The best Eliot Makeham’s comedy movies

Eliot Makeham

Eliot Makeham

22/12/1882- 08/02/1956
Today we present the best Eliot Makeham’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Eliot Makeham’s movies.
Year:

The Crimson Pirate

The Crimson Pirate
7.1/10
Burt Lancaster plays a pirate with a taste for intrigue and acrobatics who involves himself in the goings on of a revolution in the Caribbean in the late 1700s. A light hearted adventure involving prison breaks, an oddball Scientist, sailing ships, naval fights, and tons of swordplay.

The Million Pound Note

The Million Pound Note
6.8/10
  • Genre: ComedyRomance
  • Release: 07/01/1954
  • Character: Consulate Official
An impoverished American sailor is fortunate enough to be passing the house of two rich gentlemen who have conceived the crazy idea of distributing a note worth one million pounds. The sailor finds that whenever he tries to use the note to buy something, people treat him like a king and let him have whatever he likes for free. Ultimately, the money proves to be more troublesome than it is worth when it almost costs him his dignity and the woman he loves.

A Canterbury Tale

A Canterbury Tale
7.3/10
Three modern day pilgrims investigate a bizarre crime in a small town on the way to Canterbury.

The Beachcomber

The Beachcomber
6.7/10
Ginger Ted, AKA Edward Claude Wilson, a drunkard and womanizer, and Miss Jones, a missionary, live in the Alas Islands. During a cholera epidemic, Ginger Ted and Miss Jones are sent to an outlying part of the islands to run a hospital; on their return, their motorboat breaks down, and they are marooned overnight on a small island.

Champagne Charlie

Champagne Charlie
6.5/10
  • Genre: ComedyDramaMusic
  • Release: 25/08/1944
  • Character: Vance's Songwriter (uncredited)
A man from the countryside becomes London’s newest music hall sensation, and competes with a rival music hall performer for the audience’s attention.

Storm in a Teacup

Storm in a Teacup
6.6/10
A local politician in Scotland tries to break the reporter who wrote a negative story about him, and who is also in love with his daughter.

Meet Mr Lucifer

Meet Mr Lucifer
5.9/10
A T.V. set given as a retiremant present is sold on to different households causing misery each time. One of the Ealing comedies.

Just William

Just William
6/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 20/07/1940
  • Character: Man in sweet shop
A rascal child recruits his friends as assistants to help his father to get elected to the city council. Sadly, the children accidentally helped two jewel thieves to escape. They feel sorry about this, and then, to redeem themselves, the kids begin investigating a rival candidates conspiracy. Their involvement causes the boy's father to win the elections.

Vote for Huggett

Vote for Huggett
6.1/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 01/02/1949
  • Character: Mr. Christie
A firm of solicitors do battle with the head of the local council over a parcel of river front land, owned by the Huggett family, in order to build a lido/community center.

Inspector Hornleigh

Inspector Hornleigh
6.7/10
  • Genre: ComedyMystery
  • Release: 07/03/1939
  • Character: Alexander Parkinson
When a landlady finds one of her tenants murdered, Inspector Hornleigh is sent to investigate. Hornleigh's assistant, Sergeant Bingham, soon finds an attaché case that had been stolen from the murdered man. When Hornleigh examines the case, inside it he finds a bag that was used to carry important government documents. The documents have been taken, and to make things even more confusing, a duplicate of the stolen bag soon turns up.

All Hands

All Hands
6.2/10
  • Genre: ComedyWar
  • Release: 31/05/1940
  • Character: Spy
From a series of propaganda films made to raise awareness of the risks of idle gossip providing vital information to enemy spies and collaborators. This Ealing Studios production features well-known 1940s actor John Mills, playing a sailor whose girlfriend thoughtlessly blunders away vital wartime secrets. The consequences prove disastrous when his boat next leaves to cross the English Channel.

Love in Waiting

Love in Waiting
5.8/10
The story of three women working as waitresses in post-World War II Britain.

Return to Yesterday

Return to Yesterday
6.4/10
Robert Maine is torn between returning to the glamour of Hollywood and working with a small theatre company in England.

Busman's Honeymoon

Busman's Honeymoon
6.2/10
When Lord Peter Wimsey marries Harriet Vane, a crime author, they both promise to give up crime for good. As a wedding present, Peter purchases the old house where Harriet grew up, but when they try to move in the previous owner is nowhere to be found, until they start to clean the house and find his body in the cellar...

Spare a Copper

Spare a Copper
6.1/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 02/12/1940
  • Character: Fuller
George (George Formby) is an inept reserve policeman working in wartime Liverpool, who is chosen by a gang of Nazi saboteurs as the stooge for their planned destruction of the British battleship HMS Hercules. Framed by the villains and forced to go on the run, George sets out to clear his name with the aid of new girlfriend, Jane (Dorothy Hyson).

I Lived with You

I Lived with You
6.3/10
In London a young lady meets a homeless and apparently penniless Russian prince. She introduces him to her middle-class Fulham family and he moves in. It turns out he still has a number of diamonds given him by the last czar, and he is persuaded to start selling them. The resulting money, and his princely notoriety, soon cause changes in everyone's lives.

Spy for a Day

Spy for a Day
During World War I, a British farmer is abducted by the Germans to take the place of a spy about to be executed whom he closely resembles.

Bell-Bottom George

Bell-Bottom George
5.8/10
  • Genre: ComedyWar
  • Release: 07/02/1944
  • Character: Johnson
George is an unwilling civilian during the war. When an enlisted friend switches clothes with him in order to go to a party, George finds himself mistakenly pressed into the navy, where he gets involved with pretty Ann Firth and caught up in a subplot involving German spies.

Give Us the Moon

Give Us the Moon
5.7/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 31/07/1944
  • Character: Dumka
Set just after the end of WWII (but filmed in the middle of it) in a time of general euphoria at having won the war, with full employment and general happiness for all (or nearly all). Peter, the young wastrel son of a hard working hotel owner doesn't like the idea of having to work for a living. He discovers a society of "White Elephants" who are quite willing to be poor as long as they don't have to work. They are protected and guided by Nina (Margaret Lockwood) and her precocious sister Heidi (Jean Simmons).

Green Grow the Rushes

Green Grow the Rushes
5.9/10
Efforts to move Britain into the modern age don't sit well with the people of the small village of Anderia Marsh, who have claimed a right (going back to Henry III) to evade government-imposed import duties and taxes. And when the government decides to curb this right, the whole village quietly rises up in a comical rebellion. After their vessel runs aground during a storm and is impounded by the British authorities, local smugglers must find a way of disposing of their contraband brandy cargo before it's discovered by the Customs Officers.

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