boy is unwilling to swap the magnet, but Johnny tricks him into surrendering it, and is then pursued from the beach by the child's irate nurse. Immediately he begins to feel guilty about his new possession; when he meets a man who has made a demonstration iron lung to raise funds for a real one for a hospital, he gladly gives up the unwanted magnet as a contribution to the fund.
The model-maker touched by this gesture, appeals to the public to emulate the generosity of the child who gave up his most precious possession, and the magnet is repeatedly auctioned, until the money for the iron lung is collected. The mayor, meanwhile, institutes a search for the boy. Johnny, by a couple of chance encounters, is led to believe that the other child is dead, having been infected by him, and that the police are hunting "the boy with the magnet" for murder.
COMMENT: An obvious attempt to repeat the success of "Hue and Cry" (1947),but it lacks the trenchant satire and the novelty of that film. True, the psychiatrist/father gets it in the neck, but this is much like flogging a dead horse. Though we like the coughing mayor, such other mild jokes as there are (the variations on the description of the magnet-giving boy),are muffed by inept direction.
Still, actual location filming is an asset and the players try hard to overcome the thinness of their material — it is basically a one- joke yarn that is rather slow in developing (and not a particularly amusing or credible joke anyway). Fortunately, young master Fox is an engaging youth.
The Magnet
1950
Action / Comedy
The Magnet
1950
Action / Comedy
Plot summary
A mixture of a psychological study of a ten-year-old boy, an English domestic comedy and a satire on psychologists finds young Johnny Brent, the only child of a pair of psychologists, trading an "invisible watch" to a much-younger child for a large magnet. His nurse/nanny accuses him of stealing and scolds him and he runs away. He soon convinces himself that the police are after him and following several unsuccessful attempts to get rid of the magnet, he presents it to an organizer of a fund-raising campaign for acquiring an iron-lung for the local hospital. The magnet is one of the auction items and finally is mounted on the iron-lung as a tribute to the unknown donor. Meanwhile, the father makes a completely inaccurate diagnosis for the mother of the boy's worries. In the end the boy meets the child he thought had died as a result of losing the magnet, and trades the boy back for the return of his "invisible watch" the gold medal the town mayor had given him for his part in the hospital campaign.
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Movie Reviews
"Hue and Cry" rides again!
No Peace for the Wicked
Ealing often sent their crews to exotic locations and the claim in the opening credits that this fanciful whimsy was filmed at Ealing Studios - unusually without Alec Guinness - is ironically promptly contradicted by its's vivid rendering by cameraman Lionel Banes of the Merseyside locations around which a young 'William' Fox (as he was then called) is pursued; although Banes does also do an atmospheric job on the interiors.
Never dull
THE MAGNET is an unusual Ealing Studios comedy, seemingly aimed at children but with plenty of satirical elements for the adults. It very much reminded me of a proto Children's Film Foundation movie and, indeed, director Charles Frend would go on to shoot such pictures. James Fox plays a boy who comes into possession of a rare magnet on the beach, before finding himself engaging in various escapades with oddball people. Some elements are predictable - he thinks the police are out to get him when in fact they want to reward him - but there's some local character here from the Liverpudlian kids and some strong talent from cameoing stars like Harold Goodwin, Sam Kydd and Thora Hird. The film moves at a solid pace and, although it's not always successful, it's certainly never dull.